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few years ago, I found myself sitting in the
waiting room of Presbyterian Hospital in downtown Dallas. I was there for a two-day stress test, just
to see that everything under the hood was in working order. For me, the real stress test had occurred
prior to my arrival at the hospital.
After facing the traffic between Dallas
and Fort Worth ,
especially during early morning rush hour, I figured any test they threw at me
would be pretty much a cakewalk!
My
appointment on Thursday morning was set for 10:30. I arrived 45 minutes early,
just to be on the safe side. When I
entered the waiting room, there were already several people occupying chairs
and sofas, reading magazines or talking to family members, trying to pass the
time until their name was called to see the doctor or go for testing.
About
30 minutes into my wait, an older gentleman entered with a younger man I took
to be his son. After completing the
preliminary paperwork, they took a seat across the room from me. As the gentleman sat down, he blurted out in
a rather loud and somewhat surprised voice, “Are these all heart
patients?”
At
first, I thought the question somewhat rhetorical since we were all waiting to
see a cardiologist or to take different types of tests for our hearts. But the more I thought about his words and
the more they resounded in my ears, the more I began to think this man had made
a statement that had profound implications.
The
prophet Samuel learned firsthand that God is a cardiologist at heart (no pun
intended). When asked to anoint the next
king of Israel ,
Samuel saddles up his donkey and goes to Bethlehem
to visit Jesse and to select one of his sons to rule Israel . Upon his arrival, Samuel is taken by Jesse’s
oldest son, Abinadab. This young man is
handsome, tall, well-built, and carries himself as a king should. Samuel is ready to dump his horn of oil right
then on Abinidab’s head when God calls him up short and teaches him a very
important lesson; a lesson we need to hear again today!
1 Samuel 16:7 gives us God’s perspective on human nature: “But the LORD
said to Samuel, "Do not look at his appearance or at the height of his
stature, because I have rejected him; for God sees not as man sees, for man
looks at the outward appearance, but the LORD looks at the heart."
Talk
about a stress test! God wanted Samuel
to know that outward appearances count for nothing; it is the inward attitude
which God sees and the character of heart for which He searches. Outwardly, Abinadab possessed all the
desirable attributes, but inwardly something was lacking. Abinidab’s baby brother, David, a young boy
not so handsome, not so tall, not so well built, but one whose heart was right
before the Lord possessed that something lacking in his older brother.
On
that Thursday morning I learned this truth all over again. The answer to that man’s question was, and is,
a resounding yes. All of us in the
waiting room that day were heart patients.
In fact, as far as God is concerned all of us are heart patients. God wants to change our hearts, to make them
better, to cleanse them and restore them to a right relationship with Him. This can only be done when we accept Jesus
Christ as Savior and Lord of our lives.
How
long has it been since you had your heart examined? The stresses and strains of every-day life
leave all of us in need of a checkup on a regular basis. God wants to look into your heart, to examine
it, and make whole. Won’t
you make an appointment today to have your heart examined and repaired by the
Great Physician? You’ll be glad you did!
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