God does not judge by external appearance. |
—Galatians 2:6 |
I remember Cordelia as a woman from my childhood who attended my little country church. Cordelia stood out among the farm women in the congregation. As she sat in the pew, Sunday after Sunday, her trim figure displayed showy, colorful clothing, topped off with large stylish hats. Cordelia’s husband wasn’t a farmer like most of the men of the congregation either. They lived in a tidy little ranch house at the edge of the small nearby town. Cordelia painted in oils, and she had quite a reputation for her artistry. Yet, here she sat with her red fingernails, in her mink stoles that intrigued me with the mink’s beady eyes, and her “just-so” demeanor.
I wonder if the Early Church, described in the Book of Acts, had characters like Cordelia—just a little out of place style-wise, but perfectly at home in God’s house. I think I’ve found such a woman in Acts 16. Her name was Lydia. She was a Gentile from Thyatira in Asia. She was known as a “seller of purple.” She apparently had means, influence, and a large enough house to serve as the church meeting place in Philippi.
This woman, if not the very first, must have been one of the first converts to Christianity in the continent of Europe. As soon as the Lord opened her heart, she and her household were baptized, and immediately she offered hospitality to the evangelistic team who had come to their region. Her life had been changed by her coming to know the Lord Jesus Christ, through the ministry of the Apostle Paul.
Sometimes Christians pre-judge others by their outward appearance, by how they “fit in and look the part.” Writing in Galatians 2:6, the Apostle Paul makes it clear:
God does not judge by external appearance.
Also, in 1 Samuel 16:7, the Lord said to Samuel:
The Lord does not look at the things man looks at. Man looks at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart.
Wouldn’t it be fun to find a “Lydia” right smack-dab in the middle of our church who doesn’t “look” like we might expect her to look? Be alert! There probably is a one-of-a-kind, genuine, disciple there, who doesn’t look the part—at least as we would see it. God may have some wonderful surprises ahead. We must remember that God doesn’t see things the same way we do.