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Octavius Winslow

Proverbs 23:26

Proverbs 23:26
Octavius Winslow November, 14 2016 4 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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November, 14 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 4 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about the human heart?

The Bible teaches that the human heart is naturally idolatrous, displacing God with other objects of affection (Proverbs 23:26).

According to Proverbs 23:26, God calls us to give Him our hearts, acknowledging that the human heart is naturally prone to idolatry. Our affections, which should be centered on God, often seek other attachments, leading to a situation where we may love and worship the creature more than the Creator. This idolatry may manifest as we concentrate our love on a single object, turning our hearts into temples for idols instead of devoting them to Christ. The significance of surrendering our hearts wholly to God stems from our need for His cleansing from idolatry and the recognition that God is rightly jealous for our love.

Proverbs 23:26

Why is loving God above all important for Christians?

Loving God above all is crucial for Christians as it prevents idolatry and ensures our affections are directed toward our Creator (Matthew 22:37).

For Christians, loving God above all else is vital because it safeguards against the propensity to idolize created things. Scripture calls us to love Him supremely, to place His claims above all human relationships and attachments. This principle guarantees that while we are encouraged to love our spouses, children, and friends, our devotion to God must hold primacy. Misplacing this love leads to a painful process of weaning, where God must remove the idols from our hearts to restore our focus exclusively on Him. This divine jealousy highlights God's desire for a loving relationship that transcends all other affections, ensuring our hearts are aligned with His purposes and glory.

Matthew 22:37

How do we know that God cleanses us from idolatry?

We know God cleanses us from idolatry through His Word, which assures us of His willingness to wean our hearts from false affections (Ezekiel 36:26).

The assurance of God’s cleansing from idolatry is rooted in His promise to transform our hearts. Scriptures such as Ezekiel 36:26 speak to God's commitment to give us a new heart and remove our heart of stone, replacing it with a heart of flesh inclined towards Him. This indicates that God actively works in us to detach our affections from the idols we cling to, guiding us back to a true devotion to Him. Furthermore, the process involves refining our relationship with Him and teaching us to enjoy His gifts without replacing Him as the source of our joy. As we align our hearts with God’s will, we experience His faithful cleansing from all idolatry.

Ezekiel 36:26

Why should Christians engage in biblical community?

Engaging in biblical community is essential for Christians as it fosters love, support, and accountability within the body of Christ (Hebrews 10:24-25).

Biblical community plays a significant role in the life of a Christian. Hebrews 10:24-25 emphasizes the importance of gathering together to encourage one another and provoke good works. Within a community, Christians find a supportive environment where they can express their love for one another, share burdens, and remain accountable in their walk with God. This relational dynamic not only enhances individual spiritual growth but also strengthens the body of Christ as a whole. Relationships built in Christian fellowship reflect the love God desires for us to cultivate, fostering friendships that serve as sanctifying channels for grace and spiritual encouragement.

Hebrews 10:24-25

“My son, give me your heart.”

— Proverbs 23:26

THE human heart is naturally idolatrous. Its affections once supremely centered in God: but now, disjoined from Him, they go in quest of other objects of attachment, and we love and worship the creature rather than the Creator. The circle which our affections traverse may not indeed by a large one; there are, perchance, but few to whom we fully surrender our heart; no, so circumscribed may the circle be, that one object alone shall attract, absorb, and concentrate in itself our entire and undivided love—that one object to us as a universe of beings, and all others comparatively indifferent and insipid. Who cannot see that, in a case like this, the danger is imminent of transforming the heart—Christ’s own sanctuary—into an idol’s temple, where the creature is loved, and reverenced, and served more than He who gave it. But from all idolatry our God will cleanse us, and from all our idols Christ will wean us. The Lord is jealous, with a holy jealousy, of our love. Poor as our affection is, He asks its complete surrender. That He requires our love at the expense of all creature attachment, the Bible nowhere intimates. He created our affections, and He it is who provides for their proper and pleasant indulgence. There is not a single precept or command in the Scriptures that forbids their exercise, or that discourages their intensity. Husbands are exhorted to “love their wives, even as Christ loved His church.” Parents are to cherish a like affection toward their children, and children are bound to render back a filial love not less intense to their parents. And we are to “love our neighbors as ourselves.” Nor does the word of God furnish examples of Christian friendship less interesting and devoted. One of the choicest and tenderest blessings with which God can enrich us, next to Himself, is such a friend as Paul had in Epaphroditus, a “brother and companion in labor, and fellow-soldier;” and such an affectionate friendship as John, the loving disciple, cherished for his well-beloved Gaius, whom he loved in the truth, and to whom, in the season of his sickness, he thus touchingly poured out his heart’s affectionate sympathy: “Beloved, I wish above all things that you may prosper and be in health, even as your soul prospers.” Count such a friend and such friendship among God’s sweetest and holiest bestowments. The blessings of which it may be to you the sanctifying channel are immense. The tender sympathy—the jealous watchfulness—the confidential repose—the faithful admonition—above all, the intercessory prayer, connected with Christian friendship, may be placed in the inventory of our most inestimable and precious things.

It is not therefore the use, but the abuse, of our affections—not their legitimate exercise, but their idolatrous tendency—over which we have need to exercise the greatest vigilance. It is not our love to the creature against which God contends, but it is in not allowing our love to Himself to subordinate all other love. We may love the creature, but we may not love the creature more than the Creator. When the Giver is lost sight of and forgotten in the gift, then comes the painful process of weaning. When the heart burns its incense before some human shrine, and the cloud as it ascends veils from the eye the beauty and the excellence of Jesus, then comes the painful proves of weaning. When the absorbing claims and the engrossing attentions of some loved one are placed in competition and are allowed to clash with the claims of God, and the service due from us personally to His cause and truth, then comes the painful process of weaning. When creature devotion deadens our heart to the Lord, lessens our interest in His cause, congeals our zeal and love and liberality, detaches us from the public means of grace, withdraws from the closet, the Bible, and the communion of saints, thus propagating leanness of soul, and robbing God of His glory, then comes the painful process of weaning. Christ will be the first in our affections—God will be supreme in our service—and His kingdom and righteousness must take precedence of all other things.

From Morning Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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Devotionals

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