R-rated Hearts
November 2, 2009 by admin
Filed under Inspired Thoughts
THE way I feel about being around unbelievers will tell me a whole lot about my concept of God and how I stand before him. Jesus put it this way: “Do not judge, or you too will be judged. For in the same way you judge others, you will be judged, and with the measure you use, it will be measured to you” (Matthew 7:1-2 NIV).
In other words, you get what you give out. You want a loving God? Then be loving. You want a merciful God? Then be merciful. Want God to forgive you? Then forgive your fellow man. Want God to condemn you? Then be an accusatory person. Want to put yourself above the rest of the world? Then get ready for a God who is going to strain out every judgmental thought you’ve ever had and measure all the thoughts and intents of your hidden heart by the same standard.
That’s enough to send me to my knees, because I know my heart. You and I as Christians need to realize that however acceptable our lives my be for the general audience, we still possess an R-rated heart, and we’re as good as dead if we want God to meet us on any other ground than his grace and forgiveness.
The joy of this truth is that once I can believe that forgiveness for myself, then I can believe it for anybody. I have new eyes to see beyond my neighbor’s sin and love him or her with the love of Christ.
When we search the Gospels, we never find a place where Jesus was offended by a sinful person. But there are repeated accounts of his being offended by the self-righteousness of so called holy people who set themselves apart from the rest of humanity in their own eyes. For these people, he didn’t even have the time of day, except to warn them of the judgment to come, a judgment brought about by their refusal to see themselves as needy as the next guy.
AUTHOR: John Fischer. Taken from TRUE BELIEVERS DON’T ASK WHY by John Fischer. Copyright 1989 by John Fischer. Bethany House Publishers. Extracted from Men’s Devotional Bible New International Version Page 1044. Copyright 1993 by Zondervan Publishing House.






Amen!