Today's Journey

Can You See Her?
Feb.16,2014
http://getmorestrength.org
“and as she stood behind him at his feet weeping, she began to
wet his feet with her tears. Then she wiped them with her hair, kissed
them and poured perfume on them.” Luke 7:38
For most of us, prostitution represents a rather repulsive
aspect of the underbelly of society. Given our disdain for such a
godless practice, my guess is that few of us have ever thought about the
people trapped in the “industry,” let alone the thought of taking the
love of Jesus to them. We are far more prone to think of prostitutes
with Simon the Pharisee’s sanctimonious aloofness—an aloofness that
Jesus never felt.
Simon, the “good” person in town, was repulsed by the prostitute who
had gate-crashed his party. The text indicates that he watched with
revulsion the outpouring of her love at Jesus’ feet. His buttoned-up,
spit-polished religious life had shut her out. Jesus, on the other hand,
extended love and forgiveness to her and welcomed her in. What a
contrast!
Lisa DePalma is the founder of a ministry to prostitutes on the dark
street corners of Chicago. I have been stunned by Lisa’s stories of her
work with these shattered lives, and I’ve been gripped by her example of
what it means to extend the heart and hands of Jesus to them. Always
used and never loved, these prostitutes hear—some of them for the first
time—that God has wonderfully loved them through the person of Jesus.
To those of us who have a hard time feeling love and compassion for this kind of woman, Lisa writes these pleading lines.
Can you see her? Will you let God show you?
Her face instead of her clothes? Her eyes instead of her body?
Can you see her? Will you let God show you?
She has a name instead of a label, a broken heart instead of a hard one
Can you see her? Will you let God show you?
The image of God instead of an object of scorn
Her worth to the Savior instead of her worthlessness to the world
Can you see her? Will you let God show you?
His heart of forgiveness instead of your heart that judges
His blood that covers instead of your rules that condemn
Can you see her? Will you let God show you?
And when you do see, what then?
What then? That’s a great question! Getting over a self-righteous,
condemning attitude toward people who are not like us—and overtly sinful
as well—is not an easy thing. Our “goodness” has a way of backfiring on
us when we become proud that we are not like them and think of them as
hopeless objects of God’s judgment—if indeed we think of them at all.
The good guys in Jesus’ day were constantly shocked that He cared about
sinners. But as He said, He came to seek and save those who are lost.
Getting over our infatuation with how good we are begins by asking
ourselves if we want to be like standoffish Simon or like the
compassionate Jesus. I choose Jesus! I’m tired of how I feel when I am
self-righteous and proud. I find that following His lead to love the
lost is a breath of fresh air in a stodgy and stagnant world of people
who are taken with their own goodness.
YOUR JOURNEY…
- What is your attitude toward “sinners,” in particular the “worst” of them?
- What is your attitude toward your own sin? If you were to compare yourself to God’s standard of holiness (instead of comparing yourself to others), how would you rate?
- Are you willing for Jesus to show you those who are hurting and broken? If He does, are you willing to extend His love to them? If not, pray that He will stir the right response in your heart.
- If you want to know more about what you can do to help those who are taking Jesus’ love to prostitutes and outcasts, go to
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