Calvary Chapel of Jonesboro
 
He who trusts in his own heart is a fool, but he who walks wisely will be delivered. Proverbs 28:26

One of the phrases I hear all the time is that I need to trust my heart in order to make a right decision. I know that this is popular - and that it makes for a good wall plaque (you know, Laugh, Love, Trust Your Heart), but it is unwise counsel for us to follow from a Biblical worldview. This is because one of the pillars of a Biblical worldview is the fall of man and the subsequent damage that has done to our ability to reason wisely. Our hearts are not trustworthy - and any decision based on what is in them is going to be an unwise one most likely.

Before we move on I want to review the state of the human heart for us. Since we live in a worldview that says that we are basically good, it is wise for us to do such a review. Jeremiah 17:9 reminds us, "The heart is deceitful above all esle, and is desperately wicked, who can understand it? After the fall of man in the garden the world was plunged into sin. By Genesis 6:5 we read the following summation of the human race. "Then the LORD saw that the wickedness of man was great on the earth, and that every intent of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually." David helps us understand our hearts when he writes in Psalm 51:5, "Behold I was brought forth in iniquity, and in sin my mother conceived me." Our condition - and the state of our hearts - is that of being sinful and rebellious toward God. Just one last Scripture to bring this truth home. Romans 3:10-12 has a very damning endictment toward the human race. We read the following there. ". . . as it is written, There is none righteous, not even one; there is none who understand, there is none who seeks for God; all have turned aside, together they have become useless; there is none who does good, there is not even one." It doesn't get any worse than this for us - and this is simply a biblical conclusion to what Paul had been teaching for three chapters in Romans. So, to trust our hearts - without conversion - without the Holy Spirit to guide and teach us - without Scripture - is very foolish.

The one who does this is called a fool. He is a fool because he walks and thinks with utter self-dependence. He lives apart from input, counsel or wisdom from others - and most importantly independent from God and His Word. As always, the fool here only wants to air what is in his own heart and in his own mind, thinking, and reasoning. He will consistently make decisions that are silly, stupid, and foolish. These kinds of decisions will actually cause great harm if they are followed fully.

Solomon warns us that it is the one who walks wisely that will be delivered from the harm that comes from foolish thinking. If you are wondering what we would need to be delivered from - here are a few examples.

- Samson trusted in his own heart - and rejected God's counsel on moral purity and sexual sin. In time his foolishness is truly astounding. Each night after a sexual romp with Delilah, she would probe him for information on where his strength was - and each night he would lie to her. He would not get that whatever he told her would happen to him - and he would be awakened by her to find men ready to harm him. Did that deter Samson and bring him to repentance? No - he continued to trust his heart and his romantic (more like lust-starved) feelings. In the end - he was NOT delivered - and it cost him his eyes and a radically different hairdo - which, by the way, cost him his strength.

- Saul trusted in his own heart - and therefore let his jealousy run rampant. He distrusted David, thinking that he wanted to overthrow him and take his kingdom. That jealousy so warped his mind that he killed 70 priests and put to death an entire village because he believed a lie. In the end, he was not delivered. He trusted his own heart - which eventually led him to inquire of a witch what to do in battle. That was the last straw for God - who allowed Saul to die in battle the next day.

- David trusted in his own heart - which was led astray by his loins when he saw Bathsheba naked as she bathed on a rooftop. His own heart decided to hatch several lame plans to cover his tracks when his adultery led to her pregnancy. The ultimate foolishness was having ordered Joab to act foolishly in battle so that Bathsheba's husband, Uriah, would be killed in battle. David was not delivered from the destruction his adultery would bring to his family. Two sons were killed, a daughter and 10 concubines were raped, and a two costly rebellions killed thousands as a result.

- Peter trusted his own heart - that he truly did love Jesus more than all the other disciples. That kind of foolish arrogance led him to follow Jesus - but only at a distance. Jesus warned him that denials - three to be exact - would come from him before others. But Peter knew better than the Christ - he trusted his own heart and strength to stand. He was not delivered as he heard a cock crow after his third denial. He was restored later by God's grace - but he never forgot what trusting his own heart cost him.

Hopefully these four examples will help seal the deal for us in believing this Proverb. I know that I have far more than four exmaples of what trusting in my own heart has cost me. It is a foolish thing to do and one that always ends with a disaster. Walking wisely means walking in dependence on The Lord. Walking wisely means first coming to salvation by God's grace. Then it means walking in continued daily fellowship with God as we read His Word and desire the work of His Spirit within us. May God bless you and help you to walk wisely - and never do something so foolish as trust your own heart.

 
 
Many plans are in a man's heart, But the counsel of the Lord will stand.   Proverbs 19:21

There is a practice among Christians - and honestly - I am ashamed to admit that I have followed this practice at times in my life.  The practice of which I speak is that of making plans - carrying them out - and then later blaming them on God or on the leading of the Holy Spirit.  Let me give you an example of this practice.  There was a time when I really wanted to do a certain thing.  Over time this plan, which was in my heart, began to dominate my mind and my thinking.  One day I decided that I would do it - and honestly - without really taking it to the Lord and seeing if it was His will or not.  As "the plans of my heart" continued to be implemented, I would tell people that God had led me to do this - or that the Holy Spirit put this on my heart.  Well, as with all plans of men that arise out of their flesh - the plans of my heart crashed and burned.  But now my resposne was to tell people God was responsible for leading me into them.  

This kind of thing happens again and again in the Christian world.  There are people who promise and swear that God is the One who led them into a certain choice or action - when it is pretty clear from a study of Scripture that this choice is unscriptural.  I've had people tell me that God was leading them to divorce their wife.  I've had young ladies tell me that God was the one who led them to date a non-Christian.  They joyfully asserted that God was going to bring their young man to Christ.  In the end - someone was converted - but it was not the non-Christian.  That is why today's proverb is so important for us to understand.

There are many plans in the hearts of men.  These plans reside in a heart that is fallen - and in a heart and mind that desperately needs repentance.  As a result, as Paul has said, their understanding is darkened - and they are unable to come to godly decisions.  "But I am a Christian," some will assert - as if simply being a Christian guarantees that we will always make decisions in concert with the will of God.  The fact is that if we are not renewing our minds with the Word of God we are prone to fatal errors in judgment.  The fact is that if we are not denying ourselves, taking up our cross, and following Christ - we will be sadly mistaken about a myriad of things.  The fact is that if we are not trusting in the Lord with all our heart, not leaning on our own understanding - acknowledging Him in all our ways - He will not be directing our paths.  The fact is without these things happening daily - and even hourly - we will be directing our own paths.  The "many plans" that dwell in our heart naturally - will be what lead us.  

The proverb today tells us that it is, "the counsel of the Lord" that will stand in the end.  What is the "counsel of the Lord?"  In previous posts we have seen that this word "counsel" refers not to advice given that we can either choose to follow or not.  It is not just God's opinion on something that we can reject. The word means counsel that is given that is expected to be followed.  This is God's Word - the Scriptures - and when God offers His counsel on a matter - that matter is decided.  To do anything else is now disobedience and rebellion against God.  I know that sounds harsh to our post-modern way of thinking - but what has post-modernism brought us that will stand in the end?  

This proverb is kind of a warning to us.  The warning is this . . . you have many plans in your heart.  This fact is not denied.  The problem is that your plans are not guaranteed to stand.  They may be good ideas or they may be bad ones.  You may even have plans that succeed according to the ways of this present world.  But the fact is that the only plans that will stand are God's plans.  Nothing else will stand - ever.  And please understand that God is speaking on an eternal basis.  It is one thing to have our plans blessed in the short term - but quite another for them to be blessed now, and forever more.  Psalm 73 speaks of how David saw the wicked prospering and almost lost his faith over it.  But then he came into the sanctuary and into God's counsel.  He saw that although their plans were doing well for the short term - in the long term there were serious - even infinite problems with their way of living.  In the end they were destroyed and consumed.  They fell all at once - and there was no recovery for them.  Their plans - all those plans that were in their heart - led them to a short term prosperity here and now . . . but to an eternal judgment in the long term because they had no regard for the counsel of the Lord.  

Here is a quick way to make sure your plans are blessed beyond the short-term.  Consider how your plans will fare at the judgment seat of Christ.  Think using the Scriptures.  Think and consider your plans with an eternal outlook.  I can guarantee you that a billion years into the afterlife - no one will be patting themselves on the back in hell.  They won't be joking about how good they had it back during the 60-70 years they were alive and doing their own thing - living according to the "plans that were in their own heart."  They won't find it comforting to see how they "outsmarted God" for a few years while they ignored all His warnings about their choices and behavior.  What will be of comfort for all eternity is the fact that God's counsel stood - and will stand forever.  The plans of His heart will be established and therefore, it is that counsel and those plans that we should seek to know and follow.