“I have hidden your
word in my heart that I might not sin against you.”
Psalm 119:11 (NIV)
There’s an old
pair of tennis shoes in my garage that I wear when I mow or work in the yard.
You may have a pair like them: shoe laces broken and tied together, grass
stains accented with rips, one or two tiny pebbles caught in the tread (what’s
left of the tread) along with remnants of “gifts” shared by the neighborhood
cat.
One day my grandkids
decided to help me straighten up my house and somehow those wonderful tennis
shoes got tossed in my closet without my knowledge. The next morning when I
opened the closet door, the stench that hit me in the face nearly knocked me
over.
It permeated the
whole closet including my clean clothes and the other shoes. I only needed a
matter of seconds to pinpoint the source of the smell and throw the offending
shoes out on the deck. However, even though the shoes were gone from the
closet, the horrible smell remained.
I aired out the
closet for a whole day and then hung an air freshener in it. The thing was, even
though the tennis shoes had been removed for hours, they still left an odor
that required me to put another and another and another air freshener in the
closet until it was completely gone.
The horrible
odor had to continually be replaced with the clean fragrance of the air
fresheners. Thankfully it eventually worked!
It occurred to
me while I repeatedly changed air fresheners in my bedroom closet that I also needed
to allow the Lord to clean out those smelly tennis shoes from the closet in my
heart. Let me explain.
When the tennis
shoe smell says “God doesn’t even know I exist,” Psalm 139:17-18 says “How
precious to me are your thoughts, O God! How vast is the sum of them! Were I to
count them, they would outnumber the grains of sand. When I awake, I am still
with you.”
When the stench
hints that “God doesn’t care about my life and what I do,” Jeremiah 29:11 says
“For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans to prosper you
and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.”
The horrible
odor whispers “She should never have said that about you. You have a right to be
angry and to hold it against her.” But we read in Matthew 18:22 that Jesus
answers Peter’s question if seven times is enough to forgive someone with “I
tell you, not seven times, but seventy-seven times.”
Don’t let
Satan’s lies hang around in the closet of your heart. Replace his stench with
God’s truth and love. And remember, too, that the “air freshener” you hang up
only works so long without needing to be renewed.
In other words,
praying once or twice about negative thoughts and then thinking you don’t have
to bother with them any more is not true, because Satan doesn’t stop attacking.
You have to constantly be in the Word to stand strong against him.
Dig through the
closet of your heart, find all those stinky shoes and give them a toss! Don’t
forget to replace them with the sweet fragrance of God’s words of love and
encouragement.
Father, so many times I allow the liar to
creep into my thoughts and speak untruths to my heart. Forgive me and help me
to focus on you and your truth. In Jesus’ Name. Amen.
R.A.P. it up
. . .
Reflect
- Why do
you think you allow Satan to attack you with lies?
- Do you
have Scripture memorized to stand against the attacks?
Apply
- Journal
each “stinky shoe” that you struggle with in your heart.
- Beside
each entry, journal a Scripture that shares God’s promise for that
struggle.
Power
- Psalm
119:11 (NIV) “I have hidden your word in my heart that I might not sin
against you.”
- II
Corinthians 2:15 (NIV) “For we are to God the aroma of Christ among those
who are being saved and those who are perishing.”
- Proverbs
4:23 (NIV) “Above all else, guard your heart, for it is the wellspring of
life.”
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