Blessed are the Pure in Heart (Part 2)
Morning 20 August 23
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God is more concerned about the state of your heart than he is about your health, your bank balance, your business, your family, your ‘Christian work’, your church-attendance record, your giving to charitable causes, or anything else.
As Martyn Lloyd-Jones rightly says, ‘The Christian faith is ultimately not only a matter of doctrine or understanding or of intellect, it is a condition of the heart.’ In the light of this, no right thinking person can fail to face up to one all-important question: ‘Is my heart right with God?’
Pure but Imperfect
A W Pink rightly says: ‘One of the most conclusive evidences that we do possess a pure heart is to be conscious of and burdened with the impurity which still indwells us.’
Pure of Heart: Sincerity
John Calvin reminds us, ‘The Lord first of all wants sincerity in his service, simplicity of heart without guile and falsehood.’
Pure of Heart: Integrity
Thomas Watson’s words, ‘A pure heart breathes after purity. If God should stretch out the golden sceptre and say to him, “Ask and it shall be given thee, to the half of the kingdom”, he would say, “Lord, a pure heart.” ’
The difference between a pure and an impure heart is well illustrated in the testimony of Augustine. In his Confessions he tells how, as a young man struggling with his emerging sexuality, he prayed, ‘Give me chastity and continency, only not yet’. He confessed to being afraid that God would answer him immediately, whereas at that time he wanted his lust ‘satisfied rather than extinguished’. He was at least being honest in his prayer, but as an unbeliever he was far from pure in heart. Augustine was eventually converted when in his early thirties, and the language of his prayer changed dramatically: ‘Power of my soul, enter into it, and fit it for thee, that thou mightest have and hold it without spot or wrinkle.’ Augustine was still not perfect, but his heart was pure.