40 Days of Prayer, Day 24

Day 24, Tuesday, September 13
To You, O LORD, I lift up my soul. O my God, in You I trust…Make me know Your ways, O LORD; teach me Your paths. Lead me in Your truth and teach me, for You are the God of my salvation…Good and upright is the LORD; Therefore, He instructs sinners in the way. He leads the humble in justice, And He teaches the humble His way. Psalm 25:1-9
The Contrite Heart: A Review
Over the last three weeks we have explored some of the attributes of those with contrite heart. 1. Those with a contrite heart are brokenhearted over their sin. They mourn their brokenness. They are devastated over their violation of God’s character and the ache over their loss of relationship with their Creator. God is a God of relationships. He has created us for the purposes of being in a relationship with Him. Those with a contrite heart feel the weight of losing the very purpose of their existence. Those with a contrite heart grieve the separation and alienation from God that their own sin yields. When a person is truly contrite they see God as infinitely holy but also as infinitely merciful. 2. A contrite person throws themselves on the mercy of God. “Be gracious to me oh God.” In contrition we see the severity of our sin but we also see the grace of God who is waiting to forgive any who will plead with Him and His merciful character. The contrite experience the loving patience of their merciful God. The contrite know that God, all on the work of His divine will, has forgiven and restored. 3. Those with a contrite heart are thankful. Gratitude flows from the hearts that are filled with the merciful forgiveness of God. Thanksgiving and worship fill the heart of the forgiven. We praise Him for He has restored our purpose for being. He has removed His justifiable anger and replaced it with unimaginable grace. 4. The contrite love God’s revelation of His infinite power and beauty through His creation. Having been forgiven and brought into a relationship with God, those with a contrite heart cling to the relationship that God has restored. We love the God of creation, seeing His glory on display in the heavens and in the creative beauty we see all around us every day. God did that for the purpose of allowing us to enjoy the world we inhabit. He also did this for the purpose of continually pointing our hearts and minds back to the One who created all of this beauty. 5. Those with a contrite heart love God’s revelation of His character and His plans through His Word. God reveals His character, plans and holy standards through the Bible. God is a God of relationships and is therefore a God of revelation. The contrite hearted love learning about the God who created them. Those with a contrite heart, having been forgiven and restored, seek to know the forgiving, gracious and merciful God. God’s mercy extends beyond forgiveness. God’s mercy is on display in His willingness to self-disclose. He has no obligation to us to reveal His nature or His plans. He has no requirement to disclose His character to sinners. But in His mercy He forgives and restores and then takes the next amazing next step by allowing us to see Him as He really is. Those with a contrite heart love God and love the Word of God for it opens our hearts and minds to see, know, experience and adore the God of our salvation. That leads us to the next feature of the heart of those who are contrite. 6. The contrite hearted is one that is humble toward God and others. We will spend the next few days exploring this aspect of those who have had their hearts broken by their own sin. When we have been broken by our own sin in light of God’s holiness, humility must flow naturally out of our restored relationship with God. “He teaches the humble His ways,” as David says in this psalm. Today, as with any day of our lives, there is a need for humility. When we see ourselves as broken and forgiven, we feel compassion for others who are also broken. We are humbled before the God who forgave, but we are also humble toward others who also need the restorative work of God. As He has done for us, we long for Him to do for others. When we see sin all around us, in arrogance, we may slide toward judgment and condemnation. But when we remember the mercy of God on our own lives, humility protects us from harboring condemnation and bitterness toward others. Those with a contrite heart are humble.
Prayer Focus
God, give me a Christ like attitude, humble like the King of Kings. You have done so much to reveal Yourself to me. You have done infinitely precious things to restore my broken heart and cover me in Your mercy. Let me meditate on Your grace. Give me humility toward others. Amen.
Matthew Road Family: Please continue to ask God to send workers into the harvest as we head into the second night of AWANA tomorrow night.
From Bunyan’s The Acceptable Sacrifice
The broken-hearted is a sorrowful man; for that he finds his depravity of nature strong in him, to the putting forth itself to oppose and overthrow what his changed mind prompts him to; 'When I would do good, ' Paul says, 'evil is present with me' (Rom 7:21). Evil is present to oppose and to resist, against the desires of my soul. The man that has his bones broken, may have a mind to be occupied in a lawful and honest calling; but he finds, by experience, that his infirmity resists his good endeavors; and at this he shakes his head, makes complaints, and with sorrow of heart he sighs and says, I 'cannot do the thing that I would' (Rom 7:15; Gal 5:17). I am weak, I am feeble; I am not only depraved, but by that depravity deprived of the ability to put good intentions and desires into execution; O says he, I am ready to quit, my sorrow is continually before me! You must know that the broken-hearted loves God, loves his soul, loves good, and hates evil. Now, for such a one to find in himself an opposition and continual contradiction to this holy passion, it must cause sorrow, godly sorrow, as the apostle Paul calls it. For such are made sorrowful after a godly sort. To be sorry for your own sin depraved nature, and that through this depravity you are deprived of ability to do what the Word and your holy mind prompts you to do, is to be sorry of a godly sort of sorrow. For this sorrow works in you in a way which will cause you to repent.
