by Charles R. Swindoll
Read 1 Samuel 15:1--35
Even though I have known people like this, still, I cannot
fathom Saul's perspective. How can anyone be so clueless? He disobeyed the
Lord's direct command by keeping not just a few things under the ban, but keeping
everything having any value. On top of having no sense, Saul had no shame.
Instead of being humiliated by his own guilt, he erected a monument to himself
to commemorate the day. At least Achan had the good sense to be ashamed of his
sin. Not Saul! Somehow he managed to twist events and rearrange facts to
portray himself as God's champion.
Samuel's response is priceless: "What then is this
bleating of the sheep in my ears, and the lowing of the oxen which I
hear?" (1 Samuel 15:14). Amazing how simple facts can so easily prick a
deceiving heart.
I see two timeless principles at work in the story of Saul
that deserve our attention.
First, how you finish is far more important than how you
start. No one graduates from college thinking, Okay, now how can I fail? No
bride or groom tells the wedding guests, "Enjoy the party; this thing
won't last more than a couple of years." Only when a woman or man finishes
well can we call that life a success. A good beginning does nothing to
guarantee a good ending. Happy endings are the result of good choices and
consistent discipline put in sequence over a lifetime and faithfully
maintained.
Second, rationalization is disobedience because it refuses
to accept the truth. I've heard it said that the most destructive lie is the
one you tell yourself. Rationalizing is an insidious form of self-delusion. It
starts small---usually with something innocent---and quietly twists the mind to
spin the truth in convenient ways. In the end, the self-deluded mind
rationalizes everything so conveniently, so automatically, that the person has
no concept of how preposterous his or her thinking and behavior have become.
And---never forget this---no one is immune.
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