A Losing Strategy
'The sins of some people are conspicuous, going before them to judgment, but the sins of others appear later. So also good works are conspicuous, and even those that are not cannot remain hidden. '
I have found this to be true. The harder I try to keep my sins contained, managed, and hidden, the more I can feel them banging and thumping on the door behind me. They seem so powerful and uncontrollable. I can picture people asking, "Hey, what do you have in there? What's making that racket?" and me defensively replying, "Nothing to see here. I've got it under control."
Sometimes we keep the cat in the closet at night so he doesn't sleep on our faces. Two things are shocking: how much noise a cat can make when he doesn't want to be in a closet, and how much damage a cat can cause in the same situation. Isn't sin the same way? It makes way more noise and causes way more damage when it is given free rein in a dark space.
I can't start cleaning up the mess my sins make until I am willing to confess I have them. When the door is opened it is an ugly picture at first, but at least I can start to go to work. I challenge you to do the same! Let the cat out of the closet before it becomes a tiger. At that point, it will claw its own way through the door and you'll have a lot more work to do.
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