2016 picture of Ray Sparre

Insightful Musings on the Scriptures

by

Raymond P. Sparre
Northwest University class of '67



Tue Apr 12, 2022

Morning, Zane.

I just returned from an eye exam. So my eye’s are still a bit dilated. I’m in line now for cataract surgery. Yippee! The main thing now giving push to this attention is that I recently flunked my eye test at DMV when trying to renew my driver’s license. I’m falling apart all over the place.

You may not need to have eye surgery, Zane—but I think you need to see clearly the main ideas contained in this reading. So many people out there are so comfortable with excluding God from their view of things that they can’t see straight.

Blessings on your day. Love and prayers—Tua/Ray.


12 April
Mark 7:1-23
“The Pharisees and all the other Jews do not eat unless they give their hands a ceremonial washing, holding to the tradition of the elders.” (Mark 7:3)

Take note of what begins this passage and prompts Jesus’ teaching. The Jewish legalists are irritated over seeing Jesus’ disciples eating in a way that didn’t comply with their sacred tradition of ceremonial washing and they state their complaint to Jesus. Jesus takes them by surprise when He responds with a hot rebuke against their glaring hypocrisy and their imbalanced preoccupation with tradition and ceremony over and above godly principles.

Please pay careful attention to what Jesus is really saying. He is delivering a key concept that is vital for victorious Christian living. Jesus establishes its importance when he says, “Listen to me, everyone, and understand this.” If Jesus said that this is something important to understand, let’s agree that it is something important to understand. Let’s avoid the pitfall of being dull—a negative condition afflicting the disciples and which Jesus clearly condemned (v. 18).

Throughout scripture we see the dichotomy of man addressed. We learn that man is composed of both an exterior (the outside, the physical, the outward appearance, the body), and an interior (the inside, the soul and spirit, the center, the heart). Jesus is proclaiming in no uncertain terms that the interior of a man is far far FAR more important in establishing either one’s righteousness or unrighteousness before God than his exterior. Indeed, a dirty interior is what tends to produce a dirty exterior. What an idea!

Let’s understand that public ceremony is a focus on the exterior. Rightly used, it is to be a true expression of the interior. So then, ceremonial anything is really quite worthless if it does not involve the interior—the heart. A ceremonial wedding is not very healthy or lasting if it does not involve a heart-level love and commitment to each other as a husband and wife. A ceremonial baptism is of no value that does not accompany the heart condition of being “dead to sin, but alive to God” (Rom. 6:11). Ceremonial Holy Communion is of no value if it does not reflect the heart’s hunger for and identification with Christ (Gal. 2:20). Ceremonial conversion of going forward in an altar call and “saying” a prayer is useless if it is not a manifestation of a heart-felt love for God and surrender to His Lordship. Please see to it that this important truth expounded by Jesus always remains in a prominent place within the boundaries of your understanding.

“You are as close to God right now as you want to be.”