Are you looking to Jesus? Part 1
The call to examine our hearts.
Why do we look to ourselves?
It’s that time again, the end of New Year’s resolutions, and now real life can begin. Each December, we get excited because we are sure the coming year will be different.
We vow that we will stop doing this and start doing that, and the secret to success will finally be ours.
Doesn’t that sound familiar?
Why do we keep going around the same mountain, thinking that by doing the same thing (finding the latest trend or promised success plans), we will end up with a different result?
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How we look to Jesus
The Bible has an answer to this question in Hebrews 12:1&2. The author to the Hebrews previously, in chapter 11, laid out a beautiful example of saints who had demonstrated lives of faith. Now in chapter 12:1, he says
The most famous phrase in this passage is “looking to Jesus, the founder and, the perfecter of our faith.” but have we considered that “looking to Jesus” is more than a feel-good catchphrase? It is the means (the agent in our ability ) for living a life of faith.
Looking to Jesus was how the saints in chapter 11 could walk by faith. They walked in the light of what they knew about Jesus.
As Paul put it in Romans 12:2
Paul explains that we are not to allow this world’s system to influence how we live; we must actively renew our minds daily in the truth of Scripture. This also means that we are not to look to our understanding (See Proverbs 5&6, Matthew 16:24, Romans 13:14.) Renewing our thoughts, emotions, and actions in God’s Word is what compels us to look to Jesus.
Why we don’t look to Jesus
The biggest challenge to our ability to renew our minds is sin.
Jeremiah 17:9 says
and Romans 3:10–18
Now before you sink into depression from the weight of these verses, let me encourage you. The weight of sin, if you are a believer, has been lifted (See Colossians 1:21, Galatians 5:1, and Romans 6:1–6). This is where the means of looking to Jesus changes everything.
The phrase “let us” is not accomplished by our self-effort or “willpower”; instead, it is completed by looking to Jesus.
So now the question remains how do we do “let us”? The answer lies with what the Bible says calls “examine ourselves” or, as I often think of it, “examining the heart.” (See Psalm 119:59, Lamentations 3:40, and 2 Corinthians 3:18)
In the next part, we will explore the details of what it means to examine our hearts.