The Struggle Between Good and Evil in the Human Soul
Isaiah 1:16-17
Wash you, make you clean; put away the evil of your doings from before my eyes; cease to do evil;


We see what the author has produced, but we do not see what he has destroyed. The book comes out in fair copy, and we, looking upon the surface only, say, How well done! Who can tell what that "fair copy" cost? We see the picture hung upon the wall for exhibition, but we do not see how much canvas was thrown away, or how many outlines were discarded, or how many efforts were pronounced unworthy. We only see the last or best. So much is to be done in private with regard to learning to do well. We do not live our whole life in public. We make an effort in solitude: it is a failure; we throw it away; we acknowledge its existence tone one: still, we are acquiring skill — practice makes perfect — and when we do our first act of virtue in the public sight people may suppose that we are all but prodigies and miracles, so well was the deed done. Only God's eye saw the process which led up to it. This is a characteristic of Divine grace, that it sets down every attempt as a success, it marks every failure honestly done as a victory already crowned. So we are losing nothing even on the road. The very learning is itself an education; the very attempt to do, though we fail of doing, itself gives strength, and encouragement, and confidence. In learning to do well we assist the negative work of ceasing to do evil.

(J. Parker, D. D.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: Wash you, make you clean; put away the evil of your doings from before mine eyes; cease to do evil;

WEB: Wash yourselves, make yourself clean. Put away the evil of your doings from before my eyes. Cease to do evil.




The Prophetic Temper in James Russell Lowell
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