The Gangrene of the Soul
Mary Southerland
Today’s Truth
Put to death, therefore, whatever belongs to your earthly nature:
sexual immorality, impurity, lust, evil desires and greed, which is idolatry (Colossians 3:5, NIV).
Friend to Friend
Cantaloupe may very well be my favorite food. When it is in season, I stock up and always have some on hand. On one particularly hot day, a lunch of cantaloupe sounded luscious ... and it was. Afterwards, I was gone for several hours, running errands. When I walked back /in the front door /that afternoon, a foul stench nearly knocked me down. It was such a strong odor! A dead animal was my first thought. A plumbing problem was my next idea. I began a room-to-room search that ended abruptly at the kitchen sink. Opening the cabinet underneath, I nearly gagged at the stench //that slapped me in the face, making my eyes water. I instantly remembered that I had thrown
the cantaloupe peels in the garbage /before running errands and
forgotten to take them to the outside garbage can /as I usually did. The house reeked and the delicious cantaloupe was forgotten /as I threw the peels away. I lit every candle () I could find and opened every window in an effort to eliminate the odor of rotting fruit. Nasty!
* reek = stink
Greed acts the same way in our life and must be treated like garbage. Deliberately throw it away. Remove it from your life /as soon as you discover its presence in your life.
In 2 Corinthians 7:1, we find the apostle Paul’s strong warning to “purify ourselves from everything that contaminates body and spirit, perfecting holiness out of reverence for God" (NIV). Greed is the gangrene of the soul and if not quickly dealt with, will contaminate every emotion, creating a foul stench in every part of life. Choose against it. Fight it with Scripture and bombard it with prayer, remembering that God alone is our provider and that He will supply our every need.
I have come to the conclusion that [the underlying problem with wants and needs] is that we confuse the two. [What we want and what we need] are not always the same things.
[Anyone //who has met my husband will tell you that he is down-to-earth and unassuming. Dan may be a mega church pastor, but he is also very approachable and unpretentious. [The truck () Dan drives] is proof that he is totally unimpressed with the material things () this world has /to offer. Our family named the truck “Old Blue” for two reasons. It is old and it is blue. However, it is paid for and it runs and that is all () Dan needs.
However, I am certain that he would not turn down an offer from someone //who wanted to buy him a brand new Ford F-150 truck as a Christmas gift. In fact, from time to time, I have seen him gaze at some bright, shiny new truck with longing in his eyes.
Dan is the lead teaching pastor of a church that runs over 5,000 people in attendance each week and could easily rationalize [driving a nice car or truck] [as part of his pastoral image]. The only problem with that idea is that Dan is not the least bit concerned with his pastoral image /when it comes to material possessions. He is, however, deeply concerned with the image of God /being seen in his life.
Is it wrong to want and desire nice things? Not if we view and use those nice things as tools and refuse to worship them as idols. I sometimes think () God has to strip us of everything () we have /so we can learn the life changing truth //that He is our Source. Just as the shepherd meets every need of his sheep, God meets our every need. Just as sheep totally depend upon their shepherd's care, we would be wise to depend totally upon God. He is our Provider. He is our Source and He is all we need.
Let’s Pray
Father, I can be so greedy! Please forgive me /when I live as though You cannot provide my every need.
Help me to walk by faith, knowing that You love me fiercely and will take care of me fully. You are my Father, my God … my Provider! Thank You!
In Jesus’ Name,
Amen.