”If
my heart had windows you would see a heart full of love just for
you.” Recently we happened to hear these words being sung in a ballad
over the radio. If our heart had windows, what could one see’? The
very first command is to ”Love the Lord with all our heart” so obviously
the love we have for God should be easily visible from the windows
of our heart.
Not very many hearts are filled with love for God as they should
be. This is the problem, for as Solomon observed ”the heart of the
sons of men is fully set in them to do evil.”
What this world needs is a heart transplant operation. Suddenly
these are now in vogue, with medical science actually taking the
heart from a dead person and cutting out the diseased heart and
transplanting it with the healthy one. It is wonderful what medical
science can do, yet this operation is not new, for God in speaking
of Israel says, ”A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit
will I put within you: and I will take awny the stony heart out
of your flesh, and I will give you an heart of flesh.”
God,
long before man ever thought of it, promised to cut out a stony
heart and transplant it with one capable of loving Him.
What kind of heart do we have? Do we need a change of heart? This
is one operation which we can each perform for ourselves. God admonishes
us saying, ”Repent, and turn yourselves from all your transgressions;
so iniquity shall not be your ruin. Cast away from you all your
transgressions, whereby ye have transgressed; and make you a new
heart and a new spirit: for why will ye die? For I have no pleasure
in the death of him that dieth, saith the Lord God: wherefore turn
yourselves and live ye.”
The
world around us is dying of heart disease. The heart is deceitful
above all things, and desperately wicked and therefore it dies.
The only hope for any of us is in getting a new heart, one filled
with love for God. Paul tells us that if we believe in our heart
that God raised Christ from the dead, we shall be saved, for with
the heart man believeth unto righteousness. As a result, we are
to ”draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith, having
our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience.”
Peter was no doctor, but he quickly diagnosed the problem of the
world around us, for he saw that they have an heart which has been
exercised with covetous practices, and Jesus, the great physician,
discerned that ”out of the heart proceed evil thoughts, murders,
adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witness, blasphemies.” No
wonder an operation is imperative to prevent death. These are killing
diseases.
Our only hope is a new heart. God, speaking through Jeremiah says
of His people, ”I will give them an heart to know me, that I am
the Lord. And they shall be my people, and I will be their God:
for they shall return unto me with their whole heart.”
If we will but turn to God then He will give us a new heart, the
operation is guaranteed to be successful, not only will the patient
survive the operation but we will live forever. As the love of God
wells up in our hearts, we can all sing out to our Heavenly Father,
”If my heart had windows you would see a heart full of love just
for you,” and God who does not need windows to see into our hearts
replies, ”I the Lord search the heart, I try the reins, even to
give every man according to the fruit of his doings.” As happy patients
we praise Gcd saying, ”Heal me, 0 Lord, and I shall be healed; save
me, and I shall be saved: for thou art my praise.”
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