“Blessed [with spiritual security] is the man who believes and trusts in and relies on the LORD and whose hope and confident expectation is the LORD.” — Jeremiah 17:7 AMP. This is a reflection of The Heart Before God.
The heart before God is a sacred battleground. It’s the wellspring of life (Proverbs 4:23)—yet God says it is also deceitful above all things. That contradiction arrests us. We long to follow God, yet wrestle with thoughts, motives, and desires that war against His Spirit. In Jeremiah 17:7-10, God shows us two kinds of people: one who trusts in the Lord and one who trusts in man—including himself.
The one who trusts in El Shaddai is likened to a tree planted by the water. This isn’t a casual believer—this is a person whose hope and expectation are rooted in God alone. When heat comes, this believer doesn’t fear. When drought strikes, he continues to bear fruit. Why? Because his strength isn’t in his own heart, but in the presence of Yahweh. He lives by the river of God’s Spirit. He is nourished daily. He is not shaken.
But then comes the divine diagnosis: “The heart is deceitful above all things and desperately wicked; who can know it?” (Jeremiah 17:9, KJV). This is not poetic exaggeration. The Hebrew word translated “desperately wicked” can mean incurable or sick beyond healing. The heart before God, left to itself, cannot be trusted. It justifies sin. It hides selfish ambition behind religious behavior. It seeks applause while pretending to serve. And the terrifying truth? We don’t even see it.
Only God can.
“I, the Lord, search the heart, I test the mind, to give to each person according to his ways, according to the results of his deeds.” (Jeremiah 17:10, NASB). Here is divine justice—not based on appearance or confession, but on the hidden motivations behind our actions. Jesus echoed this in Matthew 15:19 (NASB): “For out of the heart come evil thoughts, murders, acts of adultery, sexual immoralities, thefts, false testimonies, slander.” He made it clear: our actions are the fruit, but the heart is the root.
This is why the psalmist cried out: “Search me, God, and know my heart; put me to the test and know my anxious thoughts” (Psalm 139:23, NASB). David understood that the heart before God must be laid bare—not hidden, not justified, not excused. We cannot cleanse ourselves. We cannot diagnose ourselves. But when we offer our hearts to Adonai, He begins the work of transformation.
Paul reminded the Romans that true change begins in the heart: “Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind…” (Romans 12:2, NASB). This transformation isn’t external—it’s inward, by the Spirit. And again, he wrote, “With the heart a person believes, resulting in righteousness…” (Romans 10:10, NASB). The heart must believe in Yeshua. It must trust in God, not in its own instincts or emotions.
Jesus declared, “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God.” (Matthew 5:8, NASB). A pure heart isn’t a perfect heart—it’s a surrendered heart. A heart tested by fire, cleansed by truth, and kept by faith. A heart that no longer exalts self but bows in awe before the throne of grace.
The Heart Before God Requires Daily Surrender
The heart before God cannot be treated casually. It must be surrendered each day, tested by His Word, and yielded to His Spirit. God is not looking for religious effort—He’s searching for hearts that are fully His (2 Chronicles 16:9). Hearts that don’t trust in circumstances, strength, or emotion, but in the faithfulness of God Almighty.
So we must pray like David: “Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a steadfast spirit within me.” (Psalm 51:10, NASB). This is not a one-time request. It’s the daily cry of those who desire to walk with God—not with hollow religion but with authentic faith.
Prayer
Father, I surrender my heart to You. I confess that it is deceitful and often led by emotion or pride. Search me, test me, and purify me. Plant me by Your waters and anchor me in Your truth. Let my roots grow deep in You so that I may not fear when trouble comes. I desire a heart that is clean, steady, and full of faith. Show me where I trust in myself, and lead me into full dependence on You. Let the heart before You be honest, humble, and wholly Yours. In the name of Yeshua, amen.
Want more fruit in your life? Start with the heart.
When we get the heart before God right, everything else begins to align.