Mat 6:21-22, Jam 1:8

“Where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.  If thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of light.”

“A double minded man is unstable in all his ways.”

 

What about Today’s Verse…

The closing paragraphs of (Mat_6) are full of instances of a divided heart.  The Greek word for care means that which divides.

Some are divided by anxiety.  The anxious soul cannot take a strong straight course; any more than a man can sleep who is wondering whether he has bolted the front door or wound up his watch.  Some are divided by contrariness–a most difficult and complicated disposition of soul.  We would like to be pleasant, helpful, agreeable, and amiable, but are conscious of cross-currents that restrain and make us awkward and disagreeable, and we find ourselves rent between two strong influences, the one to be Christ like and gracious, the other to be distant and angular.  Others are divided by fitful and passionate impulses.  Happy are they who can hold them well in check.  Even St. Paul tells us that he was conscious of these two wills–the better self which longed to do the will of God, and the lower, selfish, passionate self, which brought him into subjection.  St. Augustine tells us that, though the prayers of Monica, his mother, greatly affected him, he was constantly swept back from his ideal by an outbreak of passion.

A divided heart lacks the first element of strength–it is unstable.  The men who leave their mark on the world are those who can say:  “This one thing I do.”  But we need more than concentration, we need consecration.  We must not only be united in ourselves, we must be united in God.  Let us make the prayer of (Psa_86:11), our own:  “O knit my heart unto Thee, that I may fear Thy name.”  Yield yourself to God that He may disunite you from the world, and weave you into His own life.

 

Let us Pray:

O Faithful Lord, grant to us, we pray Thee, faithful hearts devoted to Thee, and to the service of all men for Thy sake.  Amen.