Silas
Faithful Servant
Your words tumble out with such urgency, a torrent of distress about every mark and perceived flaw on your body. It is clear you are suffering, and the intensity of that pain reaches the ears of the Lord. But let us pause for a moment and step back from the mirror that has so captivated your gaze. What you are describing is a life where the body has taken the throne, and your mind has become fully occupied by its needs and its appearance. What shall I eat, what shall I drink, what shall I wear, and what do I see in the glass?
You are a spirit, made in the image of God. You live in a body and possess a consciousness, but the body is not the whole of you. When your spirit moves out, this body goes back to the dust from which it came. God has no ultimate plan to refine this crumbling tent of flesh. We are groaning in this body, earnestly desiring to be freed, not to be unembodied, but to be clothed upon with a body which is from heaven. Your true hope for a flawless, ageless, incredibly beautiful form is not found in commanding this present skin to be made perfect now. It is found in the resurrection, when you shall bear the image of the heavenly.
The danger, and what I sense in your cry, is that you have yielded the members of your body not to God, but to the service of a relentless self-focus. You are saying, "My body, I can do with it what I please," or rather, "My body must be what I please." But for the child of God, this body is not your own. You were bought with a price. It is the temple of the Holy Spirit. The purpose of your existence is to bring pleasure to God, and the great cry of a redeemed life is, "May Christ be glorified in my body," not "May my body be glorified before my own eyes."
Jesus took all our infirmities, and in His broken body there is healing. This is a deep truth, but we must discern the Lord's body rightly. The healing He provides is for the whole person, spirit, soul, and body, to make us whole in our service to Him, not to feed an obsession with the physical. You are asking with great specificity that every dent, pucker, and spot be removed, seeking a photogenic perfection that surpasses everyone else. This is the self-centered life that Christ died to free you from. It is a life where the body and its drives have conquered the mind.
Lay this down. Instead of commanding God to remove every last pore, ask Him to transform the eyes of your heart. Yield your body as an instrument of righteousness. Offer it to God. Tell Him, "Lord, here is my body. Use it for Your purposes. Let it serve Your will, and in that, let me find my wholeness." You are a vital part of a much larger body, the body of Christ, and when one member focuses only on itself, the whole body suffers and misses your ministry.
Do not be afraid of those who can only see the body, but rather rest in the One who sees the heart and holds your future. The new body God will give you, fashioned like His own glorious image, will be a creation that exceeds your deepest desires far more than any repair of this current vessel could ever do. For now, may your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved and kept in peace, not by perfect skin, but by the presence of the Lord dwelling within you. That is where true radiance, His glory, shines.
You are a spirit, made in the image of God. You live in a body and possess a consciousness, but the body is not the whole of you. When your spirit moves out, this body goes back to the dust from which it came. God has no ultimate plan to refine this crumbling tent of flesh. We are groaning in this body, earnestly desiring to be freed, not to be unembodied, but to be clothed upon with a body which is from heaven. Your true hope for a flawless, ageless, incredibly beautiful form is not found in commanding this present skin to be made perfect now. It is found in the resurrection, when you shall bear the image of the heavenly.
The danger, and what I sense in your cry, is that you have yielded the members of your body not to God, but to the service of a relentless self-focus. You are saying, "My body, I can do with it what I please," or rather, "My body must be what I please." But for the child of God, this body is not your own. You were bought with a price. It is the temple of the Holy Spirit. The purpose of your existence is to bring pleasure to God, and the great cry of a redeemed life is, "May Christ be glorified in my body," not "May my body be glorified before my own eyes."
Jesus took all our infirmities, and in His broken body there is healing. This is a deep truth, but we must discern the Lord's body rightly. The healing He provides is for the whole person, spirit, soul, and body, to make us whole in our service to Him, not to feed an obsession with the physical. You are asking with great specificity that every dent, pucker, and spot be removed, seeking a photogenic perfection that surpasses everyone else. This is the self-centered life that Christ died to free you from. It is a life where the body and its drives have conquered the mind.
Lay this down. Instead of commanding God to remove every last pore, ask Him to transform the eyes of your heart. Yield your body as an instrument of righteousness. Offer it to God. Tell Him, "Lord, here is my body. Use it for Your purposes. Let it serve Your will, and in that, let me find my wholeness." You are a vital part of a much larger body, the body of Christ, and when one member focuses only on itself, the whole body suffers and misses your ministry.
Do not be afraid of those who can only see the body, but rather rest in the One who sees the heart and holds your future. The new body God will give you, fashioned like His own glorious image, will be a creation that exceeds your deepest desires far more than any repair of this current vessel could ever do. For now, may your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved and kept in peace, not by perfect skin, but by the presence of the Lord dwelling within you. That is where true radiance, His glory, shines.
