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Hidden Motives

So you can see we were not preaching with any deceit or impure motives or trickery. For we speak as messengers approved by God to be entrusted with the Good News. Our purpose is to please God, not people. He alone examines the motives of our hearts.” 

1 Thessalonians 2:3-4, NLT

Hidden_Agenda_Pic“I invited five ladies to our Bible group, this month. I got them all saved, had them join the church, and even got them to sign-up for donations to our new Reach-a-Sister-Fund! I’m pretty sure I’ll be moved up to group leader and featured in the church bulletin soon! Go God!”

“We need to pray about all those sad, poor people I visited on our recent missions trip! Honestly, having to live like that! They are so blessed that we could come to them! How else would they know the love of Christ, without us? We’re all they have to hold onto, you know! Bless their little hearts! God is good!”

“Ladies, we want to thank our sister for inviting three new ladies to our Bible study group, and encourage them each to keep coming back! Let’s all give God the praise and our sister a round of applause!”

Which scenario reminds you of godly women carrying the Good News to others with pure motives? I hope it wasn’t the first two!

Sometimes, the people we attempt to reach with the Gospel message suspect our motives. They’ve literally and figuratively shut doors in my face and the faces of countless number of Christians, believing our motives to be those of Sister Self-Promoting and Sister Self-Righteous, above!

The truth is we really can have hidden motives when we reach out to others in sharing the message of Jesus Christ. When we place importance upon anything (how many; people we’ve impressed with our “sainthood”, people “we’ve gotten saved”, people we’ve invited to church, or financial pledges we’ve secured) above our genuine compassion and love for unsaved people, we are operating out of hidden motives.

Each time we profess to have saved someone, we misrepresent the power of God, whose message we claim to spread! We don’t have the power to save anybody; only God does.

“For no one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws them to me, and at the last day I will raise them up.” (John 6:44)

Before we connect with others, let’s examine our motives, and ask God, the Holy Spirit, who guides us, to empower us to make the necessary corrections that will keep our motives godly.

To effectively reach others with the Good News, we must share it from godly, loving, open motives, rather than from loveless, hidden ones.  This pleases God.

By grace through faith,

Rita

Heart Matters: A Sincere Heart

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.”

1 Samuel 16:7, NASB

 

A Sincere Heart

I want you to show love, not offer sacrifices. I want you to know me more than I want burnt offerings.

Hosea 6:6, NLT

broken-heartAn apology was definitely in order, and I wasn’t going to be satisfied until I heard the words, I’m sorry. What had started as a minor disagreement between two of my sons over the proper way to build a fort with couch cushions had quickly escalated into something more: a shouting match with insults being hurled at one another. One brother was quick to see his faulty behavior and offered a sincere apology, but the other one not so much. In fact, he flat out refused. Out of frustration, “You will sit on that couch until you say ‘You’re sorry!’” came out of my mouth. With his eyes fixed on the floor, his lips pursed, and his voice hushed, he gave his brother the apology I had demanded, and he bounced off the couch and back up the stairs.

Sure, he had done what I had told him to do. He had fulfilled the requirement and he had moved on. But void of any emotion, I was hardly satisfied with the apology. I wanted him to realize his faulty choices. I wanted more than outward obedience: I wanted inward change. I wanted to see a sincere heart.

As I watched him bound up the steps, feeling proud of himself that he had fulfilled his “requirement,” I felt conviction stirring in my soul. I, too, am guilty of this same behavior with God: I pat myself on the back after putting a check mark on my spiritual to-do list and then bound off to get on with my day.

Prayer? Check.

Bible study? Check.

Church on Sunday? Check.

Offering in the plate? Check.

The spiritual to-do list could go on and on, but God doesn’t want mere outward obedience: He wants our hearts. Empty actions borne of an empty heart are not pleasing to Him, nor do they accomplish anything. Just as I wanted the apology to come from a sincere heart, He wants our actions to come from a place of sincerity as well, not from obligation, duty, or guilt.

If today you’re finding your spiritual life is leaning more toward obligation than worship, it’s OK. We’ve all been there, but we should desire something far greater: a heart that loves and adores our Creator.

Today, let’s take the time to seek Him through prayer and reading His word. Let’s confess our faulty attitude, and ask Him to replace those feelings with the love and adoration He desires and deserves.

Amazed by His grace,

Traci