I don’t know who came up with the idea that “seeing is believing” but they couldn’t have been more wrong. Trusting what you see is one of the fastest ways to get you into trouble! I think we all recognize that we can’t trust our eyes. That’s why it’s so fun to play with optical illusions.

Yet the truth is, we live in a world that is visually manipulated. Like optical illusions sometimes it’s for fun. But other times it’s done intentionally, with the goal of manipulating us. Our advertisements are manipulated. Our television images are manipulated. Even the “truth” is manipulated. We are surrounded by distortions of what “real” is.
Now I get what some of you are thinking. ”Sure, we get that the news portrays current events for ratings not news.” Or, “I know Hollywood is full of it, I’ve seen Mythbusters!” The sentiment is that manipulating what we see just isn’t that big of a deal. “It’s only TV.”
But is it?
Sins like greed and lust work on this exact principle. They tell us that what we don’t have is more appealing that what we do have. Lust plants the idea that what we need, no, what we deserve, is another woman (or man). While greed whispers that we owe it to ourselves to get a “little more” money no matter the cost.
Consistently the world tells us that if only we would go after those things will we be satisfied. We just need to consume more things and then we’ll be happy. Just one more drink. Just one more cigarette. Just one more purchase.
Can you feel it? Can you feel those desires tugging at your heart?
I can. And the truth is, sometimes they win.
What we see is a lie. What we see is not reality. It’s a myth. It’s something the world desperately wants to be true, but is so far from God’s Kingdom. Think about your own life, and then compare it to what we see. Hollywood portrays sex and drugs as ways to live your life. But when you have sex and do drugs does your life improve? Or do you feel more empty than when you began? Hollywood never shows us the consequences. Because that would show that their world doesn’t exist.
Advertisements tell us that we’ll be happy if only we have a new set of furniture, or a new game, or a nice vacation. But do you feel satisfied after that purchase? Or do you feel stress, fear, and worry because you don’t know how you’ll pay for it. Advertisements show us a great life - but they don’t tell us that the happy couple doesn’t exist.
Only God offers us a clear image into reality. Everything else is photoshopped.








