According to the American Heart Association, “The epidemic increase in heart disease mortality ended in the 1960s or 1970s.” Deaths from heart disease have fallen dramatically over the last 50 years. Heart-healthy alternatives are produced in almost every food category. Restaurants include heart-healthy menus. Smoking has been banned in most public places. Cheerios and oatmeal both claim to help with a healthy heart. Physicians and non-profits promote diet-and-exercise. Nevertheless, both of my wife’s brothers died of heart attacks. One brother collapsed in his garden. The other made it to a hospital.
I first read Dr. Kenneth Cooper’s book, Aerobics,
in 1982. It was a groundbreaking book that opened the eyes of millions to the
benefits of aerobic exercise and a healthy diet for a healthy heart. When I
visited Brazil, I was fascinated to find hundreds of Brazilians walking and
jogging every morning to get in their “Cooper.” The doctor’s name had found its
way into Portuguese as a synonym for heart-healthy aerobic exercise.
When I followed Cooper’s regimen, I experienced the benefits: lost weight, increased
strength and stamina. Unfortunately, I have not always followed those
disciplines, and it shows. Developing a healthy heart requires more than
knowledge.
As important as it is to maintain a healthy heart physically, it is even more
important for us to develop a healthy heart spiritually. The Bible clearly sets
forth the disciplines and characteristics of a healthy spiritual heart. They
include gratitude, hope, forgiveness and love. If we discipline ourselves to be
grateful every day for what God has done, if we hope when things look hopeless,
if we forgive those who injure us, if we love those of other nationalities,
ethnicities and languages, like the Good Samaritan, we will have a healthy
heart.
But, like our physical heart, having a spiritually healthy heart requires more
than knowledge. We may know that we need to be grateful, hopeful, forgiving and
loving. But how do you create heartfelt gratitude, hope, forgiveness and love?
In the spiritual realm, this requires a spiritual heart transplant. God must
create a new heart within us, something that He is more than willing to do. We
are all born with spiritual heart disease. Jeremiah says, “The heart is more
deceitful than all else and is desperately sick; who can understand it?” (Jer.
17:9). But later he writes, “I will give them a heart to know Me, for I am the
Lord; and they will be My people, and I will be their God.” (Jer. 24:7). And in
Ezekiel He says, “Moreover, I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit
within you; and I will remove the heart of stone from your flesh.” (Ez. 36:26).
God sent His son Jesus so that He might create in us a healthy heart. He
changes the heart that has grown callous, bitter and resentful into one that
overflows in gratitude. Someday our physical heart will beat its last beat and
our bodies will die. But the spiritually healthy heart that God creates will
live forever.
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