"CHANGE MY HEART, OH GOD!"
Written and preached by David P. Nolte
PSALM 51:1-19
Being king must have gone to David's head. He may have thought himself
above even the Law of God. He set aside all his morals, scruples, and ethics
to follow the way of his selfish desire. He looked with lust on Bathsheba
as she bathed; he had her brought to his palace and engaged in an adulterous
alliance with her. Then when she told him she was pregnant, he tried to
cover his sin by having her husband Uriah brought home from battle for
some R&R. Uriah refused the luxury of sleeping at home so David had
him abandoned in the front lines of battle where he was slain. This was
no sin of impulse. David wasn't just caught up in circumstances beyond
his control. He planned and plotted to carry out his sin and he put great
effort into concealing it. This Psalm reveals David's folly and restoration.
It is the Psalm of the changed heart. David's story could be told and retold
under a hundred different scenarios. Maybe this Psalm relates your own
story. This morning let me relate a situation that parallels and illustrates
the universal process of spiritual recovery. When he was just 19, Al Johnson
had joined two other men in robbing a Kansas bank. The case was closed
after two other convicts were killed in an auto crash and were mistakenly
identified by bank officials as the robbers. Al felt sure he would never
be caught. He married a Christian girl and even pretended to be a Christian.
She knew nothing of his past crime. Then someone sent him a tract in the
mail entitled, "God's Plan of Salvation." Reading it, he noticed
the Bible verse that said, "whosoever shall call on the name of the
Lord shall be saved." The realization struck that salvation was for
him. He could be forgiven and his conscience set free. The guilt of his
crime accused him, the cowardice of hiding his crime shamed him. He realized
his guilt and hated it. That is the first step in having a changed heart.
David took it, and so must we. What is the first step to a changed heart?
- CONTRITION: V17:
- David spoke of a broken and contrite heart. The word for "contrite"
means
- To be bowed down with the awareness of our spiritual bankruptcy.
- That our inner spirit is crushed with a sense of its guilt.
- That we have a genuine and deep sorrow for our rebellion against God
and a determined desire to do differently.
- A contrite heart
- Does not seek to rationalize or explain or excuse or defend or justify
or palliate sin.
- Does not try to fool God or others or self. It recognizes that God
demands truth and candor.
- Does not mean merely feeling bad or remorseful about sin!
- Does not seek to blame circumstances or other people or God for our
own failure.
- Remember Adam saying, "The woman YOU gave me handed me the fruit
and I ate it. Eve pointed to the serpent and said, "He deceived me
and I ate." He blamed God and Eve, she blamed the serpent.
- Can't you just hear David doing something like that? Blaming God or
blaming Bathsheba: "Lord, if you hadn't made me king I wouldn't have
been walking on the palace roof in the first place. And besides, did you
see what she wasn't wearing?"
- Maybe we do the same thing: "Well, Lord, if you were married to
this jerk, you'd cheat too!" Or "It's not my fault, the boss
is so cheap I have to steal from the company to survive!" Or, "If
I didn't have such terrible neighbors, I wouldn't lose my temper as much!"
- A contrite heart recognizes that sin is:
- A spiritual crime since it is a violation of God's laws.
- An offense against all that is decent and moral and right.
- Rebellion, disobedience, and stubbornness of heart.
- When we become aware of our sins, iniquities and transgressions, and
are contrite, we need to know that
- God isn't interested in hollow apologies.
- God doesn't want cheap promises or resolutions.
- God cares nothing for our efforts to balance evil with a little more
good.
- God desires a broken and contrite heart which is the true sacrifice
of one who determines to turn from sin, to forsake sin, and to abandon
it.
Al Johnson became convicted of sin, was contrite, humbled his heart
and decided to truly forsake his sin and to follow Jesus Christ. When he
did, his life changed. He stopped a lifelong habit of lying and cheating.
And after much thought and prayer he confessed his crime. His confession
made television newscasts and newspaper headlines. Honest acknowledgment
of sin is an essential in our own lives, too, and it was another step in
David's reclamation. What is the next step in having a changed heart?
- CONFESSION: VV3, 4:
- There are two sides to his confession:
- He confessed to himself: "I know, I am acquainted with, I recognize
my sin! I cannot deny it or escape it or forget it. The memory haunts me,
the devil accuses me, the sin taunts me, and it is always before me."
- He confessed to God: "Against You only have I sinned."
- Along with his admission of guilt is a confession of God's correctness
and justice in judging him for his sin. David makes no plea for indulgent
lenience or permissiveness, no claim that God is being too hard on him,
no appeal for a light sentence. Simply put, it is, "I am wrong, you
are right!"
- Genuine confession demands:
- A right estimate of sin. It is not a mistake, or a slip, or mischief.
- A right attitude to sin. A loathing, a disgust, a disapproval.
- A right conduct with regard to sin. A forsaking of and a determined
renunciation of sin.
- Solomon said, "He who conceals his transgressions will not prosper,
But he who confesses and forsakes them will find compassion." Proverbs
28:13. To confess demands the honesty of:
- Isaiah who said, "Woe is me, for I am ruined! Because I am a man
of unclean lips, ..." Isaiah 6:5.
- Peter who fell at Jesus' feet and said, "Depart from me, for I
am a sinful man, O Lord!" Luke 5:8.
- The publican who smote his breast and prayed, "God, be merciful
to me, the sinner!" Luke 18:13.
- Paul who declared "It is a trustworthy statement, deserving full
acceptance, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, among
whom I am foremost of all." 1 Timothy 1:15.
Al Johnson, convicted of sin, converted to Christ, went and tried to
make things right with the state by confessing his crime. As it turned
out, under a Kansas statute of limitations, he was set free. There was
no penalty that could legally attach to him for his crime. David experienced
something even better than that. And there is something even better for
the Christian. There is forgiveness, justification, salvation. Let's consider,
then, the last step in having a changed heart:
- CLEANSING: VV7, 9, 10:
- David recognized the filth and grime of his sin and wanted to be cleansed
of it.
- He said, "Purge me, purify me, wash me." The words he uses
imply a thorough scrubbing. One pictures an old time mother with her child
at the sink scrubbing him until his skin literally shines and squeaks.
- He said, "Blot out my iniquities." It is the image of erasure
where a mark is totally obliterated, wiped away and removed.
- He said, "Create in me a clean heart, and renew a right spirit
within me." David knew the inclination of one's heart to evil.
- He knew that "every intent of the thoughts of his heart was only
evil continually." Genesis 6:5.
- He knew that "The heart is more deceitful than all else And is
desperately sick." Jeremiah 17:9.
- It was not David's desire, nor God's intent, to gloss over or to wink
at or to indulge sin. Sin had to go.
- It is not while we indulge, or excuse, or conceal sin, but when we
have experienced God's cleansing that we can know the joy of His salvation.
- Sometimes we have door-to-door salesmen trying to sell us some "Miracle
Cleaner" that will remove everything from berry stains to tattoos.
Never works! But God has a cleanser that never fails: "the blood of
Jesus His Son cleanses us from all sin." 1 John 1:7.
All sin, all times, all people, always.
In a sense, the statute of limitations had cleansed Al of punishment.
Yet, although he was beyond the scope of law to punish him, he still chose
to repay his share of the stolen funds to the bank. In time he became the
manager of a service station, the father of three admiring children, and
an outstanding Christian layman. But he didn't do that alone. David couldn't
do it alone. As Max Lucado said, "Man cannot cope with guilt alone.
I don't care how many worship services you attend or good deeds you do,
your goodness is insufficient. You can't be good enough to deserve
forgiveness. ... No one. Not you, not me, not anyone. Quit trying to quench
your own guilt. You can't do it. There's no way. ... I don't care how bad
you are. You can't be bad enough to forget it. And I don't care how good
you are. You can't be good enough to overcome it. You need a Savior."
And, for those who come to Jesus Christ in contrition and confession, He
is that savior. Will you come to Him? Will you ask Him to cleanse your
heart? Will you allow Him to transform your life? Will you experience the
salvation He, and He only, can provide? This is the moment to decide as
you ask Him to change your heart.
Paul Lee Tan, Encyclopedia of 7700 illustrations,
p. 1128, and No Wonder They Call Him Savior by Max Lucado
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