Tag: Faith

How’s Your Heart?

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I can’t lie to my doctor. He always learns the truth.

I can emphatically promise my doctor that I’ve been eating right, exercising, and taking my medications as directed. However, when his nurse checks my blood pressure, heart-rate and blood sugar, we will learn the truth.

If I have not been making the right choices, if I have been eating badly, and not exercising, my blood pressure rises, as does my A1c. High blood pressure and bad A1c readings mean that I’ve been making bad choices. The proof is in the proverbial pudding.

I don’t eat badly and fail to exercise because I have high blood pressure, I have high blood pressure because I eat badly and fail to exercise.

So, the solution is to fix my diet and exercise habits, and in my particular case, the blood pressure and A1c correct themselves.

When scripture describes a righteous man, it is describing the outward appearance of a man who has a deep-rooted faith in the Lord in his heart. The man does not do the things demonstrated in scripture in order to become righteous, he does those things because he is righteous.

For example, in Psalm 15, King David asks, “LORD, Who shall abide in thy tabernacle? Who shall dwell in thy holy hill?”

The answer is simple, and is given in verse 2, “He that walketh uprightly, and worketh righteousness, and speaketh the truth in his heart.”

That phrase, “in his heart” is key. Because without that phrase, one may get the impression that, to enter into the Lord’s heaven, one must walk uprightly, work righteousness, speak the truth, don’t gossip or backbite, and honor those who fear the Lord.

So, under this misinterpretation, one may be tempted to think that as long as they are fair to others, do good things, preach the word, and speak well of others, they’re ready to enter into God’s Kingdom. However, that not only contradicts the Bible’s message of salvation by grace through faith apart from works, but it also describes those who will face condemnation on judgment day after leading an entire lifetime of self-righteousness and self-deceit.

Such are described in Matthew 7:21-23.

So, the proper way to interpret Psalm 15 is with the greater understanding of the central message of the Bible. Therefore, the reader can understand that the one who speaks the truth “in his heart,” is the one who has the faith in his heart.

The one who has the faith in his heart has been declared righteous by God. And when your faith is that deeply rooted, it shapes your character, and your life is marked by the characteristics listed throughout Psalm 15.

In essence, you should trust in the Lord, and the works will follow. The works then become a Spiritual blood pressure test to check your Spiritual health.

Brother Kelly Moore, former pastor of Rocky Springs Missionary Baptist Church in Jacksonville, TX, demonstrated living under grace to me through his personal example probably better than anyone I had ever known.

While he served as the pastor of Rocky Springs, I began to have some personal problems in my life. I contacted Bro. Moore for help, who immediately dropped everything and made the five hour trip to Brownwood to offer his support.

As I began to lay out what was happening in my life, he began to ask me, “How’s your prayer life? How’s your Bible reading going? How much time are you spending with God? How much time are you spending on your ministry and with your church?”

My answers to these questions were not good. Bro. Moore then used my answers to demonstrate to me that my main problem wasn’t my situation, but rather the fact that I had drifted from God. He led me through a self-examination of my works as a Spiritual blood pressure test to reveal that there was a problem.

I wasn’t in trouble because my prayer life slipped. I was in trouble because my Spiritual walk slipped, as indicated by my lax prayer and devotional life. The other problems were mere extensions of that main problem.

So, with all that said, we want to keep our Spiritual health in check. Stay in the Lord’s presence through prayer, Bible reading, and worship. Trust in the Lord, and endeavor to strengthen that faith.

And then, as you go, evaluate your life. If you don’t like what you see, you can change your habits, but the Spiritual change inside your heart will provide the basis to make the lasting change.

This is What Got Them Banned from the Promised Land

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So, there were the Israelites. God had delivered them from the bondage of Egypt, saved them from the Egyptian army by parting the Red Sea, allowing them to pass on dry ground, led them with the pillar of cloud by day, and the pillar of fire by night, fed them with the manna and provided water for them, but here they stood on the edge of the Promised Land, uncertain if God will help them.

God told them to go into the land and take it. Instead, they sent in spies. Of the 12 spies that went in, 10 said the land was unconquerable. Only 2 said they could take it, because God was with them. The Israelites refused to go into the land and began considering whether to go back to Egypt.

This is the day the Lord calls “the provocation,” or “the day of temptation.” This is the day the Israelites unequivocably told God, “We don’t trust you.”

There is no greater sin against God than that… the sin of unbelief. The sin of refusing to trust Him.

Conversely, there’s no greater way to please God than to simply trust Him. It’s faith that impresses God. It was the faith of the centurion that caused Jesus to marvel. It was Abel’s faith that pleased God with his sacrifice. It was Abraham’s faith that made God want to make him the father of many nations.

It was David’s faith that labeled him, “A man after God’s own heart.”

But the Israelites in the wilderness?

They saw the plagues of Egypt. They experienced the deliverance through the Red Sea. They were fed miraculously. They witnessed the power of Mount Sinai.

Yet, here they are in the Promised Land, with God leading them in, and they refused to follow, because they didn’t believe. That, according to Hebrews 3, is what provoked the Lord to anger.

God then told the Israelites that they (that current generation) would never enter into the Promised Land. They would wander in the wilderness for 40 years before He would lead their children in.

As I sit here and type this, I wonder how they could be so faithless, after seeing God do so many mighty works in their presence. But then I think about my own faithlessness.

How often have I seen God come through for me. How often has He delivered me, carried me through a storm, and answered my prayers. Seeing God’s history of caring for me, why do I fear, even though the current storm seems to rage longer than the ones before?

This lack of faith comes from the hardness within my heart, which comes from me forgetting Who the Lord really is. I forget His love, His grace, His goodness and His character.

So, I allow my heart to become hardened with bitterness and unbelief sets in, which sets the stage for sin, and possibly a spectacular downfall.

Hebrews 3 gives us the remedy for this. Hebrews 3 encourages us to get to know the Lord better, to be vigilant against the hardening of our own hearts, to watch for unbelief creeping into our lives, and to gather together and encourage each other in our faith.

Wednesday night, 10/8/25, at 7 p.m., we will take a closer look at Hebrews 3 at First Baptist Church of Hermleigh, 483 Harlan Ave, Hermleigh, TX. We’d love to see you!

Not Even Satan Will Do This…

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If you look at the world today, and examine human history, you will see that evil often runs rampant, and at times, seems unbridled.

In the years following World War II, hundreds of veterans surrendered to the ministry and returned to the fields in which they fought in order to deliver the Gospel. Whether it was the concentration camps of Germany, or the cruelty of the Japanese empire, these men saw what a dark place the world becomes when denied the light of the Gospel.

Rewind the clock a few centuries, and you will see the cruelty of the Inquisition, the Crusades, the Dark Ages (appropriately named), and the Romans had cruelty down to a science.

Today, the world remains a cruel place, with genocide being common in the third world, and human abuses and degradation common in the first world.

When one looks at the evil in the world, and comes to the realization that all this came into the world when man sinned in the garden at Satan’s temptation, one rightfully concludes that Satan is the source of the evil in the world.

Furthermore, one wonders just how much worse things can get? How much farther down this rabbit hole can society go?

We will learn that when the Great Tribulation comes. In the meantime, as we take all this in, it is interesting to note that there is one sin in which Satan has never been guilty. Atheism.

This notion hit me this morning when a quote from Charles Spurgeon popped up on my social media feed. Concerning atheism, Spurgeon said, “Atheism is a strange thing, even the devils never fell into that vice, for even the devils fear and tremble.”

Of all the lies, evil and sin that Satan has perpetrated onto the world through his willing accomplices, atheism is not one of them. Mainly because Satan knows as well as anyone the existence and power of God.

Which makes atheism even stranger. Because, despite the universal belief in God in the spiritual realm, and the centuries of wisdom guided by a belief in God (even among non-Christians), the modern atheist sees himself as wiser than everyone else. But, he’s a fool.

Psalm 14:1 says “The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God. They are corrupt, they have done abominable works, there is none that doeth good.”

The fool says in his heart, “There is no God.”

Romans 1:21-22 tells us that, “Because that, when they knew God, they glorified him not as God, neither were thankful; but became vain in their imaginations, and their foolish heart was darkened. 22 Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools.”

The modern atheist has rejected God, has convinced himself there is no God, and in doing so, has become vain (empty) in his thoughts and dreams, and darkness has filled his heart.

Even though he thinks himself wiser than those around him, he is a fool.

Both Psalm 14 and Romans 1 go on to show us the darkness and sin that follow once someone convinces himself that there is no God. But, there’s another side to this story as well.

Often, the fool that says in his heart, “There is no God,” is not an avowed atheist. In fact, he may even be a professing Christian. However, he is living as if God didn’t exist.

You see, to engage in sinful behavior, you have to at least temporarily convince yourself that either God does not exist, or that He is not watching, or that He doesn’t care. Because if you did believe in that moment that God was present, watching and that He cared, you wouldn’t do the sin you are about to do.

This is not something a Christian does consciously, but rather a state of mind one unknowingly enters into when they are in the process of backsliding. It works like this.

The Christian becomes lax in his Spiritual discipline. He is not praying as he should, is not spending time in God’s word, and is not gathering with his church. As he drifts, so does his consciousness about God.

As that consciousness about God drifts, so does the Christian’s moral compass. He begins to lose sight of his God-given responsibilities, of God’s authority and expectation, and finds himself justifying the things that please his flesh in the moment.

As he does this, he backslides. Until God intervenes and disciplines him. Then, he repents.

The backslide is foolish to the point that even the Christian thinks to himself, “What was I thinking?” Often, there’s no answer to that question. But we know what he wasn’t thinking… and that is that God is present, active, and watching. So, even though he didn’t say “There is no God,” he acted as if that were true, and thus acted foolishly.

When Satan sins against God, he does so in cognizant opposition to God with the misguided thought of either overthrowing God, or hindering His will. When man sins against God, it’s often with the misguided thought that God either doesn’t exist, or doesn’t care.

Don’t fall into that pitfall. We will sin. We will miss the mark. But let’s not backslide by neglecting our Spiritual lives, and let’s not fail to preach the Gospel to ourselves daily and remind ourselves of God’s truth.