The Heart of the Matter
The Heart of the Matter
May 2011
My sister Chrystal
and I shared a room growing up. It was a small 12 x 13 space with our
twin-sized beds lining opposite walls. Mine was right next to the Jack and Jill
bathroom that connected to our brothers’ room. I distinctly remember waking up
one morning, looking above the frame of that bathroom door and seeing a slight,
slender crack creeping upward about two feet from the top of the door to the
ceiling. Strange. When my dad found
out about it, he called a painter who came over, applied some plaster and
repainted with the most compatible color he could find. For several weeks after
that, I went to bed looking at the misplaced line of color streaked on the wall
above the door. Then one day I
awoke startled to see that the crack had returned. And this time, he wasn’t
alone. He apparently had been recommending his new living arrangements to his
family members, because it appeared they’d all come to settle in with him. As
many as a half dozen cracks of all shapes and sizes now laced the wall. But when another
painter came to examine the situation, he told my dad that painting alone
wouldn’t be sufficient to solve the problem. The reason the cracks were showing
up, he explained, was because the foundation underneath our house was shifting.
And no matter how much paint we splashed up there to cover them, they would
keep coming back. The cracks were merely symptoms of a more serious condition. The only way to
rectify this problem was to address the foundation. . . . the foundation. Have you ever said
something - uttered an off-hand comment or voiced an impromptu sentiment - then
immediately wondered how in the world you’d allow something like that to spill
out of your mouth? Have you, like me, ever surprised yourself? Controlling my own
tongue is a quest that I’m sure will require all the maturity that every single
year of my life will bring. That’s because so far along this journey, I’ve
already discovered that the “cracks” I make with my mouth are actually symptoms
of a much deeper, much more intimate issue, something much more difficult to
address. It’s down below the surface. Closer to the ground than my mouth is. "For out of the abundance (overflow) of the heart the mouth speaks." (Luke 6:45 AMP) Turns out, my
mouth is only a barometer that divulges whether I’m immersed in humility and
surrendered in obedience to the Lord, or whether I’m housing a malnourished
spirit that stubbornly refuses to yield to the wisdom of God’s own Word. It’s a
foundational issue. So taking inventory
of your tongue’s track record is an instructive way to uncover what’s hidden
within your heart. Let’s try it. The words of our
lips are like cracks in the wall, revealing what’s going on at the foundation.
For truly, “out of the abundance (overflow) of the heart the mouth speaks.” So I ask you . . .
What is in
abundance in your heart? What are you
putting inside? What treasures are
you storing? If you don’t know,
just listen to yourself, because your words and tone and topics of conversation
will tell you. This is why it’s so imperative that you heed this remarkable
piece of biblical advice: "Watch over your heart with all diligence, for from it flow the springs of life." (Proverbs 4:23) You must be the
guardian of your own heart, ensuring that you do not allow it to become
polluted by anything that will hinder your mission of being conformed into the
likeness of Christ. The more you soak in His Word and His truth, the more you
can expect to have a deep reservoir filled with all the treasures needed to
temper your conversations with wisdom, kindness, and humility. So maybe, instead
of “watching our mouths” we should begin by watching our hearts. Any lasting
change we make in controlling our speech will have to start at the base, the
foundation, down where the cracks are really formed. Down where
breakthroughs can really happen.
Priscilla Shirer, Going Beyond Ministries
*Adapted from
Priscilla's new book, "The
Resolution For Women".
To be released September 2011 through Broadman and Holman Publishing