By Derek Prince
Be encouraged and inspired with this extract from a Bible-based teaching by Derek Prince.
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“So, give your servant a discerning heart to govern your people and to distinguish between right and wrong. For who is able to govern this great people of yours?” And the comment is, “The Lord was pleased that Solomon had asked for this.” Now, where the translation says, “a discerning heart,” the Hebrew says literally, “a hearing heart.” That’s what we’re talking about: a heart that can hear God.
And Solomon received it as a gift from God. God gave it to him because he asked for it. Let me pause and ask you this: Have you ever asked God for a hearing heart? Do you realize that it’s with your heart you hear God? Do you realize that this is going to make all the difference in your life, whether you can hear God’s voice with your heart?
You see, it’s with our heart that we hear the voice of God, not with our physical ears. In my talks last week, I gave what seemed to me to be rather a vivid example of a bank that has a safe, and the safe is programmed electronically to open only at the voice of the bank manager. And his voice, like every voice, is unique. There’s no way to copy that voice. So, the only one who can open that safe is the bank manager when he says certain words in his voice.
Well, I believe that your heart and my heart are like that. The heart is the safe. It’s where, the place where we keep the things that really matter to us. Proverbs 4:23, the words of Solomon again:
“Keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of it are the issues of life.”
What you have in your heart is going to settle the course of your life. So, your heart is a safe that keeps things much more precious than those that are kept in a bank safe.
And I believe that every child of God should have a heart that’s a safe that’s programmed only to open at one voice: the voice of the Lord. You remember what Jesus said?
“My sheep hear my voice; and I know them, and they follow me.”
He said, “They will not follow a stranger,” because they don’t recognize his voice. How important it is to have a heart that will open to the voice of the Lord and will not open to the voice of an alien or a stranger. What kind of a heart is that? It’s a hearing heart.
We have ears to hear, not physically, but in our spirit. In the innermost depths of our being, we have a heart that responds to the voice of the Lord. Now, I want to talk for a moment out of Scripture about the opposite condition: spiritual deafness. The Bible, both the Old and the New Testament, have much to say about people who are spiritually deaf. Jesus said of those who could not understand his parables, in Matthew 13, verses 13 through 15, that they were spiritually deaf. This is how he expresses it. He said,
“‘This is why I speak to them in parables: “Though seeing, they do not see; though hearing, they do not hear or understand.”’ In them is fulfilled the prophecy of Isaiah: ‘“You will be ever hearing but never understanding; you will be ever seeing but never perceiving.” For this people’s heart has become calloused; they hardly hear with their ears, and they have closed their eyes. Otherwise they might see with their eyes, hear with their ears, understand with their hearts and turn, and I would heal them.’”
There is a picture of people who have no heart to hear the voice of the Lord. They’ve become inwardly deaf. And there’s one word which I think is very significant. It’s a frightening word. “This people’s heart has become calloused.” Their heart doesn’t respond. It’s not sensitive any longer.
Compare what God said about Israel in the Old Testament in Psalm 95, verses 7 and 8. He said,
“Today, if you hear his voice, do not harden your hearts as you did at Meribah, as you did that day at Massah in the desert.”
And then he goes on about those people who did harden their hearts.
“For forty years I was angry with that generation; I said, ‘They are a people whose hearts go astray, and they have not known my ways.’ So I declared on oath in my anger, ‘They shall never enter my rest.’”
See, I believe there are many of God’s people today who never really enter God’s rest. They’re always wandering in the wilderness, but they never enter the Promised Land. The reason is, they haven’t learned to hear God’s voice. The only way to enter God’s rest is to hear his voice.
If you put those two accounts from the New Testament and the Old Testament together, of people who are deaf in their hearts, spiritually deaf, there are two significant words that describe the condition of their hearts. The two words are “calloused” and “hardened.” That’s the kind of heart that does not hear. So, what’s the application? What’s the opposite of being calloused and hardened? I would say the key word is “sensitive.” We have to cultivate inward sensitivity toward the Lord and toward his voice. Let me give you a vivid picture. Have you ever seen a blind person reading Braille? Have you seen their fingers skimming over those little dots on the paper? If I were to brush my fingers over those dots, they would mean nothing to me. I would just feel something a little above the surface. But a blind person has so sensitized his fingers that those dots mean something to him. They are words. They have a message.
I believe that’s what it means to cultivate a sensitive heart toward the voice of the Lord. It’s to have our heart so sensitive that when God speaks, we hear his voice. It means something to us. I believe that’s the real key to blessing, to entering our inheritance. It’s so grieving to think of the people that wandered in the wilderness when they could have been in the Promised Land, all because they had not cultivated a sensitive heart toward the voice of the Lord. Let me challenge you to do that: to cultivate a sensitive heart.
Continue your study of the Bible with the extended teaching, to further equip and enrich your Christian faith.
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