Coming Clean
Today’s Scripture Reading
1 The earth is the Lord’s, and everything in it,
the world, and all who live in it;
2 for he founded it on the seas
and established it on the waters.
3 Who may ascend the mountain of the Lord?
Who may stand in his holy place?
4 The one who has clean hands and a pure heart,
who does not trust in an idol
or swear by a false god.
5 They will receive blessing from the Lord
and vindication from God their Savior.
6 Such is the generation of those who seek him,
who seek your face, God of Jacob.
7 Lift up your heads, you gates;
be lifted up, you ancient doors,
that the King of glory may come in.
8 Who is this King of glory?
The Lord strong and mighty,
the Lord mighty in battle.
9 Lift up your heads, you gates;
lift them up, you ancient doors,
that the King of glory may come in.
10 Who is he, this King of glory?
The Lord Almighty—
he is the King of glory.
PSALM 24:1-10
Today’s Devotional Reading
Coming Clean
The Vienna Maternity Hospital was the largest maternity hospital in the world in the middle of the nineteenth century. It was considered a safer place to deliver a child than a home. Yet the mortality rates for mothers giving birth were alarming. Studies done from 1839 to 1847 revealed that women attended by medical students were dying at nearly triple the rate of those attended by midwives. The cause? Unwashed hands. Doctors would routinely conduct post-mortems and then proceed directly to the maternity wards to deliver babies. Finally, a Hungarian doctor named Ignaz Phillip Semmelweis introduced the doctors to hand washing with a chlorine solution between procedures. Only then did the mortality rates of mothers of newborns drop dramatically.
Today we understand to a far greater degree the role of bacteria in producing and spreading disease. Medical personnel and restaurant workers alike are required to wash their hands regularly. And how often do we hear mothers urge their children, “Wash your hands before you come to the table!”
Just as external cleanliness promotes physical health, having “clean hands” before God promotes spiritual health. Scrubbing up spiritually involves repentance—confessing our sins, coming clean—before God so that we can experience spiritual wellbeing. The psalmist pleaded, “Create in me a pure heart, O God, and renew a steadfast spirit within me” (Psalm 51:10).
In her book With My Whole Heart, author Karen Mains writes, “Spiritual awakening always begins with cleansing. It begins in the heart of the individual who suddenly says to herself, ‘I’m dirty.’ And that is painful, particularly if we’ve been pretending all along to be clean.”
If you long for greater intimacy with God, ask him to examine your heart to see if there are any areas in which you need to come clean before him. Confession, in its most elemental form, simply means agreeing with God that you’ve departed from his ways and fallen short of his standards. Admit to him—and to yourself—that you are in need of a spiritual bath. Be prepared, like a little child, to squirm a little when he reminds you to wash behind your ears. But, oh, the joy of coming clean!
Today’s devotional reading is pulled from: NIV Women’s Devotional Bible