Let’s start with a riddle: What two partners live less than two
feet apart but never meet? They’re both CEOs of vast organizations with
overlapping jurisdictions; they communicate instantly, and work in
perfect coordination. One would perish without the other. One
specializes in intellectual pursuits all day while the other pumps iron.
These two allies work tirelessly for a lifetime without ever taking a
vacation or a day off. Even the slightest interruption of their labors
would be catastrophic, so they never sleep. They’re both exactly the
same age, inhabit the same territory, and never rest. Their combined
efforts keep us alive and well.
I’m talking, of course, about your brain and your heart. They both
oversee complex systems that are necessary for life—the nervous system
and the circulatory system. From before our birth until the moment we go
to be with the Lord, they’re on the job.
But the relationship between head and heart isn’t just
physiological. The Bible speaks of the brain as the center of our
thinking and has much to say about the condition of our minds. The heart
represents our affection, emotion, and personality. Sometimes it is
hard to get the message from our heads to our hearts. It’s possible to
have “head knowledge” of God and His Word without its filtering down
into “heart knowledge.” We are reminded in Proverbs 4:23 to “Keep your
heart with all diligence, for out of it spring the issues of life.”
We read about joy in the Bible, but we meander throughout the day
with low spirits. We hear a sermon about patience; but before the day is
out, we’ve lost our temper. We become engrossed with the study of
biblical prophecy about the End Times, but somehow we don’t share the
Gospel with those in our neighborhood should He come today. We read a
book on Christian parenting, but we can’t find time to read the
Scriptures to our children or pray with them at bedtime. We teach a
Sunday school lesson about stewardship and tithing, and then overspend
on our credit card for something that we’ve been wanting.
In Matthew 23, Jesus censured the scribes and Pharisees for studying
the Law without applying it to their lives. In verses 27-28, He said
graphically, “Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you are
like whitewashed tombs which indeed appear beautiful outwardly, but
inside are full of dead men’s bones . . . you also outwardly appear
righteous to men, but inside you are full of hypocrisy and lawlessness.”
Three Connections
To avoid the trap of the Pharisees, we’ve got to guard the interconnection between our thoughts and our attitudes.
That takes full-fledged Bible study.
Whenever you read a passage in the Bible for your own nourishment or to
teach others, your study must include observation, interpretation, and
application. In other words, always approach every passage in Scripture
with three questions: (1) What does it say? (2) What does it mean? (3)
What does it mean to me? Application requires meditation. We have to
contemplate specific verses, pondering them and ruminating over them
until they inform our thinking and affect our perspectives and
personalities.
It also takes prayer. Suppose you’re
reading through Proverbs and come to chapter 15: “A soft answer turns
away wrath, but a harsh word stirs up anger.” One of the most effective
ways of getting that verse circulating through your system is by turning
it into a prayer: “Lord, teach me the secret of the soft answer. Keep
me from overreacting today, from speaking with irritation. Remind me in
advance that harsh words increase the anger in the one with whom I’m
speaking.”
It also takes commitment. We have to use our mind to put the Bible into practice and to commit ourselves to trust its promises and obey its commands.
Salvation must be experienced. The Bible has to saturate
our personalities. The Holy Spirit wants to convert the words of
Scripture into transformed personalities. Head knowledge without heart
knowledge is worse than useless; but when head and heart join forces, it
changes our lives forever.
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