A number of years ago I was hiking along the Salmon River and came
across a grove of pine trees that had been partially stripped of their bark. I
knew from a friend who is a forester that the Native Americans who hunted this
area long ago had peeled the outer bark and harvested the underlying layer for
chewing gum. Some of the scars were disfiguring, but others, filled with
crystallized sap and burnished by wind and weather, had been transformed into
patterns of rare beauty.
So it is with our transgressions. We may be scarred by the sins of the
past. But those sins, repented of and brought to Jesus for His forgiveness, can
leave behind marks of beauty.
Some people, having tasted the bitterness of sin, now loathe it. They
hate evil and love righteousness. Theirs is the beauty of holiness.
Others, knowing how far they fall short (Rom. 3:23), have tender hearts
toward others. They rise up with understanding, compassion, and kindness when
others fail. Theirs is the beauty of humility.
Finally, when acts of sin are freely and thoroughly forgiven it leads to
intimacy with the One who has shown mercy. Such sinners love much for much has
been forgiven (Luke 7:47). Theirs is the beauty of love.
A forgiven heart is the fountain of beauty. (RBC)