Proverbs 26:11
As a dog returneth to his vomit, so a fool returneth to his folly.
When I read this verse, the thought that struck me was whether I was a fool. I think we all can picture this scene. A dog returning to its vomit. That's disgusting and unthinkable, it's foolish and dumb. In the same way, when we return to our own foolishness and sin, we are like the dog who returns to its vomit. Maybe there are struggles in our lives that we struggle with and we find ourselves always falling into the same sin and temptation, may this verse wake us up from our constant failures and realise that we are like dogs returning to our own vomit if we keep doing the wrong thing over and over again.
Radio personality Paul Harvey tells the story of how an Eskimo kills a wolf. The account is grisly, yet it offers fresh insight into the consuming, self-destructive nature of sin. "First, the Eskimo coats his knife blade with animal blood and allows it to freeze. Then he adds another layer of blood, and another, until the blade is completely concealed by frozen blood. "Next, the hunter fixes his knife in the ground with the blade up. When a wolf follows his sensitive nose to the source of the scent and discovers the bait, he licks it, tasting the fresh frozen blood. He begins to lick faster, more and more vigorously, lapping the blade until the keen edge is bare. Feverishly now, harder and harder the wolf licks the blade in the arctic night.
So great becomes his craving for blood that the wolf does not notice the razor-sharp sting of the naked blade on his own tongue, nor does he recognize the instant at which his insatiable thirst is being satisfied by his OWN warm blood. His carnivorous appetite just craves more--until the dawn finds him dead in the snow!"
It is a fearful thing that people can be "consumed by their own lusts." Only God's grace keeps us from the wolf's fate.
Monday, July 27, 2009
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