The
Hardest Substance on Earth
Behold, I am the LORD, the
God of all flesh. Is anything too hard for me? (Jeremiah 32:27).
Until recently the diamond
was thought to be the hardest substance on earth, but recent studies have
uncovered two minerals that are harder still: wurtzite
boron nitride and lonsdaleite. Both materials are four to
five times harder than any substance ever measured.
There is one substance even
harder—the human heart. It can be the hardest thing on earth.
Do you live with a stubborn spouse, a rebellious teenager, a resentful mother-in-law? God can create a new heart in that person: He can "remove the heart of stone from them and "give (them) a heart of flesh" (Ezekiel 36:26).
The heart is that part of
us that regulates our desires, thoughts and behavior. It can be redeemed. The
most stubborn, obdurate,
insensitive heart can become a heart of flesh—soft, reasonable, malleable and responsive.
And how does God melt the
human heart? Through His love, a love that can "cause the rocks to flow.” And
how does God's love reach our adversaries? Through our love. We have to take
His love into our own hearts and then show it to them.
Years ago I saw a cartoon
by Charles Addams on the cover of the New Yorker Magazine depicting an old
curmudgeon, clad in rumpled pajamas and robe, barricaded in his room. He had
just secured the door for the night with four locks, two deadbolts and a chain
latch. Only after the last lock was fastened did he notice a small envelope
that had been slipped beneath the door. On the envelope was a large sticker in
the shape of a heart. Someone broke through his defenses with a valentine! Love
found a way.
Ah, you say, you don't know
the heart of the one I live with. He has a heart of stone.
No, I don't know
that heart, but I do know this: God once drew enough water for millions
of people from a slab of flint (Psalm
114:8). “Nothing is too hard for the Lord” (Jeremiah 32:17).
Having written that may I
issue a caveat: I have framed my thoughts in an optative mood, for we can only
be hopeful, not certain. God can
soften any heart, but He has granted each of us the dignity of self-determination.
We can resist His will.
Pharaoh “hardened his
heart,” “hardened his heart,” “hardened His heart” (8:15,32), and so God “hardened his heart” (Exodus 9:12),
a judicial hardening for which there was no remedy (Proverbs 9:21). God will plead
with us, he will wait on us, but if we long resist His wise and loving will, He
will give us what we desire. But, in consequence, He will send a swelling
emptiness into our souls (Psalm 106:14).
David Roper
1 1.25.16