The Bible with Nicky and Pippa Gumbel, Classic Version, 2015Sample
The Cry of Our Hearts
God’s concern is for our hearts. He wants us to be honest with him. He likes candour. He hears the cry of our hearts.
We see in our passages for today that God hates deception. Jesus quotes Isaiah, ‘These people honour me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me’ (Matthew 15:8). The psalmist says, ‘People all lie to their neighbours; their flattering lips speak with deception’ (Psalm 12:2). We have seen how Joseph’s brothers had deceived their father about the fate of Joseph (Genesis 37:31–35). However, today we see also that they knew in their hearts that they could not deceive God, ‘Surely we are being punished because of our brother’ (42:21).
God wants to hear the cry of our hearts today.
Psalm 12:1-8
1. Cry out to God for help
‘The cheque is in the post.’
‘There will be someone round to mend your boiler first thing in the morning.’
‘Your delivery will be there tomorrow.’
Sometimes these promises are empty words. The heart does not accompany the lips. We have been deceived. We wish people would simply tell us the truth.
The cry of David’s heart is, ‘Help, Lord’ (v.1). He laments over the state of society in his day – a society that was not dissimilar to our own today. He describes deceit, arrogance, greed and selfishness.
People say things with their ‘lips’ that do not reflect their ‘hearts’:
‘Everyone talks in lie language;
Lies slide off their oily lips.
They doubletalk with forked tongues’ (v.2, MSG).
God is not impressed by people who are clever with words. David’s opening cry for help is answered as God promises aid to the weak and needy: ‘I will arise … I will protect them from those who malign them’ (v.5).
David then contrasts God’s trustworthiness with the emptiness of the lies of those around him: ‘The words and promises of the Lord are pure words, like silver refined in an earthen furnace, purified seven times over’ (v.6, AMP). This gives him confidence that the Lord will keep him safe and protect him in spite of all the deception around. ‘O Lord, you will keep us safe and protect us from such people forever’ (v.7).
‘Help, Lord’ is a great prayer at the start of a day as we ask God to help us with each of the things we are involved in.
Lord, help your people, strengthen your church and send your Holy Spirit again upon us. Help me, Lord … (bring to God all the things that you are involved in today).
Matthew 14:22-15:9
2. Cry out to God when things go wrong
Jesus loved to get away on his own to pray – ‘he went up on a mountainside by himself to pray’ (14:23). When you are completely on your own with God you can speak to him from the depth of your heart.
It is this closeness to God that enables Jesus to walk on water. He encourages Peter to do the same. But when Peter sees ‘the wind’ (v.30) he starts to panic. I know that feeling exactly. Things start to go wrong and we take our eyes off Jesus. As we focus on the circumstances around us, we begin to ‘sink’. In the middle of all this, Peter prays a panic prayer: ‘Lord, save me!’ (v.30).
Even though it is a panic prayer, it is also a cry from the heart. ‘Immediately Jesus reached out his hand and caught him’ (v.31). As I look back at panic prayers I have prayed it is amazing to see the ways in which some of them have been answered.
As Jesus and Peter climb back into the boat, the wind dies down and ‘then those who were in the boat worshipped [Jesus], saying, “Truly you are the Son of God.” ’ (v.33).
The incident finishes with all the disciples giving a cry of the heart in worship. This is quite extraordinary. Monotheistic Jews, who knew the commandment that they should worship God alone, worship Jesus. They recognise that he is ‘the Son of God’.
In fact, Jesus’ first words to the disciples as he is walking on water are literally, ‘Take courage! I AM. Don’t be afraid’ (v.27). ‘I AM’ is the name for God in the Old Testament (Exodus 3:14). Jesus is telling the disciples, and us, that he is the great ‘I AM’, so there is no need to fear. In whatever situations you are in today, this is a huge reassurance to your heart that Jesus is in control.
You may not always have the comfort of understanding what Jesus is doing or why he is letting life be the way it is, but you do have the comfort of knowing that he is in control.
They brought to Jesus all who were sick and cried out for healing. They ‘begged him to let the sick just touch the edge of his cloak, and all who touched him were healed’ (Matthew 14:36).
In the next section (Matthew 15:1–9), Jesus challenges the Pharisees about what is really going on in ‘their hearts’ (v.8). It starts with them challenging Jesus about his disciples breaking traditions. But Jesus turns the tables on them.
The Scriptures make it clear that we should make it a high priority to look after our families – especially our parents. The Pharisees had come up with spurious reasons why the money that would have been used to help them was dedicated to God, and therefore could not be used to honour and help their own parents (15:5).
Jesus accuses them of hypocrisy. The word ‘hypocrite’ literally means ‘someone who puts on a mask in play’. Their mask is honouring God with their lips, but in reality, ‘their hearts are far from [him]’ (v.8). God is far more concerned about your heart than your lips.
Lord, I worship you today as the Son of God. Thank you that when things go wrong I can cry out to you, and you hear the cry of my heart.
Genesis 41:41-42:38
3. Cry out to God from the depth of your heart
Joseph finished well – but he started out badly. He had been in a ‘pit’ (37:24, KJV), and in ‘prison’ (39:20), but he ended up in a ‘palace’ (45:16).
Like so many people in the Bible (Jesus, John the Baptist, Ezekiel, and the priests and Levites serving in the temple (see Numbers 4)) Joseph started his life’s work at the age of thirty (41:46). Up to that time Joseph had been in training. Now he is put ‘in charge of the whole land of Egypt’ (v.41).
God had seen Joseph’s heart in the midst of all his trouble. For the thirteen years between the ages of seventeen and thirty Joseph must have wondered what God was doing. He had been through so much rejection, suffering, injustice, imprisonment, disappointment and other trials. But through it all God was preparing him to be put in charge of ‘the whole land of Egypt’ (v.41).
God knew he could be trusted because his heart was right. He had stayed close to the Lord through all the trials. This is what matters – not whether you are in a period of battle or a period of blessing, but whether you are staying close to the Lord and communicating with him from your heart.
Joseph named his two children: Manasseh (‘God has made me forget all my trouble’, v.51) and Ephraim (‘God has made me fruitful’, v.52). The common thread in these two names is the four-word phrase ‘God has made me’. In both the times of suffering (Manasseh) and the times of success (Ephraim), Joseph acknowledges that it is God who is in control. His heart is not bitter in times of suffering, nor is it boastful in times of success, because he recognises that God is sovereign over his life and his situation.
Joseph’s brothers, on the other hand, had had to live with their deception and guilt (42:21 onwards). ‘Now we’re paying for what we did to our brother – we saw how terrified he was when he was begging us for mercy. We wouldn’t listen to him and now we’re the ones in trouble’ (v.21, MSG). ‘Their hearts sank’ (v.28), and with their lips they said, ‘we are honest men’ (v.31).
In all this Joseph’s original dreams were being fulfilled. In spite of all he had been through, he kept trusting God and being faithful to him. It started out badly but it finished well.
Never let go of your God-given dreams. Even if you start off in a ‘pit’ or a ‘prison’, like Joseph, you may end up in a ‘palace’. As Joyce Meyer writes, ‘No matter where you started, you can have a great finish … Even if you are in a pit today, God can still raise you up and do great things in you and through you!’
Lord, help me to lead a life of total integrity. May my lips and my heart be at one with each other. May my heart not be bitter in times of suffering, nor boastful in times of success. And Lord, in my prayers, help me to speak to you from the depth of my heart. Thank you that you hear the cry of my heart.
Pippa Adds
The Highs and Lows of Faith
Joseph goes from being a forgotten prisoner to governor of the most powerful nation of its time. Peter goes from a courageous act of faith – walking on water – to sinking in fear. The highs and lows of faith.
Joseph was ready for his sudden rise to power. He saved thousands of lives from starvation and an economy from being ruined. We need more people to rise up like Joseph who fear God, have prophetic revelation, and who are great leaders with the skills to implement a rescue plan.
Notes:
Unless otherwise stated, Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version Anglicised, Copyright © 1979, 1984, 2011 Biblica, formerly International Bible Society. Used by permission of Hodder & Stoughton Publishers, an Hachette UK company. All rights reserved. ‘NIV’ is a registered trademark of Biblica. UK trademark number 1448790.
Scripture quotations marked (AMP) taken from the Amplified® Bible, Copyright © 1954, 1958, 1962, 1964, 1965, 1987 by The Lockman Foundation. Used by permission. (www.Lockman.org)
Scripture marked (MSG) taken from The Message. Copyright © 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002. Used by permission of NavPress Publishing Group.
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Start your day with the Bible in One Year, a Bible reading plan with commentary by Nicky and Pippa Gumbel. Nicky Gumbel is the Vicar of HTB in London and pioneer of Alpha. ‘My favourite way to start the day.’ – Bear Grylls ‘My heart leaps every morning when I see Bible in One Year by @nickygumbel sitting in my inbox.’ – Darlene Zschech, Worship Leader
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