sent by Van Mason
Iris
Global
Pemba, Mozambique
25 January
2016
“The human heart is the very throne and
citadel of God. When he moves
in, heaven begins.” —Sadhu Sundar
Singh
I want to write about the heart. That’s
what determines who we are, what
we’re worth to God, what we
mean to God—and what we mean to each other.
It’s not about who’s
the smartest, or the most educated or even the most
anointed.
None of the above. We look on the outside; Jesus looks on
the
heart. We look at ability, leadership, skills and power, but
he looks on
the heart. You can’t hide it from him. You can hide
it from people. You
can even hide it from your own family. You
can hide it from your church
and hide it from your friends, but
you can’t hide your heart from God.
It’s what’s in the heart
that matters.
We look for something else, and
so we hide our hearts. We hide what’s
really the motivation
behind all we think, say and do. But God looks at
our
motivation. By that standard nobody can stand without the blood
of
Jesus. And by that definition, a change of heart is the
biggest miracle,
the most important miracle and the only miracle
that really matters. We
need all the other miracles. We need
health and wealth more than anybody
in Mozambique. But God could
fork over all the money we want in a day.
He could heal
everybody in Mozambique in a day. But he spends an
entire
lifetime working on a believer’s heart. The heart is His
greatest
masterpiece, his greatest creation. That’s what he’s
interested in—your
heart. We are desperate for him to heal our
diseases and pay our rent,
but we should be even more desperate
for a clean heart. Jesus said, “If
you abide in me, and my words
abide in you, ask whatever you wish, and
it will be done for
you.” How’s that for a definition of real, pure
revival? If we
do what he says, he will do what we say.
So
many want the secret to power, miracles and manifestations. But
it’s
a question of the heart. Faith is not just some power that
makes God do
what you want, producing miracles magically. Faith
is knowing God well
enough to know what he wants to do in a
given situation. When you carry
his heart, you know how to pray,
and he’s delighted to do what you ask.
God “fashions the hearts
of them all…” (Psalm 33:15). It is God who
fashions hearts, not
you. You can’t take your heart and change it. It’s
not your
creation. It’s not in your power to fix it. He creates
hearts,
he fashions them into what he wants. You are his
workmanship. You don’t
deserve a better heart, but he makes one
anyway. You don’t have a good
heart naturally; nobody does! The
greatest miracle there could possibly
be is that this God of
ours comes down into this sinful world and
fashions hearts after
his own design and desire.
It’s the heart that
determines everything. A good heart can appreciate
and enjoy
everything that is good. A bad heart can’t appreciate
anything.
What messes life up and steals your joy is a bad
heart.
You need understanding to keep God’s law
with all your heart. With a
good heart, you can rejoice with
those who rejoice, and be glad always.
Proverbs tells us to
trust in the Lord with all our hearts and not to
lean on our own
understanding. You don’t have to understand everything.
You
don’t have to figure everything out if you are able to trust
God
with your whole heart. So what’s the problem? As Jeremiah
says, “The
heart is more deceitful than all else, and is
desperately sick.” What’s
the problem with life? The heart is
the problem, the heart is deceitful.
The heart is the whole
issue. Jesus says, “Blessed are the pure in
heart, for they will
see God.” How many want to see God? Well, you can’t
just teach
people how to “visit heaven.” You need a pure heart. Can
you
imagine how nice and peaceful life would be with a pure
heart? If you
had one, trusting God would be easy! Life would be
peaceful, whatever
the swirl and tribulation around you. Why are
we so hungry for
everything else? Why are so many messages about
other things? We have a
long list of requests, but with a pure
heart, it wouldn’t matter if you
were rich or poor, where you
were born, what your situation is. With a
pure heart, you enjoy
everything—friends, family, challenges, and
suffering for
righteousness’ sake. With little or much, you have
strength to
endure all things.
“For where your treasure is,
there your heart will be also.…” Where is
your treasure? Where
have you set your heart? When you get up in the
morning, where
do you set your heart? To have motivation in anything,
you have
to set your heart somewhere. What is it that motivates you
to
roll out of bed in the morning and do something? Where is
your treasure?
What are you thinking about? What motivates you?
By now I have found
there is only one place to set it, and
that’s Jesus himself. That
includes Father, Son and Spirit—God.
Set your heart on him and nowhere
else. That’s the only way to
make progress toward a pure one. If you set
your heart on
anything else, you’re an idolater, an adulterer, and you
can’t
be pure.
Holiness and Jesus are the same thing.
A pure heart and God are the same
thing. Jesus has become to us
our sanctification. He is our heart. Those
who join themselves
to the Lord become one with him. Union with God has
always been
the goal of the great mystics of the Church. We partake of
his
nature and become like him. It’s personal, it’s relational and
it
satisfies. If you set your heart on anything else your heart
will not be
satisfied. You will still be heartsick. “Take my
yoke upon you and learn
from me, for I am gentle and humble in
heart, and you will find rest for
your
souls.”
Jesus explained, “A good man brings
good things out of the good stored
in his heart. And an evil man
brings evil things out of the evil stored
in his heart….” What
is in your heart is going to come out. It’s going
to shape your
life; it’s going to affect everything you do. A lot of
people
pretend. They look like they’re doing good things. They look
like
they’re successful. They look like good people. But God
sees the heart.
He weighs the motivation of the heart. And it
will come out eventually.
It will be made clear. It will become
obvious to everybody what is in
your heart. You can’t maintain a
facade forever. It will come out in
your actions. It will be
known. The fruit will manifest, good or bad.
You can’t put on an
act. It’s your heart that determines what kind of
eternity
you’re going to have.
We are God’s workmanship,
and he is not finished with us. We are
continually on the
potter’s wheel, being molded and shaped into the
image of love,
which is Jesus himself.
Good hearts produce
fruit and a good crop. The most valuable thing you
could ever
pray for is a pure heart. And only God can give you this.
“Do
not set your heart on what you will eat or drink, do not
worry about it.
Be careful or your hearts will be weighed down
with the anxieties of
life. And that day will close on you
suddenly like a trap.” Jesus says
to the Pharisees, “I know you.
I know you do not have the love of God in
your hearts.”
Everything is about the heart. Jesus taught and taught,
and it
was all about the heart. That’s all that mattered to
him.
“Peace I leave you. My peace I give to
you. I do not give peace as the
world gives. Do not let your
hearts be troubled and do not be afraid.”
Do you have a troubled
heart? You can have everything in the world, but
what’s the
point if your heart is troubled? If your heart is troubled
no
amount of luxury is going to help. The slightest bit of sin
is going to
trouble your heart. Why would you want to do
anything that is going to
trouble your heart? Sin is anything
that takes away your joy. Why is
that? Because it spoils your
heart. “Therefore, my heart is glad and my
tongue rejoices.…”
Hearts are supposed to be glad. That is the normal
Christian
heart.
When people get convicted, they get cut
to the heart, to the very core
of their being. A lot of people
need their hearts cut to the core,
sliced to the guts. Would you
like the Holy Spirit to shine so deep into
your heart that
everything is revealed and cleaned out? That doesn’t
just happen
because you declare, “God likes me the way I am.” Yes, He
loves
you, but it doesn’t mean he likes what’s in there. We need to
be
fixed. We need to come before Jesus totally empty and say, “I
just want
a clean, pure heart. That’s what I want from God.”
That’s how I see
revival—huge numbers of people pouring forward
to get a clean heart.
Then miracles will
follow.
What if we decided that all we wanted
was to be a people after God’s
heart, seeking what he wants us
to do rather than trying to convince him
of our own plans. God
said of David, “I have found David son of Jesse a
man after my
own heart; he will do everything I want him to do.”
Wouldn’t it
be amazing if God said the same about us! And in return
God
gives us the desire of our
hearts—himself.
Onward and upward in Jesus!
—Rolland
No comments:
Post a Comment