MIND STUFF
Formerly called “The Heart”
This morning we’re going to be talking
about “mind stuff” and our thoughts will be directed to the Biblical
Heart. You have a handout of NOTES on
the talk and there are a few blanks you might want to fill in. (This Study Guide is on this Web Site.
Highlighted words and white print on red have to do with the study guide.)
Our text is found in Pro. 4:23. The King James version reads:
Keep
thy heart with all diligence; for out of it are the issues of life (Pro. 4:23).
But, perhaps a better translation of Pro.
4:23 is found in "The Tanakh",
a Jewish Bible. Here is what it
says:
More than all that you guard, guard
your mind, For it is the source of life.
A few years ago on a flight from Memphis
to Florida I had the privilege of
sitting next to a professor from
a medical college in Virginia. He was
explaining to me the work they are doing in the field of mental health. And he said they had been very successful in
re-programming the subconscious mind.
I asked him, "How do you re-program
the sub-conscious?" He said they use stereo headphones and a cassette
recorder. He explained that they play
music to the left ear phone in order to distract the conscious mind. At
the same time the message to be learned is played to the right ear phone
because the right ear is closer to the subconscious.
This led me to tell the doctor of my
interest in the Biblical "heart."
I explained to him that I believe the Heart of the Bible is the same
thing as the subconscious mind. And you
know what? He agreed with me. And then he recommended a book entitled
"What To Say When You Talk To Yourself."
When I got home, my wife had a paperback
copy waiting for me. As I read the book
I was astonished to learn the power of talking to one's self. And as I
thought about this, I realized that I had been talking to myself all my
life. I remember my mother saying, "It's OK to talk to yourself, but when
you start to answer yourself, that's when you need to worry."
But, what my mother didn't realize is
that when one talks to himself, it's quite normal to hear a reply, for there is
in fact a two-way conversation going on in one's mind. And there’s nothing wrong with that for this
is the way God made us.
As I continued to read the book, it dawned on me for the first time just how
much harm we do by saying negative
things out loud.
For example, we’ve all heard this on
Monday’s. One rather happy person says, "How are you today? And the other
person says, "I'm OK for a Monday."
So how can this hurt anyone? Let's examine what's happening. The person
saying "I'm OK for a Monday” is being programmed to make sure that all
Mondays are days to be dreaded. But
why does one say this? Most likely he
heard someone else say this and thought it was funny or cute. However, the
problem is that if one continues to say this often enough and long enough, it
will become a belief of the subconscious mind. And, once his mind believes it, then every Monday will be a bad
day because his mind will see to it that he behaves in such a way as to
bring upon himself bad Mondays.
The author of the book, Shad Helmstedder,
gave some examples of what NOT TO SAY when we talk to ourselves.
"I'm going nowhere at work."
"It's just not my day."
"When I try
to talk to him we have an argument."
"I have a
problem with my weight."
"Why should
I try, it won't work out anyway."
"I have the
worst memory."
"Just this
once won't hurt."
"I've tried,
but I just can't."
Now we’ve all said things like this to
ourselves, haven't we? But, as we think
on these things, it becomes quite obvious how we can set our own words against
us. The author pointed out how much
better it would be to turn each phrase around and let our own words work for us
instead of against us. Here's how he
said to do it!
"I'm making
progress at work."
"Today is a
great day for me! "
"Every time
I talk to him we communicate better." "I'm getting in control of my
weight."
"I'm going to try, I'm certain it will
work."
"I have an
excellent memory."
"Just this
once, I won't."
" I'll keep
trying and I'll get it yet!"
The author said we should try to learn
what our subconscious mind already believes about ourselves. He said, "If you would like to know what kinds of things you
are saying to yourself unconsciously you will find the answer in what
you say to yourself out loud."
He said, "What you hear
yourself say to yourself out loud is only the tip of the iceberg; what
goes on underneath is monumental compared with what we see on the surface. He said, “… for every conscious, noticed
thought we have, there are many more thoughts that are never noticed at
all. Those unseen or unheard thoughts
are like a chorus of a thousand voices, all echoing the same kinds of thoughts
in the recesses of your subconscious mind." I'd certainly recommend this book to anyone.
We’ve heard it said that we get what we expect and that we will become
what we think about. How can
this apply in our lives? More often
than not, one will begin a diet with absolutely no belief of success. Losing weight is more often limited to
"hope" rather than belief. If one believes he will cheat on the diet
by eating the wrong foods, then he will.
If one expects something to go wrong it will. What about the negative programming of Murphy's law? It’s very negative to say out loud,
"If anything can go wrong it will"
I think the best way to express it is to
say that we get what we believe
we will get. You see, belief is the key. If we believe we will have trouble, we will
have trouble. If we believe we will fall flat on our face, we will.
But, on the positive side, if we want to
lose weight and believe that we will then we surely will. It seems that we can always accomplish what
we believe we can accomplish.
Our Lord Jesus said in Mark 11:24:
Listen to me! You can pray for anything,
and if you believe, you have it; it's yours! (TLB)
Notice two things: (1) We can pray for
anything and (2) We must believe we already have it even as we pray.
Our
Lord gave us the three key elements of prayer, (1) we must ask God, and (2) We
can ask for whatever we desire and (3) We must have a positive belief that
whatever we ask for has already come to pass. Keep in mind that faith and belief have very
similar meanings. And don’t lose sight
of the fact that prayer is much more than self talk. Prayer is talking to GOD.
I’m not sure of the customs everywhere,
but I think it’s universal that children rarely challenge things told them by
their parents. Many parents tell
children there is a bearded man who comes down the chimney at Christmas
time. And the child believes it with
all his heart.
Since the child has no previous knowledge
to challenge the Santa Claus teaching, then it becomes a belief. You see, this early in life the child has
not learned to measure a small fireplace to see if a fat man really can come
down the chimney.
Now, as the young child grows, he soaks
up knowledge like a sponge. In addition
to the teachings of his parents, he learns by talking to himself as well as
from others including grandparents, schoolteachers, and especially from TV,
radio, movies electronic games and comic books. Even his room, his toys, and his surroundings communicate
certain things to his subconscious mind.
Psychologists simply lump all this together and say we are products of
our "environment."
I became very curious and asked questions
like, "What is knowledge? What is
wisdom and what is belief?” It occurred
to me that if knowledge is NOT
challenged by wisdom then knowledge becomes
belief. So I coined the phrase "unchallenged
knowledge becomes belief."
Now to the computer. You can imagine my excitement as I waited
for my computer to print out every Scripture containing the word
"heart." I discovered there
are 762 "heart scriptures" and it occurred to me that with this
overwhelming amount of information I could learn what the Biblical heart
really is.
I began my study with the first
occurrence of the word "heart" in Genesis 6:5. It says:
And God saw that
the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of
the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually (Gen. 6:5 KJV).
This says that our thoughts are in the
heart. To say it a different way, the heart is that part of the
body where we do our thinking.
My reasoning went like this. If we think in our heart, then obviously our
heart has answers to give us to questions we ask. And if the heart has answers, then the heart is a storehouse of knowledge and wisdom.
Then I examined the next Scripture,
Genesis 6:6. It says, "The Lord
was grieved at His heart." Now
this is quite a discovery for this plainly reveals that the
Lord has a heart
too.
In Gen. 17:17 I noticed that Abraham, "said in his heart."
It seemed clear that if Abraham "said in his heart" that he was TALKING
in his heart.
In Gen. 20:6 I learned that the heart has integrity:
And God said unto
him in a dream, Yea, I know that thou didst this in the integrity of thy heart.
It would seem that the heart or
subconscious mind, if you will, has a unique kind of integrity. It will be true to what it believes. If one's heart believes evil things, then it
will be faithful to that evil. If, on
the other hand, the heart believes good things, then it will be faithful to
those good things.
Further study of the word heart revealed
that a heart can faint. In Gen. 45:26 we are told that Jacob's
heart fainted. Lets pause here and
examine a fainting heart.
The man later named Israel, Jacob, had
believed in his heart for a long time that his son Joseph was dead. But, one day he was told that Joseph was not
only still alive but that he was governor over all the land of Egypt.
Immediately this belief in Jacob's heart
was challenged. The scripture says, "Jacob's heart fainted for he
believed them not." In reality,
this news was too good to be true. Jacob wanted to believe it but was afraid
to. Suddenly there was a conflict of
beliefs. So his heart not knowing
what to do, simply fainted.
To illustrate "beliefs in
conflict", let us consider the mind of the child who believes in Santa
Claus. As we said, the child doesn't think along the lines of
why this isn't possible, because he
believes that whatever mom and dad says is true.
And his aunts, uncles, and grandparents
help the belief along by asking the child "What is Santa going to bring
you?" This continues until the
child is in the first or second grade of school. Then one day the belief in Santa Claus is challenged when another
child says, "Santa is your mother and father."
Now the child's belief is shattered. To say it like the Bible said of Jacob,
"His heart fainted."
What does the child do? How does he reconcile this conflict in his
mind? He runs to the source of his
belief, his parents and asks his mother or his father, "Are you Santa
Claus." Faced with this long
dreaded confrontation, the parents are forced to admit the truth.
Some children are hurt more than others
by this. Maybe no damage has been done
at all, but one thing is for sure, for the rest of his life this child will be
careful what he accepts as belief and he will desperately avoid challenges to
what he already believes.
Elsewhere we find many Scriptures that
indicate a heart can be hardened.
In Exo. 7:13 Pharaoh's heart was hardened. Often we read of a stony heart.
Then in Exodus 23:9 we learn a heart can
have empathy:
Also thou shalt
not oppress a stranger: for ye know the heart of a stranger, seeing ye
were strangers in the land of Egypt.
This tells us that similar experiences
among human beings should invoke empathy for we can relate to similar
experiences in our hearts. In our day,
someone may say, "I know how you feel?"
Sympathy is a wonderful thing and it
comes from the heart. But, is it wise
to say "I know how you feel" when one does not really know how
the other person feels? Suppose a
friend is suddenly depressed when he learns that he has just six months to
live. How foolish it would be for a
healthy person to say "I know how
you feel." This would surely appear to be hypocrisy to the person about to
die. It may sound good to say it, but
perhaps it would be better to say, "I love you and I'm sorry to learn
this."
In Exodus 35:35 we learn that a heart can have wisdom. In Leviticus
19:17 we learn that a
heart can have hate. In Deuteronomy 8:5 we are told to "consider" in
our hearts. This is just another way of saying to think it through in your
heart.
In
Pro. 23:7 it says “As a man thinketh in his heart so is he.” I’ve heard that one expressed this way: “You are today where your thoughts have brought you and you will be
tomorrow where your thoughts will take you.”
And we could go on with this but perhaps
the single Scripture that sums them all up is our text Scripture from the pen
of the wise King Solomon who said:
"Keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of
it are the issues of
life (Pro. 4:23)"
(PAUSE)
Let us consider an incident when Jesus had one of His many
confrontations with the scribes and Pharisees. This account is found in both Matthew 15 and
Mark 7. The exchange began when the scribes and Pharisees asked Jesus why His
followers did not ceremonially wash their hands before they ate food. They said
it was a tradition.
Jesus replied, telling them in no
uncertain terms that they were wrong and that they were transgressing the
commandment of God with that tradition.
He even went so far as to call them "hypocrites." After this, He called the multitude together
and He spoke a parable concerning this.
Well, after He spoke the parable, the
disciples wanted to know the lesson of the parable, so Peter asked our Lord
what He meant. Jesus explained that
what comes out of the mouth comes from the heart. And then he specified a number of things
that come from the heart. He said in
Matt. 15:19-20:
For out of the
heart proceed evil thoughts,
murders, adulteries, fornication's, thefts, false witness, blasphemies.
These are the things which defile a man, but to eat with unwashed hands defiles
no one.
In this explanation our Lord tells us a
great deal about the heart. Clearly the
Lord was teaching that it’s the OUTPUT from
the heart that does the damage. And the output from the heart can be either
in words, actions or deeds.
As I continued my study of the heart, It
became even clearer that God isn’t interested in what we wear or what kind of
car we drive or how big a home we live in or how much money we have in the
bank. These things have nothing to do with the plan of God. Jesus said: "Lay not up for yourselves
treasures upon earth, where moth and rust doth corrupt, and where thieves break
through and steal (Matt. 6:19).
Jesus made it clear that God is not
interested in our skills in accumulating wealth or possessions. Rather God is interested in whether or not we sincerely love
Him and how we treasure the spiritual things He gives us. Jesus said in verses 20 and 21: "But
lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust doth
corrupt, and where thieves do not break through nor steal. For where your treasure is, there will your
heart be also." And where is
heaven?
Heaven is where God is! And Jesus said, that we should lay up
treasure for ourselves where God is. It
would seem, that the treasures that we lay up for ourselves where God is, are
the things we write in our hearts.
Obviously Jesus is speaking of our marvelous
minds and a very deep consciousness that God has given us. . . a deep deep
consciousness He calls the heart.
Frankly my belief is that the heart (or subconscious mind) is the very
way that God has made us in His image.
After all, the Scriptures say,
He too has a heart. And the key to that
deep consciousness is belief. Once I
heard a public speaker make the statement, "If you believe you can
or if you believe you can’t, you're right."
Whether we realize it or not, we program what we believe. In other words we need to be careful of “stinkin’
thinkin’. Fear can be a belief.
Job said: (3:25) "For the
thing which I greatly feared is come upon me, and that which I was afraid of is
come unto me."
How does one acquire beliefs? Fortunately, our heart doesn't learn beliefs
from just one single exposure.
We learn beliefs by spaced repetition.
For example, we learned the
multiplication table by talking to ourselves and saying over and over 2X2=4 and
2X3=6. At first this was only information. Just information! But, as we said this over and over, day
after day, finally it became knowledge for it had been learned. But once it was
learned and left unchallenged by other conflicting beliefs, then it too became a
belief.
Every belief we have is learned through
spaced repetition and is written in the heart. When we consider solutions to problems we are thinking in our
heart; searching our memory banks for the knowledge and beliefs that will give
us answers. And most of
our beliefs are learned in early childhood. The wise King Solomon said:
Train up a child
in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it (Pro.
22:6).
Parents, have an awesome
responsibility. For example if a parent
tells a child over and over for year after year that he will never amount to
anything, what does the child believe? Obviously he believes, "I can never
amount to anything." And in many
cases, no matter how hard the child may try, his subconscious mind believes
that he cannot amount to anything. And
if that is the belief, then that is the result.
The Word of God is truth and the truth of
the Bible is that a child will not depart from his early teachings when he is
old.
You may be thinking that changing all
this is hopeless. But, really an understanding of how our heart works is just
the beginning. The next step is to
believe that God will help us change.
We can pray for help and we can believe God has forgiven. When God forgives, He erases
the pain but not the knowledge. And we must accept His forgiveness by forgiving ourselves.
The late best selling author Claud
Bristol wrote a book entitled "The Magic of Believing." In this book he referred to what he called
"mind stuff." I have learned
that the Bible is full of "mind stuff". Everything said in the Bible about teaching and learning is
"mind stuff."
Earlier we pointed out that there are 762
"heart" Scriptures. But, in
addition there are some 498 "soul" scriptures and 92 "mind"
scriptures and 558 "spirit" scriptures. All of this appears to be "mind stuff." And here are some
other Biblical words that we haven't even begun to study closely or even try to
define as yet:
Knowledge - Wisdom - Understanding - Hope - Faith - Trust
But in addition to these Biblical words,
there are many other English words we need to consider in future studies. Words like "emotions" and
"moods" and "attitudes."
These are "mind stuff" too.
And even though the word "brain" is NOT in the Bible, it too
is a word to be studied.
Let me tell you why I say that. When I thought of the "brain" I
asked myself (notice that I just said I asked myself) "What is the brain?"
Here is the reply I received.
"It is an interface device between the visible and the
invisible."
This reminded me of a room like this one
full of music that one cannot hear. I
thought of a radio that could pick up the music and then reproduce it so I
could hear it. The radio is an
interface device. And I began to think
of the brain as an interface device which connects the conscious mind with the
subconscious. Naturally, I wondered if my reasoning was correct for
this kind of thing was far beyond my comprehension.
I continued to ponder the thought until a
chance meeting with a young Australian doctor on a flight from Boston to Memphis.
He said he was involved with neuro science research. After explaining my thinking about the brain
being an interface between the physical and spiritual realm, I asked him if he
had ever heard anything like that. He
said, "Oh Yes! He said, "An
Australian doctor, Sir John Carew Eccles, taught there are two worlds, the
spiritual and the physical, with the brain as the connecting link. He said Sir John, now retired, once taught
at Canberra University at Sydney and won the Nobel Prize in 1963 for his
research on nerve impulses.
Further study revealed that the human
brain weighs only about 1 pound at birth but by age 6 it is full size weighing
about 3 pounds. But the brain is only
part of that marvelous, thrilling, unlimited and vastly complex mind of
ours. David said:
"I will praise thee; for I am fearfully and wonderfully made: (Psa.139:14)."
The
Apostle Paul had a lot to say about "mind Stuff." In fact, one of the most revealing things
Paul said was said to Timothy:
"Study to
shew thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed,
rightly dividing the word of truth (II Tim. 2:15)."
So what happens when we study the
Bible? Since we are children of God,
then we will learn from our Father's Word.
We will not only learn things that can help us in the present, but we
will learn things that have eternal consequences. If we know and believe the word of God then we will have the
right answers to every question of good and evil.
If
we read and study and ponder and learn His Word we are NOT talking to
ourselves. HE is talking to us. If we read out loud "Love ye one
another" then the words heard in our heart are God's words. And when His words are recorded in our hearts,
then it will be our Father talking to us when we talk to ourselves.
In I Chronicles 28:9 we read: ". . . for the Lord searcheth all
hearts, and understandeth all the imaginations of the thoughts: if thou seek
him, he will be found of thee; but if thou forsake him, he will cast thee off
for ever."
The Lord searches our heart and He can
read every word in it. Nothing is
hidden from Him. And if we seek Him we will find Him for there is an awesome
power available to man through the heart.
Our Lord, Jesus Christ said:
"Blessed are the pure in heart: for they shall see God (Matt. 5:8)."
An evil heart will never see God, but a pure heart
will see God. In order to purify
our hearts we need to say the right things when we talk to ourselves. We need to hear the positive words of the
Bible, the Word of God.
Carefully watching what we expose
ourselves to will help, for others are always saying things that are heard in
our hearts. And others includes
TV, radio, newspapers, movies, music and everyone with whom we come in
contact. We need to guard that precious
heart that God is so very interested in.
The Apostle Peter said in II Pet 3:1, the
NIV:
Dear friends,
this is now my second letter to you. I have written both of them
as reminders to stimulate you to wholesome thinking.
Paul referred to a pure conscience in I
Tim. 3:9. He said, "Holding the mystery of the faith in a pure
conscience."
The apostle Paul said in Titus 1:15:
Unto the pure all
things are pure: but unto them that are defiled and unbelieving is nothing
pure; but even their mind and conscience is defiled.
The
modern vernacular is "Clean up your act." Brethren, let each and every one of us work
diligently with the programming of our minds so that we can indeed, "clean
up our act" and make ourselves a little bit more like the model set before
us. That model is our Lord, Jesus
Christ. It is He we must follow. And by
follow we mean that we must learn to think like He thinks, we must try to do as
He does, and we must react to situations like He would. In short, we must put on the mind of Christ
just as Paul said in Phil. 2:5:
Let this mind be in
you, which was also in Christ Jesus:
Brethren, the heart is what it's all
about. Pro. 4:23 says:
More than all that you guard,
guard your mind, For it is the source of life. Tanakh
May the Lord add His blessing to our
study.
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5/30/2001