Pulelulu Fepueli 4, 2026
LEVITIKO 11-13; SAAME 51:1-12
By the loving miracle of God's grace, unclean hearts are made new and pure.
‘I he mana fakaofo ‘a e kelesi ‘a e ‘Otua, ko e ngaahi loto ta’e ma’aa kuo ngaohi ke fo’ou mo ma’a.
Leviticus 13:45-46 says, "The leprous person who has the disease shall wear torn clothes and let the hair of his head hang loose, and he shall cover his upper lip and cry out, 'Unclean, unclean. He shall remain unclean as long as he has the disease. He is unclean. He shall live alone. His dwelling shall be outside the camp." These words remind me of David's prayer after committing adultery: "Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me" (Ps. 51:10). Although the laws surrounding leprosy had to do with God's lovingly and wisely protecting his people from a deadly infection, they also point us to something profoundly deeper.
Sin is the ultimate infection. No one escapes this disease. It renders us all unclean. It separates us all from our Maker. It cries out for the ultimate cure, one only the Messiah can provide.
Like a bad stain on white linen, like a black smudge on pure vellum, like wine spilled on a new dress, like paint drips on window glass, like mud on a new shoe, this stain won't just go away. It won't fade into nothing. You won't wake up one morning to discover it has suddenly disappeared. The deepest, darkest, most penetrating stubborn stains must be cleansed.
Denying that they're there never works. Doing your best to hide them doesn't remove them. Living with them is foolishness. Hoping no one will notice is vain. Worrying about them changes nothing. Whatever has been stained must be cleansed to be new again. So it is with the human heart. It is sad to admit, but no one has a pure, perfectly clean, unstained, pristinely beautiful, heart. No one. Every heart of every person comes into this world stained by sin.
Sin is immorality's permanent ink, sinking into the deepest regions of the thoughts, desires, motives, purposes, worship of the heart. This tragic sin stain is humanly unremovable. No matter what you try, no matter how many times you try, it is there to stay without something that has cleansing power. You can look at your stains with hope
because there is a cleansing stream. It flows through the righteous life, the substitutionary sacrifice, the victorious resurrection of Jesus. He came so that sin-stained hearts would have the hope of being clean again, new again, spotless in his sight again, ultimately pure again, forever.
If we confess that we are stained, he is faithful, he is righteous, he will forgive our sins, he will cleanse our hearts and thoroughly wash us from all unrighteousness. Step out from the shame of your stains. Refuse to put your hope in things that do not cleanse. Walk away from a life of denial. Confess that you have no cleansing power of your own. Quit blaming your stains on other people, other things.
Humbly bring the garment of your heart to him. Put your stains in his hands. He will wash you in his grace. He delights in doing for you what you could never do for yourself. He delights in making you clean.