Sunday, March 12, 2023

What Feels Good

The general practice of the world (and our flesh if we want to admit it) is to live by whatever feels good and whatever our heart desires, with no regard for God and His established rules of right and wrong.  

However, God reveals in Jeremiah 17:9-10 that the human heart is "deceitful above all things, desperately corrupt (or wicked)."  God then states, "I, the Lord, search the heart, I test the mind, even to give every man according to his ways, according to the fruit of his doings."  Our fallen nature, called the flesh in Romans 8, is so corrupt that it cannot and will not please God.  

When men refuse to listen to God, as Jeremiah 16 points out, He turns them over to "their stubborn heart."  Romans 1 states this fact even stronger, that those who do not acknowledge God and refuse to thank Him, He gives them over "to the lusts of their heart" and "to their vile passions."  When men reject God and His ways, He lets them have what they want but with the obvious warning that their choice will only bring misery and death.  

In short, God lets us have what we want, even though it clearly is not His intention or given purpose for us.  He will even let us go to hell if we want to, even though He loves each person so much that He willingly laid down His life for them.  God honors our choices. 

God's answer for our wicked heart and darkened mind, through His death and resurrection, is to make us new creations. Jesus put to death our fallen nature with His death on the cross in order to give us a new heart and to transform our thoughts in our minds so that we can have the mind of Christ.  It is by the Spirit of God, who pours the love of God into our hearts and renews our mind with truth, that we are able to put to death the deeds of the flesh.  That is why, like Paul (in 2 Corinthians 5:9), we make it our aim to please God and make no provision for the flesh (Romans 13:14).

Therefore, it is essential to pick up our cross daily and let the Holy Spirit and the Word of God direct our steps.  To pick up the cross means that we admit our fleshly thoughts and desires need to be crucified, and by the Spirit's help we choose and "delight to do the will of God."  We can set the mind on the Spirit and trust His leading, which produces life and peace.

May God reveal His heart and His desire to each one of us, so that the world's deceptions and our fallen-nature heart desires would not be able to distract or destroy us.  We choose to set the standard of what pleases God rather than what feels good.  Well done, good and faithful servant.  

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