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In this world in which we live, there are many things against which we all fight. This season, with its foolishness, anger, and frustration, certainly is one of them. However, it is basically all of the things that Satan influences as prince of the power of the air that he promulgates on the world around us. One of the most dangerous things that we must face comes from within us: our heart. This correctly governs our approach and our attitude toward living this life that we have been given. John Ritenbaugh has recently given us sermons on the new heart that God is trying to give us to replace the heart with which we were called. When we find ourselves in a wrong attitude or desiring wrong things, it should be a reminder to stop and consider which heart is motivating us. Is it the new heart that we are being given or the old one with which we were called? I would like us to take a look, for a moment, at the heart with which you and I have been called. I know that some do not believe this, but it is true.
I know people who say, "My heart is not that way." Well, I had better tell you that my heart is, and I am sure yours is, as well. Matthew Henry has the following to say:
I would like to quote from Adam Clarke on the same verse.
In short, what he is saying is that our trust should be in God and His instructions to us. This is the heart that God wishes to replace, the heart about which we have been reading here. An approach toward any situation or challenge can be positive or negative, depending on the attitude that we have. Our attitude, by definition, is "a position of the body suggesting some thought [starting with the mind or your heart feeding your actions], state of mind, behavior or conduct regarding some matter as indicating opinion or purpose." The synonymsattitude, position, posture, and poserefer to the physical aspects of a body and, by extension, the mental outlook. It all goes back to the heart, which is the mind. Thus, brethren, when we find ourselves filled with stubbornness, jealousy, hatred, lust for sexual things or alcohol, or finding excuses for not doing what is right, then we feel superior to others, wanting to do our own thing, having a pity party, resenting some of the brethren, wanting to accuse others rather than loving them, justifying selfishness, justifying skipping prayer and study, being filled with fears, finding fault with the ministry or, in general, just in a rotten attitude, what should we do? If we can somehow stop in the middle of our mindset for a moment we should get on our knees and ask God to help us to see and truly realize which heart we are displaying. Is it the one with which we came out of the world, that still wants the world, and still wants to do things its way, or the one that God is trying to give us? It has been said that our heart, or our human nature, is like a coiled spring; and as long as we stand on it with our full weight, it stays compressed and does not give us any trouble. However, the moment that we take our eyes off God and relax, that spring springs up and we find ourselves in the attitude of doing things that we did prior to being called.
A better translation would be "guard your heart." This all starts with the heart that you and I have. We have to guard the new heart that God is trying to give us.
Jesus is telling us that it is His teaching, coupled with the Spirit of God. The new heart is what makes us alive. The flesh, or old heart, our old way of thinking and acting, truly profits us nothing. We have to understand that. When something is given once it is important; when it is given twice, it is even more so; three times, it is very important; but when something is given four times, it is exceedingly important in God's Word.
This is the first place in the Bible where it says, "Harden not your hearts." The author of Hebrews, who appears to be the apostle Paul, is writing to a people who are not being persecuted in the way that we view persecution. They were not being threatened at that time by torture or death but by the old religion of the physical workswashings and so forthof the law. They were being persecuted to go back into the world, in a sense, back into the old way of living; and they were letting down. They were a lot like the church of this age. They had been given the truth and were excited about it; then the time was going on, and they began to drift away.
To me, this is so graphic. I used to skin dive a lot when I was younger, and once in a while you would see a boat that had come untied resting against a pier. At first, it seemed just to sit there. You think, "It is right where it should be. It is just right on track." Then you go off and do something, and you look back and the boat is about six feet away. When you look back again, the boat is maybe twenty-five or thirty feet away. Then, when you look back again it is on the horizon. It slowly drifts away. This is what was happening to the Hebrews.
In short, the first love, the zeal, the excitement about what was done for them and what the future held for them was slipping from first place in their life into second, third, fourth, and fifth. The world slipped in, and they were just going through the motions. In chapters one and two, Paul describes their awesome Savior, the One who saved them, and how He upholds all things by His power and how He now sits at the right hand of God the Father. Paul was building a case about how He is higher than the angels and all of the angels worship Him, how He loves righteousness and how He hates sin, how He laid the foundations of the earth and the heavens, showing His awesome power and ability. All things were put under His feet. This is the One that was their God and their Savior.
Christ has experienced personally the sufferings, trials, and fears through which we go. He has been made our merciful and faithful High Priest, in things pertaining to God, to reconcile us to Him. He is leading up to something here. In chapter three, he becomes very personal.
Paul starts out by referring to us as holy brethren. Out of all of the earth, we have been selected to be holy. He is reminding us of who we are and to whom we belong. We do not belong to the world; we belong to God the Father and Jesus Christ. We are called with a heavenly calling; and because of that, we should consider the High Priest of our profession and the path that we are called to follow. Christ is both our High Priest and our Apostle. Then, as an example to us and all of mankind, we are to notice that He is faithful to His Father who appointed Him. Because of this, He was counted worthy of more glory than Moses. He goes on to say that every house has a builder. The term house not only means a place where a family lives, but it means the family itself. We, who are called today, are the house that is being built in Jesus Christ. We, out of the entire world, have been selected to build a Family that has never existed before, the Family of God. Just so that we will have the confidence, He tells us in verse 4 that the One who built His house, or Family, is Jesus Christ, under the direction of the Father. He is the One who is building it with each one of us. He tells us, past and present, that Moses was faithful in all His house, as a servant, but that Jesus Christ as a Son is "over His own house, whose house we are if we hold fast the confidence and rejoicing of hope firm to the end." We can just read over the word confidence and not give it much thought. The confidence to which we are to hold fast is the liberty of access to God the Father. Of all the people in the world, we have access to God the Father. We must not drift away.
That is where the error always comes from: the heart.
Here the word confidence means to hold to our foundationto the base from which we live, from which we operatesteadfast to the end.
To sum it up, if we choose not to hear God's Spirit urging us to pray, study, fast, meditate and obey, putting God first in our lives, then indeed our heart will slowly become hardened. God's Word and God's way of living will not become important. In Deuteronomy 8, God gave Israel trials on their trip to the Promised Land to see if they would obey Him or not. I do not know that we often stop to consider that we are on a journey. You can picture Israel going through the desert from Egypt to the Promised Land, and you can picture when they stop, and you can picture the miracles that took place. However, do we consider that we are on a journey? We have the sin of the world dangling all around us. Whether we believe it or not, we are on a journey just like Israelbut our journey is far, far more important. We are on a journey to the Kingdom of God; and though we are not being tested with the hardships of the desert, we are really being tested in this permissive, end-time environment. It is dynamite, brethren. Why was God grieved with our forefathers? They erred in their hearts, from which came the issues of life. They set their heart on the lust of eyes, the lust of the flesh, and the pride of life; and they went astray in their heart. Indeed, Paul said that we are to encourage each other "daily, while it called 'Today.'" In short, use the time wisely that you have been given, while you have it. For us, who have been called in this age, it will be the only time we will ever have. We may get second chances during our calling and during our life but, time-wise, this is the only chance. We are told that we are to be partakers of Christ, and that entails if we hold to the beginning of our confidence with the foundation, as I mentioned. We are told not to neglect our salvation or let this world take your crown. We must not allow our hearts to become hardened. He tells us that we should not be like those that came out of Egypt. They saw the miracles of God and the awesome power of God, and then rebelled against Him and troubled Him forty years and died short of the rest that was set aside for them. I am going to paraphrase Hebrews 4:1-11:
Our journey, brethren, is to the Kingdom of God and our rest is the Kingdom of God. Who is it that could not enter that rest? Those who hardened their hearts. The apostle Paul knew that he was on a journey, and that he had two hearts, or two ways of living, in him. One of these hearts was to fight against and the other was to fight for.
Paul knew, that as Jesus Christ said in Philippians 1:6, that He started a work in him and He was going to finish it. I am going to read a quote concerning these verses, from the "Berean" by John Ritenbaugh:
The world wants our heart, brethren; it really does. Human nature does not go down without a fight, for it must be overcome. In a way, this entity within us actually becomes part of the means of our perfection. Overcoming is a long process. It requires diligent humbling effort to subdue our human nature. However, we must never allow ourselves to fall into the attitude that all of our efforts are somehow justifying us before God, even though it pleases Him and gratifies us. The holiest of our actions or the holiest of the saints is still full of imperfection and defects. Even some of these are done from wrong motives and can be qualified as nothing more than a splendid sin in God's sight. Nevertheless, we are saved by grace through faith. However, even with that, God requires that we make effort to do our part. Quite often, you can read Romans 7 and say, "God understands." Yes, indeed, He doesfar better than we do. Did the apostle Paul, with the understanding that Jesus would save him though he had two ways pulling at him, just sit back and do nothing? The answer is, no, he did not.
Paul alludes to the athletic exercises called the Isthmian games that came about every fifth year. Today, we would recognize this as something like the Olympics. Paul wants us to understand that, not only are we on a journey, but we are in a race toward victory over this world.
Those who compete in the Olympic games go through a long, hard, and difficult regimen under the eye of a trainer or coach. We have all seen training camps where the athletes go through their exercises before dawn. They go on long runs, working with javelin or weights. They adhere to difficult diets, carefully watching what they allow in their bodies, and much more. They even have to have a positive mindset that will bring them to victory. Those called by God are expected to be balanced, temperate, and disciplined in how they live their lives. It is not a matter of competing with someone else; it is gaining victory over the old self, the old heart, and Satan. The world around us strives for the material crown, but we for the Kingdom of God. That is the crown for which we are heading.
Each runner ran uncertainly, and the reason that he did was that only one could obtain the prize. Thus, they were uncertain of who would win. However, in this Christian race of those called by God, all can win if they run correctly. The word adelos, which is translated uncertainly, has other meanings, as well. It says, "I do not run like one ignorant of what he is about, or the laws of the course. I know that there is a Kingdom of God, and the way that leads to it; therefore, I run with that in mind." We in this race are not ignorant of what God expects, and we can never claim that. This word adelos can also signify one that does not run without being observed. Paul knew that other eyes were upon him. Certainly his enemies wanted to see him falter. Those persecuting Paul longed to see him destroyed. The church of God looked on him with concern for all that he went through as their leader, the suffering and the strain that he under which he put himself. They watched and were encouraged by his example. The apostle Paul knew that God's eyes were firmly fixed upon him. Paul gives us the example of one who has disciplined his body, because he disciplined first his heart that he might not become disqualified after he has preached the truth to others, to all of the brethren, and even to us today. Brethren, we know that we are living in the Laodicean era of God's church, and this time is so well depicted by the parable of the ten virgins, in which everyone slumbered. That should include you and me, as well. All slumbered, and half fell away.
Our job is to answer, to respond. What must we do to open the door and develop the new heart that God wants us to have? As a result of Jesus giving Himself as an offering, His body to be torn to shreds for us, we should come out of all fornication, dirty movies, uncleanness, covetousness, foolishness. Paul reminds us that those who do these things have no part in the inheritance of the Kingdom of God.
He equates sleeping, or letting down in this time, with death, and that is something that we should remember. Paul says that you are to leave off slumbering again and put your back into your calling. We must pray and study and ask God for forgiveness and zeal, and He will give you the life that you might not perish.
Circumspectly means "to look around on all sides, being very watchful and cautious." The original word, akribos, signifies "walk correctly, accurately, consistently, or perfectly." In short, as you run the race, walk carefully by the rules that God has given us.
We must be buying back those moments that others seem to throw away. We must continually be improving, that we might gain some of the time that we have lost in the past. Why? Because, brethren, we live in the Laodicean era, where so many drift away.
This requires study, prayer, fasting, and meditation. It is God's will that we be sober, chaste, holy, and pure. This is what God is after in each one of us. God wants us to get a thorough understanding of His will that we each might glorify Him in how we live. Brethren, there is only one thing that can stop us from accomplishing this, and that is allowing our heart to become hardened and rejecting the new heart that God is working to give to us.
Let all that you do be done with love. In short, never let your heart become hardened. Never let down! JOR/pp/klg
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