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This week week’s theme is “Don’t Judge by Appearance.”
Thankfully we have mostly moved beyond the global pandemic, but for you younger readers I am here
to tell you about a lesser outbreak that we endured in the 1990’s. I am talking about the scourge of the
“magic eye” poster.
For those who don’t remember, magic eye posters look like a very dense collage of random colors, but if
you stare through them and try to focus your eyes just behind the surface (or just in front of the surface
depending on who you ask – people would have passionate conversations discussing their specific magic
eye process), an image will appear. You couldn’t go anywhere without encountering little clusters of
people oohing and aahing over some poster. It was kind of like a pre-smart phone way of looking at a
popular meme except you had to fight for it. People really got into it.
Except me. To this day I have never seen an image in a magic eye poster. For all I know you people are
just playing an extended, elaborate prank on me. I could pretend like it was no big deal to me, but the
facts say otherwise. My underlying disappointment was revealed fifteen years later when an
optometrist told me that my eyes had slightly different focal distances, and my very first question was,
“Is that why I can’t do a magic eye poster?”
What we can see depends on our eyes, but also our perspective.
Samuel asked him, “Are these all the sons you have?”
“There is still the youngest,” he answered, “but right now he’s tending the sheep.” Samuel told Jesse,
“Send for him. We won’t sit down to eat until he gets here.” So Jesse sent for him. He had beautiful
eyes and a healthy, handsome appearance.
Then the Lord said, “Anoint him, for he is the one.” (1 Samuel 16:11-12 HCSB)
David was healthy and his eyes were beautiful; he probably would have been great at magic eye posters.
But this story is not about what David could see, but about what Samuel could see in David when he
looked at him through God’s perspective.
I’m just going to have to trust all of you who tell me there are neat pictures in those frustrating posters.
And when I find myself in difficult circumstances and struggle to see God in them, I’ll just have to trust
Him when He says He’ll never leave me nor forsake me.
By Mark Stuart
Mark is the husband of Laura, father of Shelby and Jacob, and father-in-law of Bailey.
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