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A Prayer to Remove the Plank in Your Own Eye

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It is remarkably easy to spot what is wrong with someone else. The critical word they said, the choice they made, the pattern we have noticed in them for years — we can see it clearly, name it precisely, and feel entirely justified in pointing it out. What is far more difficult is turning that same clear-eyed attention on ourselves. And yet that is exactly what Jesus asks us to do before we say a single word about the speck in our brother's eye.

The image Jesus uses in Matthew 7 is almost comical in its exaggeration — and intentionally so. A large beam of timber in your own eye while you lean in to examine a tiny fleck of sawdust in someone else's. The contrast is meant to stop us cold and make us ask the honest question: what am I not seeing in myself right now? Hypocrisy is rarely felt from the inside — it almost always has a convincing explanation, a reasonable justification, a way of looking like discernment rather than deflection. That is why Jesus calls us to a daily practice of self-examination, asking God to reveal what our own blind spots will not let us see. This is not about becoming so self-absorbed in our own sin that we never speak truth to others — Jesus actually affirms that we should address sin in a fellow believer's life. But we must do the hard, humbling work of honest self-reflection first, so that when we do speak, our words carry the weight of integrity rather than the hollowness of hypocrisy.


Today's Bible Verse

"Why do you look at the speck of sawdust in your brother's eye and pay no attention to the plank in your own eye? You hypocrite, first take the plank out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to remove the speck from your brother's eye."Matthew 7:3-5


Ponder Today

  1. We are often genuinely blind to our own sin — not always out of dishonesty, but because our own justifications and rationalizations obscure what is right in front of us.
  2. The plank-and-speck image is deliberately exaggerated to jolt us into honest self-examination — Jesus wants us to laugh at the absurdity of it and then feel the conviction of its truth.
  3. Asking God every morning to reveal any sin in our lives is one of the most spiritually protective habits we can build — it keeps our hearts soft and our eyes clear.
  4. Jesus does not forbid us from addressing sin in other believers' lives — He simply insists that we do the honest work of self-examination first, so that we can speak with integrity rather than hypocrisy.
  5. No one will receive correction from someone they can see is living with their own unaddressed sin — removing the plank from our own eye is what gives our words weight and our lives credibility.

Today's Prayer

Dear Jesus, I confess that I have been trying to remove the speck from my brother's eye while struggling with a plank in my own. Forgive me for this hypocrisy. It is easy to call out sin in other people's lives, but terribly difficult to honestly face it in my own. Open my eyes to the sin I have been blind to, and show me the damage it has caused. Help me remove the plank and truly live in obedience to You. And when I do need to address sin in a fellow believer's life, help me do so with kindness, compassion, and humility — not from a place of judgment, but from a heart that has first knelt before You. I give You all the praise and glory, Lord. Amen.


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