You Can't Trust Your Heart ( From our 8-10-25 worship) Podcast Por  arte de portada

You Can't Trust Your Heart ( From our 8-10-25 worship)

You Can't Trust Your Heart ( From our 8-10-25 worship)

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Watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/bafcxsFwrMoSummary:“You Can’t Trust Your Heart—But You Can Trust God”(summary of your message)Big ideaOur inner perceptions can mislead us—like a pilot’s inner ear in the somatogravic illusion—so don’t let your heart lead. Instead, train your heart to follow God and His Word.Key text flow: Psalm 64 → Proverbs 20:5 → Jeremiah 17:9–10 → John 12:48 → Proverbs 18:4; Romans 11:33; 1 Corinthians 14:33; Matthew 11:28–30.Opening illustrationQuestion: “Which way is up?”Analogy: Pilots who can’t see the horizon (night, weather, clouds) can feel like they’re climbing when they’re not. Trusting that feeling, some have pushed the nose down and flown into the ground.Spiritual parallel: Your heart can do the same—it lies when you can’t “see the horizon.”Jer 17:9 (ESV, excerpt): “The heart is deceitful above all things and desperately sick…”Psalm 64 — What it shows us about the heartTroubled (vv. 1–2)The psalmist cries out from dread and fear of hidden threats.Real life: people can smile on the outside and still carry dread within.Obstinate (vv. 3–6)The wicked pursue their purpose and justify it; they scheme and say, “Who can see?”v. 6: “The inward mind and heart of a man are deep”—hard to probe, easily self-deceived.Dismissive (vv. 7–9)Even when God acts, people often shrug until consequences fall.We delay hard realities (sin, death, judgment) and live for the moment.Tension/hope (v. 10)“Let the righteous… take refuge in Him.”Question: If the heart is deceitful, how can we be upright in heart?The path forward — Train your heart to be a follower, not a leaderDraw the heart out with understandingProv 20:5 (ESV, excerpt): “The purpose in a man’s heart is like deep water, but a man of understanding will draw it out.”Practical means: steady Scripture intake, prayerful reflection, wise counsel, even counseling when needed. If you’re not working on your heart, your heart is working on you.Submit to God’s searching and standardJer 17:10 (ESV, excerpt): “I the LORD search the heart and test the mind…”John 12:48 (ESV, excerpt): “The word that I have spoken will judge him on the last day.”My heart isn’t the standard; God’s Word is.Trust the depth that brings peace, not chaosProv 18:4 (ESV, excerpt): “The fountain of wisdom is a bubbling brook.”Rom 11:33 (ESV, excerpt): “Oh, the depth of the riches and wisdom and knowledge of God!” (God’s wisdom is deep but not disorienting.)1 Cor 14:33 (ESV, excerpt): “God is not a God of confusion but of peace.”Yoke your life to JesusMatt 11:28–30 (ESV, excerpt): “Come to me… take my yoke upon you… and you will find rest for your souls.”Following Jesus trains the heart to walk in step with Him.ApplicationsCheck your instruments: When emotions are loud and visibility is low, fly by the instruments—the clear commands and promises of Scripture—rather than by feelings.Name the currents: Journal or pray through the “deep water” motives pulling you (Prov 20:5). Ask a mature believer or counselor to help you “draw them out.”Replace self-justification with Scripture-submission: Before acting, ask, “Where does God’s Word authorize or correct this?” (John 12:48).Stay with the body: We help each other keep our eyes on the horizon—stirring one another to love and good works (Heb 10:24–25).Refuge, then rejoice: Take refuge in the Lord (Ps 64:10), then let joy follow obedience, not feelings lead obedience.LandingThesis restated: You can’t trust your heart; you can trust God.Like Peter, we know where to look but can lose focus—so keep your eyes on Jesus, lean on His Word, and let your heart follow Him.Invitation: Whether your heart feels like “deep waters,” you’re ready to become a Christian, or you simply need prayer and a hug—the Lord and His people stand ready to help.
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