"Give me your heart."
Proverbs 23:26
"Your heart is not right in the sight of God." Acts 8:21
The heart is the main thing in true
religion. I make no excuse for asking the special attention of my readers,
while I try to say a few things about the heart.
The head is not the principal thing.
You may know the whole truth as it is in Jesus, and consent that it is good.
You may be clear, correct, and sound in your religious opinions. But all
this time you may be walking in the broad way which leads to destruction. It
is your heart which is the main point. "Is your heart right in the sight of
God?"
Your outward life may be moral,
decent, respectable, in the eyes of people. Your minister, and friends, and
neighbors, may see nothing very wrong in your general conduct. But all this
time you may be hanging on the brink of everlasting ruin. It is your heart
which is the main thing. Is that heart right in the sight of God?
Wishes and desires are not enough to
make a Christian. You may have many good feelings about your soul. You may,
like Balaam, long to "die the death of the righteous." (Num. 23:10.) You may
sometimes tremble at the thought of judgment to come, or be melted to tears
by the tidings of Christ's love. But all this time you may be slowly
drifting downward into hell. It is your heart which is the main thing. Is
that heart right in the sight of God?
There are three things which I propose
to do in order to impress the subject of this paper upon your mind.
I. First, I will show you the
immense importance of the heart in religion.
II. Secondly, I will show you the
heart which is wrong in the sight of God.
III. Lastly, I will show you the
heart which is right in the sight of God.
May God bless the whole subject to the
soul of everyone into whose hands this book may fall! May the Holy Spirit,
without whom all preaching and writing can do nothing, apply this paper to
many consciences, and make it an arrow to pierce many hearts!
I. In the first place, I will show the immense IMPORTANCE of the heart in
religion.
How shall I prove this point? From
whence shall I fetch my arguments? I must turn to the Word of God. In
questions of this kind it matters nothing what the world thinks right or
wrong. There is only one sure test of truth. What says the Scripture? What
is written in the Bible? What is the mind of the Holy Spirit? If we cannot
submit our judgments to this infallible umpire, it is useless to pretend
that we have any religion at all.
For one thing, the Bible teaches that
the heart is that part of us on which the state of our soul depends. "Out of
it are the issues of life." (Prov. 4:23.) The reason, the understanding, the
conscience, the affections, are all second in importance to the heart. The
heart is the man. It is the seat of all spiritual life, and health, and
strength, and growth. It is the hinge and turning-point in the condition of
man's soul. If the heart is alive to God and quickened by the Spirit, the
man is a living Christian. If the heart is dead and has not the Spirit, the
man is dead before God. The heart is the man! Tell me not merely what a man
says and professes, and where a man goes on Sunday, and what money he puts
in the collecting plate. Tell me rather what his heart is, and I will tell
you what he is. "As a man thinks in his heart, so is he." (Prov. 23:7.)
For another thing, the Bible teaches
that the heart is that part of us at which God especially looks. "Man looks
at the outward appearance—but the Lord looks on the heart." (1 Sam. 16:7.)
"Every way of man is right in his own eyes—but the Lord ponders the heart."
(Proverbs 21:2.) Man is naturally content with the outward part of religion,
with outward morality, outward correctness, outward regular attendance on
means of grace. But the eyes of the Lord look much further. He regards our
motives. He "weighs the spirits." (Prov. 16:2.) He says Himself, "I the Lord
am the searcher of the heart, the tester of the thoughts." (Jer. 17:10.)
For another thing, the Bible teaches
that the heart is the first and foremost thing which God asks man to give
him. "My son," He says, "give Me your heart." (Prov., 23:26.) We may give
God a bowed head and a serious face, our bodily presence in His house, and a
loud amen. But until we give God our hearts, we give Him nothing of any
value. The sacrifices of the Jews in Isaiah's time were many and costly.
They drew near to God with their mouth, and honored Him with their lips. But
they were all wholly useless, because the heart of the worshipers was far
from God. (Matt. 15:8.) The zeal of Jehu against idolatry was very great,
and his services in pulling down idols brought him many temporal rewards.
But there was one great blot on his character which spoiled all. He did not
walk in the law of God "with all his heart." (2 Kings 10:31.) The heart is
what the husband desires to have in his wife, the parent in his child, and
the master in his servant. And the heart is what God desires to have in
professing Christians.
What is the heart in man's body? It is
the principal and most important organ in the whole frame. A man may live
many years in spite of fevers, wounds, and loss of limbs. But a man cannot
live if you injure his heart. Just so it is with the heart in religion. It
is the fountain of life to the soul.
What is the root to the tree? It is
the source of all life, and growth, and fruitfulness. You may cut off the
branches, and wound the trunk, and the tree may yet survive. But if you hurt
the root, the tree will die. Just so it is with the heart in religion. It is
the root of life to the soul.
What is the mainspring to the watch?
It is the cause of all its movements, and the secret of all its usefulness.
The case may be costly and beautiful. The face and figures may be skillfully
made. But if there is anything wrong with the mainspring the works will not
go. Just so it is with the heart in religion. It is the mainspring of life
to the soul.
What is the furnace to the steam
engine? It is the cause of all its motion and power. The machinery may be
properly made. Every screw, and valve, and joint, and crank, and rod may be
in its right place. But if the furnace is cold and the water is not turned
into steam, the engine will do nothing. Just so is it with the heart in
religion. Unless the heart is lighted with fire from on high, the soul will
not move.
Would you know the reason why such
multitudes around you take no interest in true religion? They have no real
concern about God, or Christ, or the Bible, or heaven, or hell, or judgment,
or eternity. They care for nothing but what they shall eat, or what they
shall drink, or what they shall put on, or what money they can get, or what
pleasure they can have. It is their heart which is in fault! They have not
the least appetite for the things of God. They are destitute of any taste or
inclination for spiritual things. They need a new mainspring. They need a
new heart. "Therefore is there a price in the hand of a fool to get wisdom,
seeing he has no heart unto it." (Prov. 17:16.)
Would you know the reason why so many
hear the Gospel year after year, and yet remain unmoved by it? Their minds
seem like Bunyan's "slough of despond." Cartloads of good instruction are
poured into them without producing any good effect. Their reason is
convinced. Their head assents to the truth. Their conscience is sometimes
pricked. Their feelings are sometimes roused. Why then do they stick fast?
Why do they tarry? It is their hearts which are in fault! Some secret idol
chains them down to the earth, and keeps them tied hand and foot, so that
they cannot move. They need a new heart. Their picture is drawn faithfully
by Ezekiel, "They sit before you as my people, and they hear your words—but
they will not do them—for with their mouth they show much love—but their
heart goes after their covetousness." (Ezek. 33:31.)
Would you know the reason why
thousands of so-called Christians will be lost at last, and perish miserably
in hell? They will not be able to say that God did not offer salvation to
them. They will not be able to plead that Christ did not send them
invitations. Oh no! They will be obliged to confess that "all things were
ready" for them, except their own hearts. Their own hearts will prove to
have been the cause of their ruin! The life-boat was alongside the wreck—but
they would not enter it. Christ "would" have gathered them—but they "would
not" be gathered. (Matt. 23:37.) Christ would have saved them—but they would
not be saved. "They loved darkness more than light." Their hearts were in
fault. "They would not come to Christ, that they might have life." (John
3:19; 5:40.)
I leave this branch of my subject. I
trust I have said enough to show you the immense importance of the heart in
religion. Surely I have good reason for pressing the subject of this paper
on your notice. Is your heart right? Is it right in the sight of God?
II. I will now show you, in the second place, the heart that is WRONG in
the sight of God. There are only two sorts of hearts, a right one and a
wrong one. What is a wrong heart like?
The wrong heart is the natural heart
with which we are all born. There are no hearts which are right by nature.
There are no such things as naturally "good hearts," whatever some ignorant
people may please to say about "having a good heart at the bottom." Ever
since Adam and Eve fell, and sin entered into the world, men and women are
born with an inclination to evil. Every natural heart is wrong. If your
heart has never been changed by the Holy Spirit since you were born, know
this day, that your heart is wrong.
What does the Scripture say about the
natural heart? It says many things which are deeply solemn, and painfully
true. It says that "the heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately
wicked." (Jer. 17:9.) It says that "every imagination of the thoughts of the
heart is only evil continually." (Gen. 6:5.) It says that "the heart of the
sons of men is full of evil." (Eccles. 9:3.) It says that "From within, out
of the heart of man," as out of a fountain, "proceed evil thoughts,
adulteries, fornications, murders, thefts, covetousness, wickedness, deceit,
lasciviousness, an evil eye, blasphemy, pride, foolishness. All these evil
things come from within." (Mark 7:21.) Truly this is a humbling picture! The
seeds of these things are in the heart of everyone born into the world.
Surely I may well tell you that the natural heart is wrong.
But is there no one common mark of the
wrong heart, which is to be seen in all whom God has not changed? Yes! there
is; and to that common mark of the wrong heart I now request your attention.
There is a most striking and instructive figure of speech, which the Holy
Spirit has thought fit to use, in describing the natural hear. He calls it a
"stony heart." (Ezek. 11:19.) I know no emblem in the Bible so full of
instruction, and so apt and fitting as this one. A truer word was never
written than that which calls the natural heart a heart of stone. Mark well
what I am going to say; and may the Lord give you understanding!
(a) A stone is HARD.
All people know that. It is
unyielding, unbending, unimpressible. It may be broken—but it will never
bend. The proverb is world-wide, "as hard as a stone." Look at the granite
rocks which line the coast of Cornwall. For four thousand years the waves of
the Atlantic Ocean have dashed against them in vain. There they stand in
their old hardness, unbroken and unmoved. It is just the same with the
natural heart. Afflictions, mercies, losses, crosses, sermons, counsels,
books, tracts, speaking, writing—all, all are unable to soften it. Until the
day that God comes down to change it, it remains unmoved. Well may the
natural heart be called a heart of stone!
(b) A stone is COLD.
There is a chilly, icy feeling about
it, which you know the moment you touch it. It is utterly unlike the feeling
of flesh, or wood, or even earth. The proverb is in everyone's mouth, "As
cold as a stone." The old marble statues in many a cathedral church have
heard the substance of thousands of sermons. Yet they never show any
feeling. Not a muscle of their marble faces ever shrinks or moves. It is
just the same with the natural heart. It is utterly destitute of spiritual
feeling. It cares less for the story of Christ's death on the cross, than it
does for the last new novel, or the last debate in Parliament, or the
account of a railway accident, or a shipwreck, or an execution. Until God
sends fire from heaven to warm it, the natural heart of man has no feeling
about religion. Well may it be called a heart of stone!
(c) A stone is BARREN.
You will reap no harvest off rocks of
any description. You will never fill your barns with grain from the top of
Snowdon or Ben Nevis. You will never reap wheat on granite, or slate, or on
flint. You may get good crops on Norfolk sands, or Cambridgeshire fens, or
Suffolk clay, by patience, labor, money, and good farming. But you will
never get a crop worth a farthing off a stone. It is just the same with the
natural heart. It is utterly barren of penitence, or faith, or love, or
fear, or holiness, or humility. Until God breaks it up, and puts a new
principle in it, it bears no fruit to God's praise. Well may the natural
heart be called a heart of stone!
(d) A stone is DEAD.
It neither sees, nor hears, nor moves,
nor grows. Show it the glories of heaven, and it would not be pleased. Tell
it of the fires of hell, and it would not be alarmed. Bid it flee from a
roaring lion, or an earthquake, and it would not stir. The Bass Rock and
Mount Blanc are just what they were 4000 years ago. They have seen kingdoms
rise and fall, and they remain utterly unchanged. They are neither higher,
nor broader, nor larger than they were when Noah left the ark. It is just
the same with the natural heart. It has not a spark of spiritual life about
it. Until God plants the Holy Spirit in it, it is dead and motionless about
real religion. Well may the natural heart be called a heart of stone!
The wrong heart is now set before you.
Look at it. Think about it. Examine yourself by the light of the picture I
have drawn. Perhaps your heart has never yet been changed. Perhaps your
heart is still just as it was when you were born. If so, remember this day
what I tell you. Your heart is wrong in the sight of God!
Would you know the reason why it is so
difficult to do good in the world? Would you know why so few believe the
Gospel, and live like true Christians? The reason is, the hardness of man's
natural heart. He neither sees nor knows what is for his good. The wonder,
to my mind, is not so much that few are converted, as the miraculous fact
that any are converted at all. I am not greatly surprised when I see or hear
of unbelief. I remember the natural heart is wrong.
Would you know the reason why the
state of people is so desperately helpless, if they die in their sins? Would
you know why ministers feel so fearful about everyone who is cut off
unprepared to meet God? The reason is, the hardness of man's natural heart.
What would a man do in heaven, if he got there, with his heart unchanged? By
which of the saints would he sit down? What pleasure could he take in God's
presence and company? Oh no! it is vain to conceal it. There can be no real
hope about a man's condition, if he dies with his heart wrong.
I leave this point here. Once more I
press the whole subject of my paper upon your conscience. Surely you must
allow it is a very serious one. Is your heart right? Is it right in the
sight of God?
III. I will now show you, in the last place, the right heart.
It is a heart of which the Bible
contains many pictures. I am going to try to place some of those pictures
before you. On a question like this, I want you to observe what God says,
rather than what is said by man. Come, now, and see the marks and signs of a
right heart.
(a) The right heart is a "NEW
heart." (Ezek. 36:26.)
It is not the heart with which a man
is born—but another heart put in him by the Holy Spirit. It is a heart which
has new tastes, new joys, new sorrows, new desires, new hopes, new fears,
new likes, new dislikes. It has new views about the soul, and sin, and God,
and Christ, and salvation, and the Bible, and prayer, and heaven, and hell,
and the world, and holiness. It is like a farm with a new and good tenant.
"Old things are passed away. Behold all things are become new." (2 Cor.
5:17.)
(b) The right heart is a "BROKEN
and CONTRITE heart." (Psalm 51:17.)
It is broken off from pride,
self-conceit, and self-righteousness. Its former high thoughts of self are
cracked, shattered, and shivered to atoms. It thinks itself guilty,
unworthy, and corrupt. Its former stubbornness, heaviness, and insensibility
have thawed, disappeared, and passed away. It no longer thinks lightly of
offending God. It is tender, sensitive, and jealously fearful of running
into sin. (2 Kings 22:19.) It is humble, lowly, and self-abased, and sees in
itself no good thing.
(c) A right heart is a heart which
BELIEVES on Christ alone for salvation, and in which Christ dwells by faith.
(Rom. 10:10; Eph. 3:17.)
It rests all its hopes of pardon and
eternal life on Christ's atonement, Christ's mediation, and Christ's
intercession. It is sprinkled in Christ's blood from an evil conscience.
(Heb. 10:22.) It turns to Christ as the compass-needle turns to the north.
It looks to Christ for daily peace, mercy, and grace—as the sun-flower looks
to the sun. It feeds on Christ for its daily sustenance, as Israel fed on
the manna in the wilderness. It sees in Christ a special fitness to supply
all its needs and requirements. It leans on Him, hangs on Him, builds on
Him, cleaves to Him, as its physician, guardian, husband, and friend.
(d) A right heart is a PURIFIED
heart. (Acts 15:9; Matt. 5:8)
It loves holiness, and hates sin. It
strives daily to cleanse itself from all filthiness of flesh and spirit. (2
Cor. 7:1.) It abhors that which is evil, and cleaves to that which is good.
It delights in the law of God, and has that law engraved on it, that it may
not forget it. (Psalm 119:11.) It longs to keep the law more perfectly, and
takes pleasure in those who love the law. It loves God and man. Its
affections are set on things above. It never feels so light and happy as
when it is most holy; and it looks forward to heaven with joy, as the place
where perfect holiness will at length be attained.
(e) A right heart is a PRAYING
heart. It has within it "the Spirit of adoption whereby we cry, Abba
Father." (Rom. 8:15.)
Its daily feeling is, "Your face,
Lord, will I seek." (Psalm 27:8.) It is drawn by an habitual inclination to
speak to God about spiritual things—weakly, feebly, and imperfectly
perhaps—but speak it must. It finds it necessary to pour out itself before
God, as before a friend, and to spread before Him all its needs and desires.
It tells Him all its secrets. It keeps back nothing from Him. You might as
well try to persuade a man to live without breathing, as to persuade the
possessor of a right heart to live without praying.
(f) A right heart is a heart that
feels within a CONFLICT. (Gal. 5:17.)
It finds within itself two opposing
principles contending for the mastery—the flesh lusting against the spirit,
and the spirit against the flesh. It knows by experience what Paul means
when he says, "I see a law in my members warring against the law of my
mind." (Rom. 7:23.) The wrong heart knows nothing of this strife. The strong
man armed keeps the wrong heart as his palace, and his goods are at peace.
(Luke 11:21.) But when the rightful King takes possession of the heart, a
struggle begins which never ends until death. The right heart may be known
by its warfare, quite as much as by its peace.
(g) Last—but not least, the right
heart is HONEST, and SINGLE, and TRUE. (Luke 8:15;1 Chron. 12:33; Heb.
10:22.)
There is nothing about it of
falsehood, hypocrisy, or image-acting. It is not double or divided. It
really is what it professes to be, feels what it professes to feel, and
believes what it professes to believe. Its faith may be feeble. Its
obedience may be very imperfect. But one thing will always distinguish the
right heart. Its religion will be real, genuine, thorough, and sincere.
A heart such as that which I have now
described, has always been the possession of all true Christians of every
name, and nation, and people and tongue. They have differed from one another
on many subjects—but they have all been of a "right heart." They have some
of them fallen, for a season, like David and Peter—but their hearts have
never entirely departed from the Lord. They have often proved themselves to
be men and women laden with infirmities—but their hearts have been right in
the sight of God. They have understood one another on earth. They have found
that their experience was everywhere one and the same. They will understand
each other even better in the world to come. All that have had "right
hearts" upon earth, will find that they have one heart when they enter
heaven.
CONCLUSION
(1) I wish now in conclusion to
offer to every reader of this paper, a QUESTION to promote self inquiry. I
ask you plainly this day, "What is your heart? Is your heart right or
wrong?"
I know not who you are into whose
hands this paper have fallen. But I do know that self-examination cannot do
you any harm. If your heart is right, it will be a comfort to know it. "If
our heart condemns us not, then have we confidence towards God." (1 John
3:21.) But if your heart is wrong, it is high time to find it out, and seek
a change. The time is short. The night comes when no man can work. Say to
yourself this very day, "Is my heart right or wrong?"
Think not to say within yourself,
"There is no need for such questions as these. There is no need to make such
ado about the heart. I go to church or chapel regularly. I live a
respectable life. I hope I shall prove right at last." Beware of such
thoughts, I beseech you—beware of them if you would ever be saved. You may
go to the best church on earth, and hear the best of preachers. You may be
the best of churchmen, or the soundest member of a chapel. But all this
time, if your heart is not right in the sight of God, you are on the high
road to destruction. Settle down to quiet consideration of the question
before you. Look it manfully in the face, and do not turn aside. Is your
heart right or wrong?
Think not to say within yourself, "No
one can know what his heart is. We must hope the best. No one can find out
with any certainty the state of his own soul." Beware, I say again—beware of
such thoughts. The thing can be known. The thing can be found out. Deal
honestly and fairly with yourself. Set up a 'trial' on the state of your
inward man. Summon a jury. Let the Bible preside as judge. Bring up the
witnesses. Inquire what your tastes are—where your affections are
placed—where your treasure is—what you hate most—what you love most—what
pleases you most—what grieves you most. Inquire into all those points
impartially, and mark what the answers are. "Where your treasure is there
will your heart be also." (Matt. 6:21.) A tree may always be known by its
fruit, and a true Christian may always be discovered by his habits, tastes,
and affections. Yes! you may soon find out what your heart is, if you are
honest, sincere, and impartial. Is it right or wrong?
Think not to say within yourself, "I
quite approve of all you say, and hope to examine the state of my heart some
day. But I have no time just at present. I cannot find leisure. I wait for a
convenient season." Oh, beware of such thoughts—again I say beware! Life is
uncertain, and yet you talk of "a convenient season." (Acts 24:25.) Eternity
is close at hand, and yet you talk of putting off preparation to meet God.
Alas, that habit of putting off is the everlasting ruin of millions of
souls! Wretched man that you are! Who shall deliver you from this devil of
putting off? Awake to a sense of duty. Throw off the chains that pride, and
laziness, and love of the world are weaving round you. Arise and stand upon
your feet, and look steadily at the question before you. Churchman or
dissenter, I ask you this day—Is your heart right or wrong?
(2) I wish, in the next place,
to offer a SOLEMN WARNING to all who know their hearts are wrong—but have no
desire to change. I do it with every feeling of kindness and affection. I
have no wish to excite needless fears. But I know not how to exaggerate the
danger of your condition. I warn you that if your heart is wrong in the
sight of God, you are hanging over the brink of hell! There is but a step
between you and everlasting death!
Can you really suppose that any man or
woman will ever enter heaven without a right heart? Do you flatter yourself
that any unconverted person will ever be saved? Away with such a miserable
delusion! Cast it from you at once and forever. What says the Scripture?
"Except a man be born again he cannot see the kingdom of God." "Except you
be converted and become as little children, you shall never see the kingdom
of heaven." "Without holiness no man shall see the Lord." (John 3:3; Matt.
18:3; Heb. 12:14.) It is not enough to have our sins pardoned, as many seem
to suppose. There is another thing needed as well as a pardon, and that
thing is a new heart. We must have the Holy Spirit to renew us, as well as
Christ's blood to wash us. Both renewing and washing are needful before
anyone can be saved.
Can you suppose for a moment, that you
would be happy in heaven, if you entered heaven without a right heart? Away
with the miserable delusion! Cast it from you at once and forever! You must
have a "fitness for the inheritance of the saints," before you can enjoy it.
(Coloss. 1:12.) Your tastes must be tuned and brought into harmony with
those of saints and angels, before you can delight in their company. A sheep
is not happy when it is thrown into the water. A fish is not happy when it
is cast on dry land. And men and women would not be happy in heaven, if they
entered heaven without right hearts.
My warning is before you. Harden not
your heart against it. Believe it. Act upon it. Turn it to account. Awake
and arise to newness of life without delay. One thing is very certain.
Whether you hear the warning or not, God will not go back from what He has
said. "If we believe not, He abides faithful—He cannot deny Himself." (2 Ti.
2:13.)
(3) I wish, thirdly, to offer
COUNSEL to all who know their hearts are wrong—but desire to have them made
right. That counsel is short and simple. I advise you to apply at once to
the Lord Jesus Christ, and ask for the gift of the Holy Spirit. Entreat Him,
as a lost and ruined sinner, to receive you, and supply the needs of your
soul. I know well that you cannot make your own heart right. But I know that
the Lord Jesus Christ can. And to the Lord Jesus Christ I entreat you to
apply without delay.
If any reader of this paper really
wants a right heart, I thank God that I can give him good encouragement. I
thank God that I can lift up Christ before you, and say boldly, Look at
Christ—Seek Christ—Go to Christ. For what did that blessed Lord Jesus come
into the world? For what did He give His precious body to be crucified? For
what did He die and rise again? For what did He ascend up into heaven, and
sit down at the right hand of God? For what did Christ do all this—but to
provide complete salvation for poor sinners like you and me—salvation from
the guilt of sin, and salvation from the power of sin, for all who believe!
Oh, yes! Christ is no half Savior. He has "received gifts for men, even for
the rebellious." (Psalm 68:18.) He waits to pour out the Spirit on all who
will come to Him. Mercy and grace—pardon and a new heart, all this Jesus is
ready to apply to you by His Spirit, if you will only come to Him. Then
come—come without delay to Christ.
What is there that Christ cannot do?
He can create. By Him were all things made at the beginning. He called the
whole world into being by His command. He can quicken. He raised the dead
when He was on earth, and gave back life by a word. He can change. He has
turned sickness into health, and weakness into strength—famine into plenty,
storm into calm, and sorrow into joy. He has wrought thousands of miracles
on hearts already. He turned Peter the unlearned fisherman into Peter the
Apostle. He turned Matthew the covetous publican into Matthew the Gospel
writer. He turned Saul the self-righteous Pharisee into Paul the Evangelist
of the world. What Christ has done once, Christ can do again. Christ and the
Holy Spirit are always the same. There is nothing in your heart that the
Lord Jesus cannot make right. Only come to Christ.
If you had lived in Palestine, in the
days when Jesus was upon earth, you would have sought Christ's help if you
had been sick. If you had been crushed down by heart-disease in some back
lane of Capernaum, or in some cottage by the blue waters of the sea of
Galilee, you would surely have gone to Jesus for a cure. You would have sat
by the way-side day after day, waiting for His appearing. You would have
sought Him, if He did not happen to come near your dwelling—and never rested
until you found Him. Oh, why not do the same this very day for the sickness
of your soul? Why not apply at once to the Great Physician in heaven, and
ask Him to "take away the stony heart and give you a heart of flesh"? (Ezek.
11:19.) Once more I invite you. If you want a "right heart," do not waste
time in trying to make it right by your own strength. It is far beyond your
power to do it. Come to the great Physician of souls. Come at once to Jesus
Christ.
(4) I wish, lastly, to offer an
EXHORTATION to all whose hearts have been made right in the sight of God. I
offer it as a word in season to all true Christians. Hear me, I say to every
believing brother or sister. I speak especially to you.
Is your heart right? Then be thankful.
Praise the Lord for His distinguishing mercy, in "calling you out of
darkness into His marvelous light." (1 Pet. 2:9.) Think what you were by
nature. Think what has been done for you by free undeserved grace. Your
heart may not be all that it ought to be, nor yet all that you hope it will
be. But at any rate your heart is not the old hard heart with which you were
born. Surely the man whose heart is changed ought to be full of praise.
Is your heart right? Then be humble and watchful. You are not yet in
heaven—but in the world. You are in the body. The devil is near you, and
never sleeps. Oh, keep your heart with all diligence! Watch and pray lest
you fall into temptation. Ask Christ Himself to keep your heart for you. Ask
Him to dwell in it, and reign in it, and garrison it, and to put down every
enemy under His feet. Give the keys of the citadel into the King's own
hands, and leave them there. It is a weighty saying of Solomon, "He who
trusts in his own heart is a fool." (Prov. 28:26.)
Is your heart right? Then be hopeful
about the hearts of other people. Who has made you to differ? Why should not
anyone in the world be changed, when such a one as you has been made a new
creature? Work on. Pray on. Speak on. Write on. Labor to do all the good you
can to souls. Never despair of anyone being saved so long as he is alive.
Surely the man who has been changed by grace ought to feel that there are no
desperate cases. There are no hearts which it is impossible for Christ to
cure.
Is your heart right? Then do not
expect too much from it. Do not be surprised to find it weak and wayward,
faint and unstable, often ready to doubt and fear. Your redemption is not
complete until your Lord and Savior comes again. Your full salvation remains
yet to be revealed. (Luke 21:28; 1 Pet. 1:5.) You cannot have two heavens—a
heaven here and a heaven hereafter. Changed, renewed, converted, sanctified,
as your heart is—you must never forget that it is a 'man's heart' after
all—and the heart of a man living in the midst of a wicked world.
Finally, let me entreat all
right-hearted readers to look onward and forward to the day of Christ's
second coming. A time draws near when Satan shall be bound, and Christ's
saints shall be changed—when sin shall no more vex us, and the sight of
sinners shall no more sadden our minds—when believers shall at length attend
on God without distraction, and love Him with a perfect heart. For that day
let us wait, and watch, and pray. It cannot be very far off. The night is
far spent. The day is at hand. Surely if our hearts are right, we ought
often to cry, "Come quickly—come Lord Jesus!