I'm sure you've noticed how our world today is intoxicated with outward beauty and trying to fix all that. Many people spend a lot looking for love, and trying to fill that inner empty void.
It's The Heart That God Sees.
He sees it all, all that's going on here, but He's looking for pure hearts.
From social media algorithms to celebrity culture, outward physical appearance seems to reign here. Attractive young people are often treated like royalty, with their looks mistaken for virtue. But God’s vision cuts deeper than the human eye ever can.
When the prophet Samuel stood in Jesse’s house to anoint Israel’s next king, he was sure the crown would go to Eliab—strong, tall, regal. But God said:
“Do not look on his appearance…for the Lord sees not as man sees: man looks on the outward appearance, but the Lord looks on the heart.” —1 Samuel 16:7
This wasn’t just a lesson for Samuel. It’s a warning to all who judge by the visible and overlook the invisible. God does not crown the outwardly impressive. He crowns the inwardly faithful.
Jesse had one more son—David. A teenage shepherd so overlooked that he wasn’t even invited to the meeting. In that culture, shepherds were nobodies. Disrespected. Untrusted. The testimony of a shepherd wasn’t admissible in court. To Jesse, David was just the youngest—barely worth mentioning.
But God saw what no one else did.
God didn’t see the sheep smell or the dirt under David’s fingernails. He saw a heart that would sing Psalms in caves, dance before the Ark, and weep in repentance. He saw a future king whose throne would one day be occupied by the Messiah Himself.
That’s how God works. He bypasses the stage lights of human approval and chooses the quiet soul who walks with Him in the shadows.
“Even if my father and mother abandon me, the Lord will hold me close.” —Psalm 27:10
That verse, written by David, suggests personal pain. Perhaps Jesse never truly valued him. Perhaps rejection was a familiar ache. And yet, God’s acceptance eclipsed every human slight.
Barna Research confirms that over 60% of Christians say wounds from childhood still shape their self-worth. But the gospel rewrites our story. God doesn’t just mend the broken; He exalts them.
As Charles Spurgeon once said: “God does not need your strength: He has more than enough of His own. He asks for your weakness, that He may show His strength.”
Scripture is filled with Davids—unwanted sons, barren women, tax collectors, fishermen—those whom society dismisses, but heaven crowns. Beauty may win attention, but character wins favor with God.
So if you’ve ever felt invisible, overlooked, or forgotten—even by those who should’ve loved you most—remember:
The God who formed your heart sees it, treasures it, and calls it worthy.
He does not overlook what the world ignores.
As the hymn says:
“His eye is on the sparrow, and I know He watches me.”
Let that truth steady your heart today. In the kingdom of God, no one is “just” anything. Not “just a shepherd.” Not “just a woman.” Not “just a broken soul.”
You are seen. You are loved. And you are chosen for His purposes.
Come to Jesus as you are -- He will indeed save and improve upon.
Some of you need to polish your exterior a bit (just kidding. No, for real, kinda not kidding)—but do cultivate your interior in Christ (that's far more important). That’s what God always sees. He's the one with an inside look.
Q: Have you seen all those A-list actors and other famous people lately who once looked so outwardly beautiful but now don't?
Some of them felt hungry and ate way too much and didn't seem to stop. Obesity is a killer.
Some partied hardy, they drank and did drugs unto wreckage and some to street-living.
Some just non-gracefully aged instead of gracefully. Poor genes?
Remember the "Sydney Sweeney has great jeans" advertising campaign (it was about outward appearance)? It sparked an online backlash, with critics falsely saying it promotes eugenics.
Then, President Donald Trump piggybacked on the comments, drawing a link between immigration, violent crime, and genetics, stating, “We've got a lot of bad genes in our country right now.” Just sayin'.
We live in such a youth and sex-crazed culture still. Many famous people have really overdone it on cosmetic surgeries, and now they look so hideous, unrecognizable. Many won't even come out in public anymore. They were attractive, they once "had it" but now they don't and are desperate to regain it.
I've heard that 75% of the reason an employer hires a worker is due to their outward appearance and demeanor.
Outward appearance and demeanor seem to really influence hiring decisions these days, particularly in the initial stages (it's long been like that). It's said that the influence of appearance somehow makes an impact in the workplace.
- First Impressions and Snap Judgments: "You only get one shot at making a first impression", "First impressions are lasting impressions." Studies show that employers form initial impressions of candidates in a very short amount of time, sometimes just a few seconds. Appearance and demeanor contribute to these snap judgments, potentially influencing perceptions of professionalism, confidence, and "fit" within the organization.
- The Outward "Beauty Premium": Research consistently says that conventionally attractive individuals experience advantages in the hiring process, such as being more likely to be interviewed, receiving more favorable evaluations, and even being offered higher starting salaries. This phenomenon is sometimes referred to as the "beauty premium".
- Bias and Stereotypes: Unconscious biases can lead hiring managers to associate attractiveness with positive traits like competence, confidence, and likeability, potentially overshadowing other qualifications. This can lead to situations where less qualified but more attractive candidates are favored over more qualified but less attractive ones.
- Job-Relevant Factors: While appearance can have an impact, it's crucial to note that skills, experience, and qualifications remain essential for long-term success in most roles. Employers are unlikely to retain someone based solely on appearance if they cannot perform the job well.
- Protected Characteristics: Laws prohibit discrimination based on protected characteristics like race, gender, age, religion, and disability.. but employers are still hiring who they want to hire.
- Holy Spirit, help people like me be more like the Lord.. good reps for the Father. Sure, as much as we can in different areas of this life here--we want people drawn towards Jesus. You do the drawing as You point to Him. Please use us anyway You like.
- Are you overly worried about how you look, believer? Stop that, you'll soon get a new body.
- How is a beautiful woman without discretion like a gold ring in a pig’s snout (Proverbs 11:22)?
- To “gaze upon the beauty of the Lord” refers to David's desire to worship and adore God simply for who He is and not what He could get from Him.
Religious people even now.. to me they seem to be the same yesterday, today and forever. I certainly don't hate them. God wants me to show them His love as well.
They want to look and sound really pious and good outwardly for the approval of people. Don't at all want to be like them!
The Bible says, "They will act religious, but they will reject the power that could make them godly. Stay away from people like that! " 2 Timothy 3:5
Jesus was referring to God’s words recorded in Isaiah 29:13 when He said, “These people honor me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me” (Matthew 15:8 nlt). And while outward spiritual actions may fool many onlookers, they can never fool the Lord.
Remember: “The Lord doesn’t see things the way you see them. People judge by outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart” (1 Samuel 16:7 nlt).
Two people can hear the same gospel message today -- one heart melts like wax before a flame, while the other hardens like clay in the sun. Two different results.
Cain and Abel prove it to be so—two brothers, same parents, same home, same truth from the same God. Yet one’s faith rang true, and the other’s was a hollow shell, hiding the jealousy and anger that erupted in a real murder (See Genesis 4).
We choose Jesus to save us, or we put that off. Did you know that your lost heart can become hardened as you sit in a church year after year, religious person. It can happen, don't let that happen. Repent and get real. Get saved by Jesus and His gospel.
Cain’s story warns us: it’s possible to walk, talk, and dress like a real believer looking right from the outside, yet have no real pulse of spiritual life.
Again, the Apostle Paul warned, “They will act religious, but they will reject the power that could make them godly” (2 Timothy 3:5 nlt).
Many people sing the songs at church, but their hearts aren't saved or worshipping the Lord at all. They are still dead inside, looking churchy -- they hum to another tune. As Vance Havner once said, “Satan is not fighting churches—he’s joining them.”
History and Scripture overflow with sobering warnings from examples that we need to take heed to: Cain offered. Esau wept. Gehazi served. Judas apparently followed. Yes, it appeared so. The Pharisees prayed..long.
The rich young ruler appeared right, but then walked away from Jesus. So SO sad, how he approached Jesus, appearing open to truth, with a seemingly earnest question about eternal life, but ultimately he turns away. Idols can't save anyone.
The foolish bridesmaids carried lamps. But each, without a surrendered heart, didn't all of them remain lost. Who wants that!? Lip-service type of faith come off nice. It fools the crowd but never Christ: “These people honor me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me” (Matthew 15:8 NLT).
In a Barna survey, 65% of Americans self-identified as Christian, yet only 6% held a biblical worldview. Something needs to change on the inside of a person. The entry is free, but it costs a believer to follow. The gap between professing and possessing faith is wider than most people imagine. Outward religion is so easy (appears right); inward regeneration and the transformation of sanctification will cost you everything. Be willing to lay it all down to follow Christ home.
One day, every mask will fall, and every heart will be weighed. Jesus Himself said, “Not everyone who calls out to me, ‘Lord! Lord!’ will enter the Kingdom.. only those who actually do the will of my Father” (Matthew 7:21 nlt). He’s not after mere outward performance or ritual—He wants the person. All of you.
True Christianity isn’t about you looking the part well or at all—so be real. It’s about losing your life to gain His (Luke 9:23–24). Jesus be Savior and Lord of my life!
It’s the difference between wearing a wedding ring and actually loving your spouse that you actually married. A life commitment that God helps you keep. The Lord doesn’t scan for mere polish; He searches for authentic purity as we walk with God (See 1 Samuel 16:7).
Okay, so here’s the invitation: Repent and come to Christ. He offers not just faith to believe, but heaven in the future. He offers life abundant here today and non-stop (See John 10:10).
"The thief comes only in order to steal and kill and destroy. I came that they may have and enjoy life, and have it in abundance to the full, till it overflows." John 10:10 amp
You’ll never taste it if you’re content to play-act all religious instead of being born again into a living hope. God wants you. He wants your whole heart, all of you—not a borrowed script.
I don't love the worldsystem, but “Jesus is all the world to me, my life, my joy, my all; from Him I’ll never turn away, my Savior, my God.”
This isn’t about looking Christian at all. We avoid all appearance of evil and it’s about loving Christ authentically. And love, when real, changes everything. It works it's way out in your life.
The Bible says, "But the LORD said to Samuel, ‘Don’t judge by his appearance or height, for I have rejected him. The LORD doesn’t see things the way you see them. People judge by outward appearance, but the LORD looks at the heart." 1 Samuel 16:7
In a world obsessed with image, God remains resolutely focused on the heart.
Today’s worldly culture crowns mere outward youth and charisma over inner godly character and holiness. It rewards nice symmetry, strange styles for hyper-thin people, and social media gloss and shine. But God’s gaze bypasses the skin and looks straight into the soul of a person. As He told Samuel right there on Jesse’s home turf.
It's true. God the Father, Son and Holy Spirit doesn’t see things the same way that you and I see them.
We do ask for God's perspective--Lord, please help us discern and see things.. even people, the way you see them.. with potential as Christians.
Samuel nearly made the same mistake that many of us do. He saw Eliab—tall, impressive, with that natural leader look—and assumed this must be God’s chosen king. But God had already rejected him as the future king. God wasn’t recruiting a celebrity here. He was seeking a servant with a heart of worship.
DAVID: A SHEPHERD, A SINGER, A SOLDIER—AND A SURPRISE
David was not the obvious pick for any of us human. He was the youngest, ruddy, stuck out in the fields, smelling like sheep perhaps, scribbling down poetic lyrics, and playing a harp. In Jesse’s eyes, David wasn’t even worth introducing. “He’s just watching the sheep,” Jesse said dismissively.
But heaven (the Trinity) had been watching David’s heart. And God basically said, “That’s my boy. Anoint him.”
David—a nobody from nowhere—became Israel’s greatest king and ancestor to the Messiah Himself. His story reminds us that God’s greatest works often begin in hidden meadows or other obscure places.
As missionary Amy Carmichael wrote:
“A quiet heart is content with what God gives. It is enough.”
David, content in the shadows, had a heart God could use in the spotlight.
MODERN PARALLEL: THE GROCERY CLERK GOD USED
Please go read about men of God in the 1800s. There was this quiet shoe clerk named Edward Kimball. He prayed over his Sunday School boys with tears and great care. One of them, Dwight L. Moody, became the most powerful evangelist of his generation. Mr. Kimball never filled stadiums—but he had the heart that touched one who would.. one that God used to do that.
The world barely noticed Mr. Kimball. But God did and does people just like him today.
JESUS: THE UNEXPECTED SAVIOR
Even Jesus, the Son of David, came as the son of a carpenter from a no-name town (he might have done some carpentry work, too).
“There was nothing beautiful or majestic about his appearance, nothing to attract us to him.” —Isaiah 53:2 (NLT)
He didn’t match the world’s idea of a king. No crown, no armor, no pedigree in politics. Had no dad who had been a king. Yet this eternal King wore thorns as a crown, not gold, and He brought salvation from a cross, not a throne.
As the hymn reminds us:
“He had no stately form, He had no majesty,
That we should be drawn to Him.
He was despised, and we took no account of Him.
Yet now He reigns with the Most High.”
—How Deep the Father’s Love for Us, by Stuart Townend
THE WISDOM OF GOD’S WAYS
Saul had the look but lacked the life. David had the heart but not the height. And yet, God said of David:
“I have found David... a man after My own heart, who will do all My will.” —Acts 13:22 (ESV)
As Tozer wrote:
“A true and safe leader is likely one who has no desire to lead, but is forced into a position of leadership by the inward pressure of the Holy Spirit.”
APPLICATION: GOD USES WHOEVER IS WILLING
Barna research has shown that 70% of young adults feel “unseen” by their community. But God sees you. He isn’t scouting talent like a recruiter. He’s listening for hearts that whisper, “Here I am, Lord. Send me.”
God is not looking for ability but availability. He doesn't call the already equipped; He equips the called. He supplies the rest.
“I’m just a nobody trying to tell everybody
All about Somebody who saved my soul.”
—Casting Crowns, “Nobody”
THE POINT: LOOK PAST THE SURFACE—IN OTHERS AND IN YOURSELF
Don’t underestimate people who don’t look the part. That shepherd might be a king-in-waiting. And don’t disqualify yourself, either. You don’t have to be impressive to be chosen. You just have to be His.
Your story is not finished. Your value is not in your image but in His imprint.
“You are altogether beautiful, my darling; there is no flaw in you.” —Song of Solomon 4:7 (ESV)
Because the world may reward the outwardly well-polished (by birth or spending).
But God—He anoints the pure.
I want to challenge you to take a prayer-pause today, believer. Call upon the Lord in sincerity.
Look beyond that mirror or selfie pic. Beyond the suits, the great jeans, the Insta-filters, those scars, the resumes, the worldly filters! And ask yourself:
Is my heart right with God because of the Cross today, due to true repentance and faith in Jesus? Is my heart after God's own heart like David's was? On the inside (which is far more important than on the outside)? Is my heart burning red-hot with passion for Jesus, or lukewarm, or cold spiritually? Am I in the Word and available to know, to serve, and to closely follow the Lord Jesus today? Come / come back as you are willing to be changed! Get home before dark!
* There Once Were Two Handsome Farmers
Outside a drought-stricken village, two farmers had prayed for rain. One prayed and went home. The other prayed, and then he plowed his field. When the clouds finally broke, only one had prepared for the blessing God sent. Hearing God’s Bible truths believer is sorta like evaluating while praying for rain—you can sit back and merely hope, or you can memorize a few Scriptures as you reach out to God so He'll use you. Seed planting, watering, harvesting -- you want to be apart with Him huh? You can ready your life for the harvest that God is willing to send for you to reap. Yep, He can use you to save a soul. Faith that doesn’t move your hands and person to do good things.. is that really faith at all?
* The Soldier’s Beautiful Medal
A soldier kept a medal given to him by his grandfather, who had fought in WWII. He wore it proudly on his jacket, it looked kinda cool.. telling stories of great courage and sacrifice. But when a just war came to his own doorstep, he refused to go serve—feeling afraid inside, unwilling, and unconvinced about all the details of it. He could have prayed. He loved the symbol but not the good service that it represented. Jesus warned us of the same sort of thing: those who wear the name “Christian” but shrink back from obeying Him when the moment demands it. Why stay a mere poser? Honor without action is just cheap costume jewelry. The term minister still means servant. Many of the religious leaders of Jesus' day expected to be served, and even those of our day, they love the outward symbols but not serving the Lord. They didn't love genuine service where the Holy Spirit can wisely work through a child of God in the Kingdom.. for the benefit of other people.
Don't put it off another day. Ask for Christ's free forgiveness and infilling. Come to Jesus as you are, sincerely confess and repent, willing to be made new by Him. Righteous relationship instead of self-righteous religion is what the Lord wants from you and me.