Saturday, October 25, 2008
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Search My Heart, O God
Brent Barnett 

David prays a very admirable prayer in Psalm 139:23-24 saying, "Search me, O 
God, and know my heart; Try me and know my anxious thoughts; And see if there
be any hurtful way in me, And lead me in the everlasting way."  David is quick 
to understand and admit that he is prone (as we all are) to hidden sins
(see Psalm 19:12), errors of heart of which we are not yet aware.  Once we 
become aware of them, we need to deal with them, and it is David who sets an
example of being proactive in this process.  Rather than waiting for sin to 
happen and the consequences to result, David asks God to show him where his
faults might lie.  If he can be made aware of them before they hurt him or 
others, why wouldn't he prefer to be changed ahead of time?  This is exactly
what a person with a tender heart toward God ought to do.  He ought to ask God 
to search his heart so that he can be made aware of anything that needs
to be dealt with.  The wonderful thing is that David has already acknowledged 
in verse one of this same chapter that God has already searched him and known
him.  God already knows the errors in David's heart and makeup.  It is once 
David realizes just how much God knows about him and how much God thinks about
him that David comes to welcome God's searching out of his heart so that he can 
benefit from the knowledge which God possesses about him.  It is a privilege
as a child of God to have the mind of Christ (1 Corinthians 2:16), part of 
which, is to be made aware of our weaknesses and sin.  

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God has given us as the body of Christ a specific time to be introspective, 
though His desire is that we should deal with sin as quickly as possible all
the time.  The Lord's Supper is a fixed time to mediate upon the work of Christ 
on the cross, a large part of which involves doing what David did in asking
God to search and know his heart.  When we partake in communion, we ought to 
ask God to try us and see if there are any wicked ways within us.  If there
are, we ought not to partake until we repent or make an issue right with a 
brother or sister whom we might have sinned against.  This is the sanctifying
part of this ordinance instituted by Christ.  It is a time to reflect upon the 
blood of Christ shed for us and the body of Christ broken for us such that
we remember who we are in Christ to the extent that we want to honor Him fully 
with our lives.  Paul is adamant in 1 Corinthians 11:29 that we be introspective
about sin and "judge the body rightly."  Verses 28-30 say the following: "But a 
man must examine himself, and in so doing he is to eat of the bread and
drink of the cup. For he who eats and drinks, eats and drinks judgment to 
himself if he does not judge the body rightly.  For this reason many among you
are weak and sick, and a number sleep."  When we let sin go unchecked in our 
lives, it can bring decay to our bodies (Psalm 32:3), and it certainly brings
decay to our souls (Galatians 5:9).  God doesn't take lightly to blatant 
blasphemy and hypocrisy during such a solemn occasion.  

The highest honor we can give Christ Who died for us is to die to self and live 
for Him.  The greatest insult we can cast upon Him is to refuse the grace
and sanctifying power which He died so that we could freely receive.  When we 
hide sin in our hearts, we insult Christ by refusing His gift and blaspheming
His redemptive work.  It is not that we lose our salvation when we harden our 
hearts, but we certainly grieve the heart of God greatly.  It delights God's
heart when we purify ourselves as He is pure during the time of communion or at 
any other time (1 John 3:3).  May we not forget the importance of introspection
and self-examination when taking of the Lord's Table.

One of the best ways to keep walking in the straight and narrow way is to be 
regularly introspective.  This involves being sensitive to the Holy Spirit's
conviction, being humble in reading the Word, and praying proactively for God 
to reveal character flaws that need to be rectified and sanctified.  May
we take it upon ourselves to pray as David did that God would search us and 
know us so that we could be sanctified and changed. 

Brent Barnett
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Brenton M. Barnett is the founder of the free Bible teaching O. Addison Gethers
e-mail address : [EMAIL PROTECTED] or [EMAIL PROTECTED]
window live messenger: [EMAIL PROTECTED] aim: durangoadd64 skype: cowboys62 
yahoo messenger: OADDISONGETHERS
 
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