TLIC PROVERBS. APRIL 1: APPLE.

Proverbs 7:2. keep my teaching as the apple of your eye;

We naturally protect our eyes don’t we. If dust or sand is blowing around us we close our eyes to protect them. Maybe you’ve worn protective goggles in the pool or while doing a project. God even built natural eye protection into your face – eye lids, eye lashes, eye sockets all protect the eye. Why? Because, obviously, our sight is very important.

In ancient times the center of the eye, the pupil, was called the apple of the eye. Whatever you kept as the apple of your eye was what was most important to you. It was central to your life. It was the thing that you loved so much that you stared at it (literally and figuratively). In the psalms King David said it this way:

Psalm 16:8. I have kept the Lord always before me. 

We look at what we love. And what we look at the most is what we become. This is the law of worship – we become like the thing we worship, the thing we keep as the apple of our eye. David moved the Ark of the Covenant out of the Tabernacle and into his back yard so that he could look at it constantly as a representation of God. He kept God and the teachings of God at the center of his life. By contrast we tend to look at everything but God. Social media scrolling. Binge watching. News channels. Home shopping. Pornography.

Like Solomon, God wants his children to look at his wisdom and his ways. He wants us to look at Christ and his cross. To keep Jesus as the apple of our eye. How? By knowing that God has made us the apple of his eye. King David again:

Psalm 17:8. [God] Keep me as the apple of your eye; hide me in the shadow of your wings,

God loves us. He always keeps us in his sight. He never stops affectionately staring at us. His children are the most important thing to him. How do we know? Because Christ died for us, rose for us, and placed his life inside of us, that’s how. On the cross, Jesus had one eye on the Father and one eye on us. His great love for us carried him through the shame to the glory of his Father. A glory that now lives in us that the Father can’t and won’t ever take his eyes off of.  

You: What is the apple of your eye? The center of your affections?

You in Christ: You are the apple of God’s eye. How does this strengthen you for what lies ahead?

Christ in you: How can you set the Lord Jesus always before you like David did?

Pray: Father, you have made me the apple of your eye. In Christ I am your beloved and you are mine. Help me to love you and to keep my eyes on you too. Amen.

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