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PURITY OF HEART
"Blessed are
the pure in heart, for they will see
God." (Matt. 5:8)
We never
see many things that are pure. Some
things are supposed to be pure but
are not. Other things are partly
pure. Streams and rivers were no
doubt meant to be pure, but today
many of them flow with a high
percentage of sewage. The church was
meant to be pure, but even she is
often defiled. Brides are clothed
with the outward symbols of purity,
but statistics tell us that today
many of them recite the marriage
vows in impurity.
There are a
few things that are really pure. God
is pure, holy and separate from
sinners. God's word is pure (Psa.
119:140). Jesus is pure (Heb. 7:26).
We believe that someday there will
be a pure church. The New Jerusalem
will be pure as it comes down from
heaven, and a pure river of the
water of life will flow out of her
(Rev. 21:18, 21; 22:1). In that day
there will be a road to Zion that
will be pure and holy, and only the
pure ones will venture to walk upon
it (Isa. 35:8). At that time those
who serve the Lord will be pure;
they will be clothed in spotless
linen.
In the
scripture, God gives us many
pictures of his purity, and of his
desire that man should be pure. In
the book of Exodus, the Tabernacle,
where God came to dwell and meet
with man, is intimately described.
In the innermost part of the
Tabernacle we see all things
overlaid with pure gold. The
candlestick, that represented the
presence of God, was totally made of
pure gold (Ex.39:37). The High
Priest was clothed with a chain of
pure gold upon his breastplate
(39:15), with bells of pure gold
upon the hem of his robe (39:25),
and he wore a crown of pure gold
upon his head (39:30). This is a
picture of how man is to walk with
God, in purity, glory and holiness.
We see this picture again at the end
of the book of Revelation, as
redeemed and purified men walk
before God in a city that has a
street made of pure gold.
We also see
in Exodus that the holy anointing
oil had to be pure (37:29). The
olive oil for the great menorah
also had to be pure and undefiled
(Lev. 24:2). These items represent
God's Holy Spirit, and we see that
the Holy Spirit is called
"Holy" for a reason.
THE OPPOSITE OF PURITY AND
HOLINESS
The
opposite of purity is defilement.
There are two areas of defilement
that we might consider. First of
all, there is the defilement of the
flesh. Surprisingly, there are not
too many ways in which the flesh can
be defiled. A person can defile his
body through various forms of sexual
immorality. He can defile it through
drugs, drunkenness and gluttony, but
there are not too many other ways he
can defile the body.
The big
area of defilement is in the area of
the heart, which includes mind and
spirit. We can say that unless the
heart of man is first defiled it is
impossible to really defile the
flesh. All fleshly defilements first
begin in the heart. It is for this
reason that the biblical writer
says, "Above all else, guard
your heart, for it is the wellspring
of life" (Prov.4:23).
King David
realized this truth after he had
fallen into his awful sin. He
committed adultery with the wife of
one of his own great military
heroes. To cover up the crime he had
the man killed. When David was
confronted with his sin he came into
deep repentance. His heart-rending
sighs are recorded for us in Psalm
51:10 where he says, "Create
in me a pure heart, O God, and renew
a steadfast spirit within me."
David came to realize that evil
deeds spring from the heart, not
from the flesh.
Jesus dealt
with this matter when he spoke on
the subject of clean and unclean
foods. He instructed us that the
body is made unclean by what
proceeds out of a person’s heart.
This includes evil thoughts, lusts,
passions, greed, pride, envy,
unbelief, etc. (Mt. 15:19). When a
person lusts, that person is
defiled. When he has unbelief in his
heart he is also defiled. When a
person is affected with dead
theology, dead religion, or dead
works, that one is defiled just as
surely as if he had walked through
the tomb of a dead person in Old
Testament times.
WHAT IS PURITY OF HEART?
What
does it mean to be pure in heart? It
was Sören Kierkegaard who published
a book in 1938 by this title: Purity
of Heart Is to Will One Thing.
Purity of heart is to have one
thought and that thought be God.
David summed it up with these words
from Psalm 27:4, "One thing
I ask of the LORD, this is what I
seek: that I may dwell in the house
of the LORD all the days of my life,
to gaze upon the beauty of the LORD
and to seek him in his temple"
(Psa. 27:4). It is precisely for
this reason that the pure in heart
will see God. God is the sole object
of their search in life. He is their
aim, their goal, and their delight.
In these
days, hearts seek after many things.
People may pretend that they are
seeking God with all their heart and
with all their strength, but often
the telltale signs betray their true
motives. Purity of heart deals with
motives and hidden purposes. The
writer of Proverbs says, "The
purposes of a man's heart are deep
waters..."(Prov. 20:5).
Yet, the Lord knows man's heart and
carefully deals with it. The
scripture says, "The
crucible for silver and the furnace
for gold, but the LORD tests the
heart" (Prov. 17:3).
Once there
was a king in Jerusalem by the name
of Amaziah. In some ways he was a
great king, but in other ways he was
not so great. The scripture
testifies of him, "He did
what was right in the eyes of the
LORD, but not wholeheartedly"
(2 Chron. 25:2). Imagine that! It is
possible even to do the right things
and have a wrong heart. God examines
the heart. When God sent Samuel to
look for his chosen king, the
prophet thought God was looking for
a man with outstanding appearance
and stature. The prophet looked upon
one of the sons of Jesse, thinking
that he must surely be the chosen
king. At last God said to the
prophet, "…Do not consider
his appearance or his height, for I
have rejected him. The LORD does not
look at the things man looks at. Man
looks at the outward appearance, but
the LORD looks at the heart."
(1 Sam. 16:7).
Young David
was chosen by God, and he went on to
become not only the greatest king
Israel ever had, but he became the
greatest seeker after God. With his
life he defined purity of heart in a
way it had not been defined before.
It was not that David lived a
sinless life. He probably sinned
worse than many people in the church
today, but he always came running
back after God, even in tears of
remorse.
HOW MAY WE HAVE PURE HEARTS?
If we
desire a perfect heart - a pure
heart, we must ask for it like David
did. He said, "Search me, O
God, and know my heart; test me and
know my anxious thoughts. See if
there is any offensive way in me,
and lead me in the way
everlasting" (Psa.
139:23-24). We must gain the courage
to face our real selves and take a
hard look at our true motives. We
are not fooling God, and chances are
that we are not fooling as many
people as we think. We must be
willing to open up our inmost beings
to the thorough searching of God,
without fear and in simple faith. We
must let God examine and change our
real motives. Those hidden drives
and ambitions and those dark secrets
of our lives must be brought to the
light. This whole process is known
as repentance.
Moses dealt
with this very matter when he
challenged Israel: "Circumcise
your hearts, therefore, and do not
be stiff-necked any longer"
(Deut. 10:16). God wants to do a
deep and personal work in us. He
desires to get past the outward,
fleshly things into the inner man of
the heart - into the area of
desires, goals, loves, and aims of
life.
We read in
scripture a very unflattering
assessment of the heart of man in
its natural state. The scripture
says, "The heart is
deceitful above all things and
beyond cure. Who can understand
it?" (Jer. 17:9) But God
says, "I the LORD search the
heart and examine the mind, to
reward a man according to his
conduct, according to what his deeds
deserve" (Jer. 17:10). The
natural heart of man is bent on
evil, but God desires to give each
of us a new heart - a pure heart.
God desires that we have a spiritual
"heart transplant." The
Lord says in Ezekiel 36:26, "I
will give you a new heart and put a
new spirit in you; I will remove
from you your heart of stone and
give you a heart of flesh."
As
Christians we call this the new
birth, and we believe it comes by
accepting Jesus and allowing him to
take up residence within our
innermost being. It was for this
purpose that he died. He "…gave
himself for us to redeem us from all
wickedness and to purify for himself
a people that are his very own,
eager to do what is good" (Tit.
2:14).
Once we
have called upon the Lord as David
did, and circumcised our hearts as
Moses bade us do, God wants us to
progress on in purity. The scripture
challenges us: "Now that you
have purified yourselves by obeying
the truth so that you have sincere
love for your brothers, love one
another deeply, from the heart"
(1 Pet. 1:22). He exhorts us
further: "Since we have
these promises, dear friends, let us
purify ourselves from everything
that contaminates body and spirit,
perfecting holiness out of reverence
for God" (2 Cor. 7:1);
"Everyone who has this hope
in him purifies himself, just as he
is pure" (1 John 3:3).
God desires
that we keep our hearts and minds
fixed upon him, upon that which is
pure (Phil. 4:8). Such a one may
ascend to the hill of the Lord and
may stand in his holy place. He or
she is the one who has clean hands
and a pure heart (Psa. 24:33-4).
This one shall see God and live in
his presence forever. This one,
above all people on earth, will be
truly blessed and happy.
-Jim Gerrish
This updated article is published
courtesy of Bridges For Peace,
Jerusalem. Original publication
date, 1992.
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