WITH ALL YOUR
HEART
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And one of
the scribes came up and heard them disputing with one another, and seeing that
he answered them well, asked him, "Which commandment is the first of
all?". Jesus answered, "The
first is, 'Hear, O Israel: The Lord your God, the Lord is one; and you shall
love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with
all your mind and with all your strength.' The second is this, 'You shall love
your neighbor as yourself.' There is no other commandment greater than
these." And the scribe said to him, "You are right, Teacher; you have
truly said that he is one, and to love him with all the heart, and with all the
understanding, and with all the strength, and to love one's neighbor as
oneself, is much more than all whole burnt offerings and sacrifices." And
when Jesus saw that he answered wisely, he said to him, "You are not far
from the kingdom of God."
Mark 12:28‑34
The first time it
happened no one seemed to notice. But soon it became an epidemic. It began one
Sunday afternoon around three o'clock... a fine new suburban church building
simply collapsed. There was no fire and no explosion...it just crumbled
together as if a huge unseen foot had stepped on it. Some urban believers were
slightly amused when they read about it in the paper. The following Sunday an inner city church suffered the same fate ...the magnificent
architecture which had drawn tourists for generations became rubble in a few
seconds. This caused some gloating among some non‑institutional
Christians who took pride in the fact that they never met in church buildings.
The following Sunday these "New Testament" Christians had barely
emerged from their house meeting when the house fell to the ground.
As the
investigators began to probe, they learned that in each instance the
congregation had been visited on the day of their building's collapse by an
elderly man who was described by witnesses as having "wild looking
eyes." Was it Elijah? Congregations began to watch the door
apprehensively, wondering if today this strange visitor would find his way to
them.
One Sunday morning
the elderly man with "wild looking eyes" turned up before the service
at a church which had a reputation for laying heavy emphasis on total
commitment and discipleship.
One of the brothers
in the flock approached the stranger.
"Sir, we're
all petrified. We know what has happened to the building of every congregation
you’ve visited. We know this is some form of judgment ...but for what? Where were
they found wanting?"
"They were
judged," answered the stranger, "for their mediocrity. Mediocre
prayers ...mediocre lives ...lukewarm hearts ...lazy minds. The living God has
given these people his very best. In love, God has given them all he has: his
only begotten Son ...purchased them back from the curse of the second death
with Jesus' blood. And what do they give back to God? ...their scraps ...their
leftovers. Would that they were either hot or cold. But because they are
lukewarm he spews them out of his mouth!"
"Well,"
answered the Christian from the 'total commitment' church, "on that basis
we should pass the test. There isn't a church in town that preaches a tougher
message on commitment than ours."
At 3:00 p.m. the
church collapsed like all the rest.
....and you
shall love the Lord your God with all your
heart, and
with all your soul, and with all your mind,
and with all
your strength ....
Of course, the
judgment which has already begun at the house of God does not concern itself
with buildings of brick and steel ...but it does concern itself with the
kingdoms we build which are not the Kingdom of God at all. It is possible for
me to be very earnest about building a name for myself, or a new form of
religious community, or a reputation for my church ...while my heart toward God
remains lukewarm. One day all the things I have built out of earnestness for
myself, (while my inmost heart for God was lukewarm), will indeed come down.
Suppose the Master
of the house returns to the servants to whom he has given talents to find the five talent man in high elation ...he has a surprise for the
Master. Instead of delivering five talents more for the five he had received,
he says,
"Master, come
into the yard, I have something wonderful to show you. You gave me five
talents. I amassed fifteen more. With the twenty talents I made this…"
He pulls out a
chord and unveils a bronze statue of himself holding a Bible. The Master orders
him into outer darkness.
The vast bulk of
all the things we like to think we have done for the Lord were done, not for
him, but for ourselves. Consider how in our thought life, our prayer life, our
business life and family life, whatever is excellent is reserved for ourselves
...God gets the mediocre.
Cain brings an offering
which may appear acceptable to every eye but God's. God sees this offering as
the expression of a lukewarm heart. And this mediocre offering is not an
offering even as mediocre prayer is not prayer. Any half‑baked mediocre
thing we bring to God is worse than if we brought nothing ... it is blasphemy.
When the merciful and
living God decided to deliver us from the curse of death and the bondage of
Satan, he did not go to the spiritual junk yard and look for the wreckage of
some ruined angel. He took the best he had ... the Son who lived in his very bosom
... his supreme joy and only treasure …
his best ... to redeem us. And when the Son of God appeared clothed in human
flesh, did he yawn and say to himself, "Well, what else can I do? I'll
shuffle through this somehow." He
put himself into it with all his heart, soul, mind and strength ... everything
he did was quality.
If you have doubts about the person of Jesus,
read the Sermon on the Mount in any language. How can any thinking person doubt
that this is the most beautiful and penetrating arrangement of words ever to
touch this earth? And when Jesus healed he made sure the healing was complete.
The blind man whose vision was imperfect after the first touch was touched
again. When Jesus fed the multitudes he fed them with abundance. When he laid
down his life he laid it down with all his heart. And when we ask Jesus to touch
our lives, his touch is perfect.
Who forgiveth all thine iniquities.
Who healeth all thy diseases.
Who redeemeth thy life from destruction;
Who crowneth thee with lovingkindness and tender mercies. Who satisfieth thy mouth with good things;
So that thy
youth is renewed like the eagle's.
But the blessing has to be
received as it is given ...
with the whole
heart.
Nothing Jesus has done for you will have any lasting
effect until you take hold of it with all your heart ...with all your soul...
with all your mind and with all your strength.
And the
scribe said to him, "You are right, Teacher; you have truly said that he
is one, and there is no other but him, and to love him with all the heart, and
with all the understanding, and with all the strength, and to love one's
neighbor as oneself, is much more than all whole burnt offerings and
sacrifices."
And when Jesus saw that he answered wisely, he
said to him, "You are not far from the kingdom of God."
If we want to live in God's
kingdom now ... as opposed to our own religious kingdoms which will surely
crumble ... here are three simple things to keep in mind:
1.
Put your
heart into receiving God's mercy.
The mercy of God cannot
flow into a half‑opened heart. Yet how many times when the Son of God
knocks on the door we're afraid to open it more than a crack. "What if he
puts his foot in?" Have no fear. The Lord will not force his way in ... he
will not enter until you open the door wide and bid him welcome.
This opening of the
heart to receive the Lord's mercy needs to be done daily ... hourly ... until
it becomes our second nature to draw our life and our strength from him who is
the incarnation of divine mercy.
My soul thirsteth for thee. My flesh longeth
for thee
in a dry and
thirsty land where no water is.
2.
Put your
heart into your daily prayers.
Some of us pray
with our mouths ...some of us put in the time while our minds wander the earth.
How easily for all of us to slip from prayer into a journey through the past,
or into some pressing anxiety, or even into sleep. And the reason is that we
are not approaching the Throne with all our heart, soul, mind and strength. We
need to put our best into it even if we have to begin by saying; "Lord, I
don't know how to pray ...help me!" When such a cry begins to rise from
the heart, the answer is already on its way.
3.
Put your
heart into showing mercy to your neighbor.
How often we find
ourselves half listening to someone who is pouring out his soul ...we simply
are not putting our heart into it. Or, we catch ourselves going through the
motions of good deeds while our hearts are tepid. What a change takes place in
the quality of our work in the vineyard when we approach our neighbor's need
with a merciful heart ... an alert and thoughtful mind.
Perhaps we feel that we have been placed
in a rather boring corner of the vineyard. The people who come to us with their
needs seem to be so uninteresting or so hopeless. "Will they ever come out
of their rut? Will they ever change?" But what a refreshing wind begins to
blow through these relationships when we put our hearts into them and begin
dealing with these people as before the eye of a Lord who loves them with the
same unspeakable love which has
transformed us. When our hearts are in it, God is in it ... redemptive grace
flows in abundance.
God who gave his best ...
his everything ... his Only Begotten ... to redeem us and make us his children
waits for us as we are right now, (for all our hang-ups and problems), to love
him with all our heart, soul, mind and strength, and to show our appreciation
for the death and resurrection of Jesus by loving our neighbors as ourselves …
by showing mercy.
If we will do that, when
Elijah comes, the structure will stand.