From the Minister's Desk . . .
Gale Nelson
Offerings
The sacrifices of God are a
broken spirit, a broken and a contrite heart; These, O God,
You will not despise. Psalm 51:17
One of the hardest truths for us to remember is the importance
of true penitence. Even when we're conscious of a desperate
need for God, we often seek His favor by offering Him nothing
more than the outward actions of worship. But what God is more
interested in is the condition of our hearts, and if our
hearts are not truly given to Him in godly sorrow, then there
is nothing else we can offer Him that will be acceptable.
However, when David said that the sacrifices God desired were
those of a contrite heart, he did not mean that the physical
acts of worship which God had commanded could be disregarded.
It would be a mistake to use this text to support the view
that it does not matter how, or even if, we worship God
outwardly as long as we love Him in our hearts. The familiar
"not . . . but" construction in the Scriptures simply means
that the "not" is less important than the "but," and that the
former has little meaning apart from the latter. For example,
when Jesus said, "Do not labor for the food which perishes,
but for the food which endures to everlasting life" (John
6:27), we do not understand Him to mean that working for our
physical food is wrong or unimportant; rather we understand
Him to be saying that our efforts in the physical realm are
far less important than those in the spiritual and that the
former has very little significance if it is not connected to
the latter.
Similarly, David is teaching us in Psalm 51 that the outward
aspects of worship are relatively meaningless by themselves.
If these deeds don't come from a humble heart that is
conscious of its own sin, then God is not pleased by them.
This, as we have said, is not an easy truth for us to
remember. The temptation is always to give God this or that
physical "offering" and suppose that He surely must look upon
us favorably for having worshiped Him as we were commanded to
do. But such "worship" does not honor God. The thing that He
desires us to offer Him, far more than anything else, is "a
broken spirit, a broken and a contrite heart.
Miami Gardens, as we enter this "season" of giving and
thanksgiving, let us not forget our responsibility to honor
God with our hearts and the first fruits of our labor.
Give me a pure heart -- that I may see thee,
A humble heart -- that I may hear thee,
A heart of love -- that I may serve thee,
A heart of faith -- that I may abide in thee.
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