Sunday, October 20, 2013

THE MAN

I don't recall the first time I saw the man, but it was sometime in my childhood. I remember one instance in particular in which I was playing on the playground and a bunch of kids came up to me and started making fun of me. There was no one there who stood up for me. At last they left, and I found a small enclosure beneath the playground equipment in which to hide. I thought I was alone, but then I looked out from my cubby and saw the man. He walked over and knelt down in front of the opening. His smiling face cheered me, and I could see the love in his eyes. As I wiped the tears from my face, he told me not to worry or be upset and promised that he would never leave me. I soon rewarded him with a bright and youthful smile that reflected the change he had brought about within me. In that simple way, he seemed to have picked up and reassembled the pieces of my young, wounded heart, restoring my dignity. He helped me to see myself the way he saw me. And I looked up to him. 

Time went on and I grew up. I saw the man from time to time, mostly from a distance. I no longer looked up to him—he was no taller than I. And I was no longer that insecure child that needed constant reassurance—but when I saw his face in the crowd, still I would smile. Sometimes I didn't see him for long periods of time. Maybe because I stopped looking for him amongst the crowds and chaos of life. Even so, I sometimes sensed his presence—his loneliness—but I rarely saw him. 

Then one day he came to me again. I hadn't thought about him for such a long time that I was surprised to see him. And yet he looked just the same as he had years and years ago. That's when I realized that the man never aged. He smiled at me the way he always had, and I greeted him quickly, for I was an adult with loads of responsibilities and obligations. I looked at my watch, caught sight of the time, and said, “Oh, I'd better go, or I'll be late.” I had a meeting to attend and little time to spare. I hurried off and promptly forgot him. 

  I was on top of the world in those days. Everything was right. I had a career, a family, a home, and so much more. I was so proud of my self-sufficiency—so happy to be able to say that I didn't need anything from anyone anymore. I even had enough that I was able to give some of my money away to help the needy, and it made me feel like a good person. 

  And then things began to change. My kids grew up and started to rebel. My spouse and I grew discontent, and we blamed one another for the problems in our lives. There was a lot of fighting at home, and I grew bored with my career. It was the autumn of my existence. I felt as though the rug had been pulled out from under me. I became depressed at the realization that everything I'd counted on for stability in my life was shifting. “Everything changes!” I yelled bitterly, waving my fist in the air. “Change is the only constant thing in this life!” 

With the discontent at home, I poured myself into my work. I stayed late. I chased after advancement and success. It seemed to be working—but I wasn't happy. I became like an empty shell, endlessly and unsuccessfully searching for significance and happiness. In the midst of all this, my family broke apart at the seams. I observed all their selfish ways and cried, “No one cares about anyone but themselves!” And I knew it was true and believed it to be the main cause of the troubles in the world, though at the time I couldn't admit that I too suffered from this very same plight.

  When the children left for college, my spouse and I separated. We considered our differences irreconcilable. Neither of us wanted to have to be the one to change. As I sat alone in my new apartment, I felt a deep loneliness and dissatisfaction. Everything that once had brought me joy in life seemed gone, stripped away like leaves from a tree. I wept bitterly at the realization of what a mess my life had become. “I'm all alone,” I cried, “all alone in this world!” And I came to the end of myself. 

I'm glad I couldn't see myself at that moment, hugging my knees and crying. Wailing …  Screaming into the air … Flinging things across the room … For a moment I felt again like that child on the playground, except that I realized, in a moment of honesty, that I was largely to blame. I knew I had been just as selfish as the rest of them. That's when I remembered the man. I opened my eyes, still wet from crying and saw him standing near. 

Through the welling tears, he was nothing more than a blur, and I immediately considered him to be a hallucination—the distant memory of an imaginative child. In spite of this, I called out to him, saying, “Everything changes,” as I clumsily wiped the tears from my eyes. The man became sharper in my view, but still, I didn't quite see him through the veil of my own self-pity. “Everything changes,” I sorrowfully muttered. I looked up into the man's eyes, my knees still drawn to my chest in front of me, and finally I saw him. He smiled at me and said nothing, but the words I had spoken, seemed to come back to me as echoes: Everything changes … changes … changes …  

As I looked into the man's eyes, meditating on the words I had spoken, I suddenly realized that they weren't true. Everything changes—but not the man. He has never changed, I thought and then hoped, perhaps he never will. At that moment, the wells of my tears ran dry. I sniffed back the oozing sorrow and felt a wave of truth wash over me. But I wasn't quite ready to embrace it. “No one cares about me,” I complained, searching for pity. The man's smile brightened, but still he said nothing. “I'm all alone. I don't want to be alone anymore,” I whimpered, wallowing in my sorrows. At last the man spoke: “I told you once before that I would never leave you. I have always been with you, whether you saw me or not.” As he spoke, I knew his words were true.

  “Will you help me?” I said. “Tell me what to do. What do I have to do to fix this mess I'm in?” And the man's face fell. “Do? There's nothing you can do,” he said tenderly. Again, my tears began to flow. “So it's hopeless then, is it? I really am alone—and no one can help me … and no one cares.” 
  Laying a hand on my shoulder, the man said, “That's not true—I care.”
  I looked up at him with the same old bitterness in my eyes and said, “A lot of difference that makes! Why did you even come, if all you were going to do was tell me that my situation is hopeless?”
  For a while the man said nothing. He just looked at me and I at him. And as I continued to gaze at him, he seemed to absorb my bitterness and anger—and my sense of desperation—and I began to heal—and to hope. 

  “I didn't come here to give you a list of things to do—I came here to give you myself. You cannot fix your problems—only I can fix your problems.” Then the man extended his hand towards me, as if to help me off the floor. As I tried to make sense of it all, I hesitated, and in that moment I caught a glimpse of the man's palm and saw within it a scar. A tinge of fear and sorrow welled up within me as I looked at it. 

  I gave him a strange look, and said, “Who are you?”
  With certainty in his eye, the man replied, “I am—”

  I waited for him to continue, and I waited, and I waited … Seeing the look of confusion in my eye, he said: “I am—I have always been—and I will always be … I was there when the Universe was born, and I know every star by name … I witnessed the creation of the earth, the shaping of man from the dust, and his tragic discovery of evil … I was there when mighty empires sprung up like weeds from the ground, and I was there when they withered away. I have seen kingdoms come and go … the raging of wars … and generations passing like night and day … I saw cities built and then watched them crumble, carried away to the sea. And I know every grain of sand upon the shore and the place from which it came. I carry them around in the palm of my hand, and they remind me of the frailty of man and of all his deeds … I have seen it all, including what remains to be seen—because I am.” 

  Again I looked at his hand, and I saw blood within the scar. He looked at me with love in his eyes and asked me to take his hand.
  In that moment I understood: To take his hand was to submit to him—to belong to him. 
  “I'm afraid,” I said. “There's so much I wanted to do with my life. I'm not sure I'm ready to give it all up. Isn't there another way?”
  The man looked at me somberly. “There is no other way.” 
  “But I don't want to give up who I really am,” I said.
  “And who are you?” the man replied.

  “I—I—” I thought about it for a second and came up empty. “I don't know,” I finally said.
The man smiled wistfully as a tear came to his eye. “I know who you are,” he whispered. “I've known you since the beginning of time: Every thought you've had. Every word you've spoken. Everything you've done. Every tear you've cried. I know it all.”

  I felt myself grow pale and my spirits fall. “Then what could you possibly want with me? You know what a screw up I am.” I studied the man's face. There was an unfathomable depth to his eyes, and I suddenly felt I couldn't take the heat of his gaze or the power of his silence. In his presence I quickly became filled with the realization of every wrong I'd ever done. The shadows hiding in the darkness of my heart were now clear as day—and they haunted me. I realized then that I didn't even know who I was—so how was I supposed to make something of myself? And what could I—a speck of dust—really accomplish in my own strength? And I came to this conclusion: I am nothing.

  Seeing again the man's outstretched hand, I was overcome with the humility of my circumstance. “I'm not good enough to take your hand,” I moaned, the gravity of this truth weighing heavily on my heart. 
  “No,” the man replied, “but I am good enough to take your hand.” Immediately my heart felt relief at the hope of his words, even as I struggled to wrap my mind around it. 

“How did you get that scar?” I asked at last.
  “That scar—that blood—was the price I paid to take your sins away. It is the price I paid to be able to take your hand and bring you with me.”

“But why would you do such a thing? Who am I to you?” I said in wonder. “To you I can be nothing but a grain of sand on the beach or a fleeting puff of smoke from an extinguished flame. In the grandness of the Universe, I am less than nothing—why should you concern yourself with me?”

  The tear that had formed in the man's eye fell down his cheek as he answered: “I do this for you because you belong to me—and because I love you. I'm the one who created you, and I made you who you are … In the grandness of the Universe, you may be nothing. But—in my heart, dear child—you are very large.” 

  I looked at his hand again, and I knew he wasn't offering to take all my pain away. Nor was he offering me an easy life. He wasn't promising to fix all my problems, though I knew that he would help me with all those things. Instead, what the man was offering was something far more valuable than every good thing in creation combined. He was offering me himself: true, selfless love. 

  I took his hand and he lifted me to my feet as though I weighed nothing. And as I looked to him for answers, he began to speak:
  “When you were a child, your father would take you by the hand and guide you and keep you safe. He gave you boundaries to protect you and food to sustain you. Take my hand and never let go—and I will keep you safe. Listen to my instruction and you will avoid many dangers. Let me be the one to sustain you in every difficulty and trial of life. Let me be the one to provide your every need. Remember that I am the only thing that never changes, so let me be your rock, your shelter, and your strength. I know you fully and I love you still. Nothing in this life can change that. If you keep hold of my hand and stay close to me, then even death cannot keep you from my love … I take your hand—and your weaknesses, faults, sorrows, and lack. You take my hand: my strength, my purity, my love, my joy. Everything I have is now yours so long as you remain with me. You belong to me now … and I am yours forever.”

Friday, November 16, 2012

CHRISTMAS IN HAITI!


Dear friends and family,
Some of you already know that I (Lara) recently went on a short-term IAM Builders mission trip to Haiti. It was both a challenging and a rewarding trip, and, by the end of the trip, I knew that God was not only using me to help others, but also, He was using the entire experience to teach me and to further my spiritual growth.
     Over the course of my first two days in Haiti, I was ready to conclude that I would never go back. I had no desire to return and, in fact, I hadn't even planned on going to Haiti in the first place! But God has a way of changing our hearts and minds. He shows us who we really are—who He made us to be! And the One who made us, and who sees all, knows what's best for us. So, by the end of my trip to Haiti, I knew that I wanted to return.
     Jesus said that if we ask, we will receive; if we seek, we will find; and if we knock, the door will be opened for us... So that's what I did! I asked God to allow my husband and I to go to Haiti together. For many reasons, the week around Christmas seemed like a good time for such a trip. So I “knocked on the doors” of the missionaries we had encountered while we were in Haiti to see if they would be willing to host us around this time. Many of the people had already made plans to come back to the states for Christmas... But one door was left open—the door to a children's home run by Al and Bev Carpenter—and they were eager to have us come.
     Therefore, between December 24 and January 1, Collin and I will be traveling to St. Marc, Haiti to help out at the children's home and do whatever we can to help the surrounding community. The details of our work have not been fully worked out yet, but we are hoping to raise some funds (or use our own) to do some kind of community project. Here are some of the others things we are planning to do while we're there: teaching, crafts and games with the children, a community prayer walk, help out with street church, cook the kids and staff an American dinner, paint the girl's home, general maintenance, additional construction work as needed. As you can see, we could definitely use some prayer for God's guidance as to what to do while we're there, but we're trusting that if we go, He will put us to good use.
     We know that there are many who are asking for prayer and financial support these days and that it is simply not possible to give to everyone who asks. However, if God places this trip on your heart, please know that we—and the people we encounter—will be blessed by whatever gifts or prayers you may have to give. Prayers are especially important because we know that nothing is possible without God, who “gives all men life and breath and everything else” (Acts 17:25). The cost of the trip—not including special projects we might have the opportunity to do in country—is around $1800, most of which is airfare. The rest is room and board. If you are interested in making a donation, you have several options. You can give towards (1) the needs of the children's home, (2) the community project (if applicable), (3) our room and board (about $500 total), or (4) our travel costs. Checks made out to “Touch Ministries” are tax deductible and can be applied to the first three expenses. For tax purposes, please don't write any special notes on the check itself. Instead, include a separate note to indicate how you'd like the funds to be used. If you'd like to donate anonymously, send your donation to Touch Ministries, 417 Rebecca Street, New Martinsville, WV 26155. Otherwise, if you can get the checks to us, we'll make sure they get to the right place. Thanks for your consideration!
     Below are a few links with additional information about Touch Ministries, the children's home, and my (Lara's) previous trip to Haiti. If you have any more questions about this trip, feel free to contact me.


Sincerely, Collin & Lara Hitchcock

HAITI 2012: THE BACK STORY


The following is an excerpt from the letter (written on June 27, 2012) that I distributed prior to going to Haiti. It will give you a taste of the back story of this trip and the one to come.
     In early May I began making plans to go on a short-term mission trip to South Sudan, and now it appears as though I will be going to Haiti instead. Over the past few months my journey has been like that of a sailboat, tossed by the wind of the Spirit (see John 3:8). “In his heart a man plans his course, but the LORD determines his steps” (Proverbs16:9). I stepped out to do something that I believed God was calling me to do. I shifted my “car” out of park and began to drive... and God began steering me in a direction I had not expected. (As the saying goes, “God can't drive a parked car.”) Just as Paul and his companions tried to walk out paths that ended up being blocked by God (see Acts 16:6-10), so too I feel that God has been guiding me by means of opened and closed doors. Let me explain...
     When I heard about the people of South Sudan at the first mission trip meeting, I felt love well up inside of me. Believing that God was calling me to go there, I began preparing for the trip. The support of my parents and the ease with which I was able to get my shots taken care of was further evidence to me that God was calling me to go. But eventually I learned that the size of the group was shrinking and we no longer had enough people to go on the trip. Needless to say, I was very disappointed. I had prayed that God would open and close doors according to His will, and it seemed that the door to Sudan was quickly closing. There was, however, another option—a mission trip to Haiti in the fall. Feeling more of a burden for Africa, I had never really considered going to Haiti. But with one door closing and another one opening, I considered the facts: My shots are done, money is coming in, and I have the time and desire to serve. As my feelings of disappointment subsided, excitement began to build, and I began to wonder if perhaps this was God's plan all along...
     Thinking back over these past few months, I realize now that, while I may not have taken the most direct path, I've undoubtedly learned something on this journey that God wanted me to learn. And I believe it is this: We may not always know exactly what to do, but sometimes we just need to get over our fear of making mistakes, do something that is consistent with God's character, and trust that He can lead us in spite of our uncertainty (Proverbs 3:5-6).  

Thursday, November 15, 2012

HAITI (Sept-Oct 2012): TRIP SUMMARY


Dear friends and family,

As you know—with your help!—I was able to go on a short-term IAM Builders mission trip to St Marc, Haiti. The main purpose of this trip was to continue work on a new, larger school building for the children served by Touch Ministries. Here are two pictures of the soon-to-be new school building:

Images: from the back (our daily entrance) / from the front
The variety of jobs we did was fairly limited. The main thing we worked on was the electrical. Considering this, it may surprise you to learn that one of our main jobs was chiseling holes and channels into the cinder block walls (refer to the images below). 

Images: Power-drilling channels in order to be able to run electrical conduit in the floor / Holding up electrical components to illustrate how they fit into the channel I just carved / Cementing over an electrical conduit in the floor / Running pull-wire through one of the conduits.
Once chiseled, electrical boxes and pieces of conduit are fitted into these holes and are cemented over. After the cement is dried, relatively stiff pull-wires were run through the conduits and were later used to pull the electrical wire through the conduit between the adjacent switches, outlets, etc. I don't think the electrical had been started when we arrived, but it was nearly completed when we left.
     Besides working on the electrical, I moved sediment—big and small—from the dig site of the school's latrine to a more convenient location...
     
Images: Haitian nationals digging what will end up being the school's latrine / Showing off my strength as I carry a large rock from the dig site to the dump site. Hauling smaller sediments away from the large pile that has accumulated next to the pit as the Haitians dig deeper.
I also got to try something I had really wanted to try... MASONRY! I helped build a wall!

Images: The space under the stairs before we started the wall / Sliding some cement in between two placed cinder blocks as I had watched the nationals do / Marco and Joe pose next to the completed wall.
Some school kids visit the work site to hand out thank yous... And these thank yous are not only for us, but also, for you who enabled us to go! Thank YOU!


Images: School kids line up to hand us thank you cards / multiple thank yous / a close-up of one thank you: “We love you IAM Team”
In addition to the construction work we did at the school, we were also able to visit the House of Hope, an orphanage associated with Touch Ministries. The best part of the trip was spending time with the “orphans.” (Actually, strictly speaking, they aren't orphans. They each have at least one parent or grandparent living. But their families were unable to provide for them financially, and so—before they were taken in by House of Hope—they were in pretty rough shape physically.) We only spent two days with the orphans, but they were the best two days! One day we went with them to the beach. The other day we went on a walk with them to visit and pray for their families; we did a craft project with them (designed by yours truly); and we ate lunch with them. Here are a few pictures:
 
Images: Making new friends / having my hair brushed / finding crabs / crafting sun-catchers / playing catch / giving and receiving love...

Before, Haiti was barely on my mind... 
Now, it's forever on my heart.

Thank you for enabling me to go! God's blessings,

Lara Hitchcock

More pics at: 





 


SEEKING GOD: OVERCOMING OBSTACLES


Introduction
Last time we concluded that the mandate to seek God with our whole heart means that we love Him with our whole heart... And, if our heart is also pure, everything we do in life should be done out of our love for God. Loving God, however, is not the only thing we should be doing with our whole heart. We are also instructed to wholeheartedly obey God and observe His commands (Dt 26:16, 30:2, 30:10).

Futile Fasters & Sham Seekers
At this point you may be wondering, “What does obedience have to do with seeking God?” I will answer with the words of Isaiah (58:1-2): Shout it aloud, do not hold back. Raise your voice like a trumpet. Declare to my people their rebellion and to the house of Jacob their sins. For day after day they seek me out; they seem eager to know my ways, as if they were a nation that does what is right and has not forsaken the commands of its God. They ask me for just decisions and seem eager for God to come near them.
     What do you think this passage of Scripture is telling us about seeking God? It think it is saying that we can't truly seek God without also seeking to be obedient to His will. Jesus also speaks about this issue in John 14:21,23-24: “Whoever has my commands and obeys them, he is the one who loves me. He who loves me will be loved by my Father, and I too will love him and show myself to him... If anyone loves me, he will obey my teaching. My Father will love him, and we will come to him and make our home with him. He who does not love me will not obey my teaching. These words you hear are not my own; they belong to the Father who sent me.” Selah... (Pause and contemplate that!!)
     Therefore, in order to seek God with our whole heart—meaning that our motivation for seeking Him is that we love Him—we must also strive to follow His commands. If we “seek God,” but knowingly live a life contrary to His character, then we are really only seeking God in pretense (see Jer 3). We may seem eager to know God, but if, by our actions, we deny Him (see Titus 1:16), then we are not really seeking God for who He is, but rather for who we wish Him to be—and we are re-imagining Him in our own image instead of acknowledging that we were created to be like Him.

Pharisees & Sinners
When the Pharisees questioned why Jesus ate with tax collectors and “sinners,” He replied, “It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick” (Mt 9:10-12). Was Jesus saying that these “tax collectors and sinners” were sick and the Jewish leaders were just fine? How did Jesus describe the Jewish leaders of His day? This is how he spoke to them: “Woe to you, teachers of the law and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You are like whitewashed tombs, which look beautiful on the outside but on the inside are full of dead men’s bones and everything unclean. In the same way, on the outside you appear to people as righteous but on the inside you are full of hypocrisy and wickedness” (Mt 23:27-28). From this statement, it's clear that Jesus was not suggesting that the Jewish leaders were spiritually healthy. We also know this from Romans 3:23, which tells us that all mankind has sinned and has, thus, fallen short of the glory of God. What Jesus meant, then, was that only those who recognize their sinful condition will see their need for the healing that He provides. The Pharisees were just as sick as the rest of the people, but their hypocrisy and pride prevented them from admitting it.
     So, what is the lesson for those who truly wish to seek God? Our seeking is faulty—and our “love” for God, fake—if we are not concerned with obedience. But, even if our heart's desire lines up with God's will, we are all still afflicted with the sinful human condition and are all in need of His forgiveness. Therefore, the precursor to seeking God is repentance (Mt 3:2)—an acknowledgment of our sins, and a turning or returning to God's ways (Dt 4:30, 30:10, Jer 18:11, Joel 2:12). And “If we confess our sins, [God] is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness” (1 John 1:9).

Prayer: “Search me, O God, and know my heart; test me and know my anxious thoughts. See if there is any offensive way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.” Amen! (From Psalm 139:23-24.)

Thursday, November 8, 2012

SEEKING GOD: WITH All YOUR HEART


Introduction
Last time we talked about how God wants us to seek Him with our whole heart. But, in order to do that, our heart must be pure. A divided heart is filled with conflicting desires, which paralyze us into inaction. Therefore, we must learn to seek God with our whole heart.

All Your Heart”
Actually, the phrase “all your heart” occurs repeatedly throughout the Bible. A study of these passages is quite enlightening. Among the most common things that the Bible instructs us to do with all our heart is to: seek God (Dt 4:29, Jer 29:13), love God (Dt 6:5, 13:3, 30:6, Mt 22:37, Mk 12:30-33, Lk 10:27), serve God (Dt 10:12, 11:13,Josh 22:5, 1 Sam 7:3, 12:20, 12:24, Col 3:23-24), observe God's commands / obey Him (Dt 26:16, 30:2, 30:10), and turn/return to God (Dt 30:2, 30:10, 1 Sam 7:3, Joel 2:12). We are also instructed to hold fast to Him (Josh 22:5), trust Him (Pr 3:5), and lay hold of His words (Pr 4:4). Most of these passages deal with our action towards God, suggesting that God is the only One who should have the affections of our entire heart. Not only that, but it shows us that our hearts should be set upon God rather than on what He can give us or do for us. We should, however, trust in the goodness of God and be thankful for what He has already done. And the remaining Scriptures deal with these subjects—reflecting on the wonderful things God has done for us. For example, Joshua 23:14 says, “Now I am about to go the way of all the earth. You know with all your heart and soul that not one of all the good promises the LORD your God gave you has failed. Every promise has been fulfilled; not one has failed.” And Zephaniah 3:14-17 says,

Sing, O Daughter of Zion;
shout aloud, O Israel!
Be glad and rejoice with all your heart,
O Daughter of Jerusalem!
The Lord has taken away your punishment,
he has turned back your enemy.
The Lord, the King of Israel, is with you;
never again will you fear any harm.
On that day they will say to Jerusalem,
Do not fear, O Zion;
do not let your hands hang limp.
The Lord your God is with you,
he is mighty to save.
He will take great delight in you,
he will quiet you with his love,
he will rejoice over you with singing.”


Do everything in love”
But let's take a step back for a moment and consider this question: What is the primary function of the “heart”? Is it not to love? And if the primary function of the heart is to love, then to do something with our whole heart should certainly not exclude love! We should seek God because we love Him... not because we want something from Him... not because we want to look pious or holy or whatever... not because we want to impress others... And everything we do in life should be motivated by our love for God. I believe that is what it means to do something with “all your heart”... Do everything for God (1 Cor 10:31, Col 3:17,23). “Do everything in love” (1 Cor 16:14).

Prayer: Lord, help me to love You more and to do only that which can be done out of love for You. Amen!

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

SEEKING GOD: AWAKENING DESIRE


Introduction
Over the past several days I have felt that God has been wanting to teach me something—and has already begun to teach me something—about the principle of seeking Him. I share a portion of it now in the hopes that if it spoke to me, it may speak to you as well... and draw you closer to Him...


Personal Questions for Reflection:
Do you seek...
  • God's face... or His hand?
  • His presence or His presents?
  • His will or your own?



How to Seek God
We know we are to seek God... but how are we to seek God? In Jeremiah29:13, God says, “You will seek Me and find Me when you seek Me with all your heart.” And in chapter 119:2, the psalmist confesses, “Blessed (happy, fortunate, to be envied) are they who keep His testimonies, and who seek, inquire for and of Him and crave Him with the whole heart” (Amplified). How are we to seek God? We are to seek God with our whole heart. What does that mean? To me it means that we must have an undivided or pure heart (See Ps 86:11, Eze 11:19; Ps 24:3-4, 51:10,Pr 20:9). You see, what we set our hearts upon, reveals what our treasures really are (Mt 6:21). Can we set our hearts both on our own sinful desires and on God? No—the two are fundamentally opposed. Either our sinful desires will crowd God out of our life, or our devotion to God will cleanse and purify our hearts, removing from them our sinful desires. Therefore, the most powerful seeker is the one who seeks with their whole heart, because they will devote all their energy toward one pursuit, instead of dividing their energy among many pursuits. Yes, “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God” (Mt 5:8).

What Does it Mean to Seek?
What does it mean to seek God? What does it mean to seek anything? Does it not mean that we have a desire for something that motivates us into action? To seek is to put forth effort in the pursuit of something that we deem worthy. Therefore, there is no such thing as passive seeking. How are we to seek? ...diligently, earnestly, with our whole heart! The more important something is to us, the more willing we will be to lay aside other, less worthy desires, as we press forward in pursuit of that one goal. Consider athletes, who train themselves for competition. They don't have the luxury of much leisure or of eating whatever they might desire. Their desire to succeed in their chosen field is greater than their desire for the momentary pleasures that could keep them from their goal. You may say that you are seeking God, but the question is this: How badly do you want to find Him? How much is God worth to you? Is He worth giving up all else in order to seek and to find Him?
        Consider Paul's thoughts on this matter (Php3:7-14): “But whatever was to my profit I now consider loss for the sake of Christ. What is more, I consider everything a loss compared to the surpassing greatness of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whose sake I have lost all things. I consider them rubbish, that I may gain Christ and be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but that which is through faith in Christ—the righteousness that comes from God and is by faith. I want to know Christ and the power of his resurrection and the fellowship of sharing in his sufferings, becoming like him in his death, and so, somehow, to attain to the resurrection from the dead. Not that I have already obtained all this, or have already been made perfect, but I press on to take hold of that for which Christ Jesus took hold of me. Brothers, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.

Prayer: Lord, please awaken in me a greater desire to know You. Amen!