Timothy Keller Sermons Podcast by Gospel in Life - A New Heart
Episode Date: August 27, 2025When you’re about to die, there are no tangents; you get right to the point. You only say the things that are the most important that you’ve ever learned in your whole life. Here, at the very end ...of the end of his sermons, at the very end of the book of Deuteronomy, Moses gets to the most crucial things he could possibly tell anyone. Here he gives us the solution to what could be called the ultimate human problem. So let’s ask 1) What’s that problem? 2) What’s the solution? 3) How do you know if you have it? and 4) If you don’t, how can you receive it? This sermon was preached by Dr. Timothy Keller at Redeemer Presbyterian Church on September 16, 2007. Series: The New Heart God Gives. Scripture: Deuteronomy 30:1-10. Today's podcast is brought to you by Gospel in Life, the site for all sermons, books, study guides and resources from Timothy Keller and Redeemer Presbyterian Church. If you've enjoyed listening to this podcast and would like to support the ongoing efforts of this ministry, you can do so by visiting https://gospelinlife.com/give and making a one-time or recurring donation.
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Welcome to Gospel and Life.
When someone you know is contemplating life's deepest questions, who am I?
What's wrong with the world?
What can truly make me whole?
Jesus doesn't just give us answers.
He gives us himself.
In this month's podcast, Tim Keller looks at how we can share the hope we have in Christ
as the answer to a person's search for meaning and purpose.
As you may know, August is Go and Share Month at Gospel in Life,
and we've curated a wide range of free resources to help you take simple steps to share the gospel
with someone God has put in your life.
You can access these resources at gospelonlife.com slash share.
We believe God uses small acts to do great things, and we're inviting you to do simple, small acts
to go and share the gospel this month, because the gospel changes everything.
our scripture reading tonight is from the book of Deuteronomy chapter 30 verses 1 through 10
when all these blessings and curses I have set before you come upon you and you take them to heart
wherever the Lord your God disperses you among the nations and when you and your children return to
the Lord your God and obey him with all your heart and with all your soul according to everything
I command you today then the Lord your God will restore your fortunes and have compassion on you
and gather you again from the nations which he scattered you.
Even if you have been banished to the most distant land under the heavens,
from there the Lord your God will gather you and bring you back.
He will bring you to the land that belong to your fathers,
and you will take possession of it.
He will make you more prosperous and numerous than your fathers.
The Lord your God will circumcise your hearts and the hearts of your descendants
so that you may love him with all your heart and with all your soul and live.
The Lord your God will put all these curses on your enemies who hate and persecute you.
You will again obey the Lord and follow all his commands I am giving you today.
Then the Lord your God will make you most prosperous in all the work of your hands
and in the fruit of your womb, the young of your livestock, and the crops of your land.
The Lord will again delight in you and make you prosperous, just as he delighted in your fathers.
If you obey the Lord your God and keep his commands and decrees that
are written in this book of the law and turn to the Lord your God with all your heart and with all
your soul. This is the word of the Lord.
We said that the book of Deuteronomy is a series of sermons that Moses preached at the very end of his
life. And when you're about to die, there are no tangents. You get right to the point.
You only say the things that are the most important that you've ever learned.
in your whole life.
And here at the very end of the end, of all of the sermons, at the very end of the book of Deuteronomy,
Moses gets to the most crucial things he could possibly tell anyone.
And tonight, I would say in some ways, the most crucial of everything he said so far.
Here he gives us a solution to what could be called the ultimate human problem.
so let's ask what's that problem what's the solution how do you know if you have it and if you don't
how can you receive it what's the problem what's the solution how do you know if you have it if you
don't how can you receive it okay don't fall off your chairs four points not five points
it's only be about two-hour sermon said the ordinary hour and 45 minutes
what's the big problem it's actually there in verses one to four for weeks and months we have been looking at
the book of deuteronomy and basically the book of deuteronomy is god's blueprint for how he wants
human beings to live and it's a marvelous blueprint it's a vision of a life of integrity and
joyful unselfishness and if we really live the way it says in the book to do oh my you know
if you were here on labor day we looked at deuteronomy 15 and
And there's a statement in Deuteronomy 15 that I've just been struck by for years.
God says, if you obeyed everything I said in this book, in the law, there would be no poor among you.
He's saying if you had a community, a society of people that obeyed God's law fully and wholeheartedly,
there would be no permanent class of poor people in that society at all.
It would be a test.
It's amazing.
That's another sermon, of course, and I won't stay there.
but the point is, wow. And God over and over says, if you live according to the law of God,
this will be the blessedness that you will experience. This will be the blessed society that you
will have. But throughout the book of Deuteronomy, Moses has said, the warning is if you don't
obey God, if you turn from him, if you live lives without integrity and of selfishness and
pride and self-centeredness, you will be cursed. You will be cut off.
and you will be eventually exiled and banished.
And see, verses 1 to 4 is Moses looking down the carters of time
and saying finally here at the very end,
and by the way, O Israel, you will.
You will fail.
You will utterly fail in the end to obey the law of God.
And you will be, see verse 1, you'll be in 2, you'll be dispersed.
All these curses will come upon you.
And you, verse 4, will be ban.
that's bad news however we shouldn't pick on the Israelites it's only in the story of
Israel we only see what is writ large in the entire human race there was a book put out just
earlier this year by a philosopher Jacob needleman wrote a book called why can't we be good
and you know the basic point of the book is so obvious and yet he points out that all social
theorists are writing books about how we ought to live. And therapists are writing books about how
we ought to live. And political leaders are writing books about how we ought to live. But they're
just missing one point. We know how we ought to live. We can't do it. The point of the book is
in the book, for example, Needleman says, human beings who know what is good, nevertheless remain
mysteriously helpless to internally adopt and do the ethical, moral, and religious ideas bequeathed to
them. He says, this is maybe, this is the ultimate human problem. We know how we ought to live.
You keep giving us books on how we ought to live. We know how we ought to live. We just can't do it.
We can't summons up the ability to across the board live the way we ought to live. And that's the
reason why we still have the world in the mess that it's in. We know what is right to do. We can't
do it. That's the ultimate problem, the human race. Becky Pippert wrote a book called Hope has
its reasons. And years ago, she was auditing a course in counseling psychology.
at Harvard University. And she was listening in a class to a case study, a great case study,
of a young man who hated his mother but didn't know it. And the case study showed how the
therapist helped him see that he did hate his mother. He was incredibly bitter and that it
was distorting his whole life. And when the case study was over, Becky raised her hands and said,
well, now how is the therapist going to help him forgive his mother? And the professor,
the whole class of shock said well that's not therapy he says you're asking a lot after all we just
we just gave him what he really you know the you know we showed him what was going on in his you know
insides and all that and Becky and everybody started raising their hands and finally the professor said
listen if you're looking for a forgiving heart you're in the wrong department and what he simply
meant is he says psychology is a science we can't we can't give you a new heart
which is what needleman is trying to say. That's the biggest problem. We know what to do.
We're powerless to do it. What's the solution? Verse six. Look at this. It's an amazing.
This is a gift of God. This is not something you can do. It's something that God does.
Verse six, in spite of being banished, in spite of all the curses, in spite of the fact that you've, you know, you've blown it.
Verse six, the Lord your God will circumcise your hearts.
What does that mean?
Well, if we're going to understand what a circumcised heart is, we have to understand what
hearts are and what circumcision is, all, first of all, what hearts are.
You say, well, I know what a heart is.
No, I don't think you do.
You say, well, the heart is the source of the emotions and the feelings, as opposed to the
head, which is the source of the mind and the thoughts.
And if that's wrong, according to the Bible, the Bible does not mean, does not use the word
heart that way.
It does not use the word heart the way we use it in modern English.
or in our society.
In the Bible, the heart is the seat of the entire acting self.
And the heart controls not just the emotions,
but also the thoughts and the actions.
Why?
Because in the Bible, the heart is the seat of your most fundamental commitments.
The things that you most hope in, you most believe in,
you most look to, and you most live for.
The things that you look at and say,
if I had that, that, then I would be happy, then I would have meaning, then I would have value.
Whatever those things are that you look at like that, that determines everything.
See, for one of you, your greatest joy isn't what is your greatest joy, and your greatest
fear isn't what your greatest fear is. Why? Because your emotions are flowing from these
fundamental commitments. They're shaped by your fundamental commitments and all your decisions and all
your thinking and all of your imagination is too. The heart is the place.
where you decide what most turns your crank, what's most exciting, what most captures your
imagination, what you most love, what you most find beautiful and attractive. And whatever those
things are, that affects everything else. That shapes everything else. All right? Then what's
a circumcised heart? Circumcision was the ritual that the Israelites went through when they
committed to obey God in his covenant. Circumcision was obeying God when they committed to serving
God in his covenant. So what would a circumcised heart be? Obviously, it's not a physical thing.
Obviously, it's a metaphor. But what is it a metaphor for? It's this. To say, you need a circumcised
heart is God's way of saying, and Moses' way of saying, it's not enough to obey God
out of duty alone.
It's not enough to obey God
externally only.
Circumcision represents
external, the body,
the physical. And what
the circumcised heart is
saying is, it's not enough
to only serve God because you have to,
you ought to serve God because
you want to, because you
love to.
I had an old
older minister who was a mentor to me that used to say
this. The
being of God, the greatness of the being of God, demands a love that can't be the response to a
demand. The being of God, the greatness of the being of God, requires a love that cannot just
be a response to a requirement. What does that mean? See, look, what do you do with your
solitude? When you don't have to think of something, when you have nothing to do, when you're just
sitting there twiddling your thumbs you're waiting for a bus and the bus doesn't come what do you
what do you automatically instinctively love to dream about wish for plan for what do you most like
reading about what do you most instinctively automatically love to do not because you have to just because
you want to that's where your heart is and those things those things are the things you set your
heart on but what are those things everybody come on you know what they are there there's somebody
opposite sex, there's your career, there's money, there's these things. But the greatest thing in the
world, the greatest thing in the universe, the most beautiful thing, the most worthy thing, the most
great thing in the world is what? It's God. But our hearts don't fix on that. What if, however,
you got a circumcised heart? What if, however, God came in from the outside and fixed your heart
so that the thing you most ought to do was the same thing you most wanted to do and love to do.
That's a circumcised heart.
That's an astounding thing.
The thing you most want to do, the thing you most is the thing you ought to do.
And that's the reason why you've got this, you know, this just John Newton hymn that goes like this that I so often like to quote,
our pleasure and our duty, though opposite before, since we have seen his beauty are joined apart no more.
That's a new heart.
The moment you find your pleasure and your duty that are always different, I've got to do it,
I ought to do it, you know, I believe in God, I know I've got to do it, I need to be good,
but here's your passion, here's the things that you most desire to, here's the things that you're attracted to.
Our pleasure and our duty, the opposite before us, since we have seen his beauty are joined.
And when that happens, you've got the circumcised heart, you've got the new heart.
Now, something this big ought to be all through the Bible and it is under different names.
Ezekiel and Jeremiah say God will give you a new heart, not just a circumcised heart,
or the spirit of God will come and write the law on your heart.
That's also in there.
And when Jesus talks to Nicodemus in John chapter 3, he quotes Ezekiel 37, and he says,
you must be born again of the spirit.
Same thing.
To be born again, to be born of the spirit, to get a new heart, to have a circumcised heart,
is the same thing.
And that is the solution to the ultimate human problem that we know how we ought to live, but we can't live it.
Now, thirdly, how do you know if you've got this thing?
How do you know if you have a new heart or a circumcised heart?
There's actually three signs embedded in verses 6, 7 and 8, 6 and 8, actually, that I think are extremely important signs that you have received that you have this circumcised heart.
Here's the first sign.
Well, the three words, by the way, that tell us the three signs are love, obey, and live.
See them in there?
Love obey and live.
First, verse six, God will circumcise your heart so you will love him with all your soul.
Ah, what's that mean?
Well, the first sign of a changed heart is not a change in the quantity of religious knowledge,
but in the quality of spiritual awareness.
This is really important.
I'll say it again.
It's not a change.
Conversion or the new birth or the new heart
is not a change in the quantity
of religious knowledge.
It's not just learning new things,
you know, religious things.
It's the quality,
a whole new quality of spiritual awareness.
Whenever this new heart is talked about,
it's talked in terms of sensory language.
So if you go back to say,
Deuteronomy 29, verse 3 and 4,
It's only the chapter before.
It says, God will give you a heart to understand, eyes to see, and ears to hear.
See?
Eyes to see and ears to hear.
What does that mean?
You've known about the doctrine.
You know about God.
You know God's holiness.
You know God's justice.
You know God's love.
You know these things.
But when you get the new heart, you will see it.
You won't just know about it.
You will taste it.
Sometimes that is in the Bible.
Taste it.
You will hear it.
finally.
What?
Jonathan Edwards was a pastor in 18th century New England, 1730s and 40s.
And in 18th century, New England, in that time, everybody believed Christianity.
And I mean everybody.
If you went to North Hampton, Massachusetts, everybody went to church.
Everybody was a baptized member.
Everybody believed in the Trinity and believed in the deity of Jesus and believed he died for
sins, everybody. And yet, Jonathan Edwards learned what he knew what actually all pastors know,
and yet we're always a little afraid to talk about it. And that is in spite of the fact
you have all these people out there and they're living according to Christian principles and
they're believing the Christian doctrines and they're baptized and they're members. Some of them
have a new heart and some of them don't. Some of them have the circumcised heart and some don't.
Edward saw that any minister can see that
but Edwards unlike the rest of us cowards
talked about it a lot
and he actually wrote four books on the subject
which are tremendous
and I've tried to work through them and there's nothing better
on this subject but I believe that in the end
here's what Edward says that the main difference
is between a person with a new heart and a person
who believes and obeys and comes to church
and does all the good things but doesn't have a new heart
Here's the difference.
He says, people with a new heart, love and obey God for the beauty and attractiveness of who
he is in himself.
They don't love and obey God because they have to.
They don't love and obey God to get things.
They don't obey love and obey God as a means to an end.
They obey God because they love him as an end in and of himself.
They love him aesthetically.
What?
We always say the gospel change.
is everything, and we believe it really does. That's why here at Gospel in Life, August is
Go and Share Month. Throughout August, we're inviting thousands of our listeners to take a small
step in sharing the gospel with someone God has placed in your life. For those of you who make a gift
to Gospel in Life this month, we'll send you two copies of Making Sense of God by Tim Keller. It's a powerful
resource that explores how Christianity makes emotional, cultural, and rational sense in today's
world. It's our thanks for your gift and provides a way you can do a small act to share the
gospel by reading the book with a friend, giving one to a coworker, or passing on both copies
to people who are exploring the Christian faith. It's a simple way to start a gospel conversation
or continue it. To request your two copies of making sense of God, simply go to gospelandlife.com
slash give. Again, that's gospelonlife.com slash give. Now, here's Dr. Keller with the remainder of today's
teaching. Now, yes. Listen, for those of you heard this illustration before, you know, be patient,
but a lot of you haven't. It's my favorite and best illustration on this subject. When I was in
college, I took a music appreciation course, and I had to listen to a lot of Mozart because they
was on the test. And I had to be able to identify Mozart for the test. So I listened to Mozart.
to get a, you know, passing grade in a class, so I get my degree, so I get out and get a good job.
I listen to Mozart, in other words, to make money.
But today, my wife and I will spend a lot of money just to listen to Mozart.
What happened?
Well, why do we listen to Mozart now?
To get a good grade?
No, I'm not in a class.
So people will think I'm cultured?
No, nobody sees me listen to Mozart.
Well, why do you listen to Mozart?
You know, you can say, I don't know.
But what that means is, it's beautiful.
It used to be that listening to Mozart was useful.
But now, it's beautiful.
And beautiful means it's satisfying in and of itself.
It's attractive.
It fulfills in and of itself.
It's not a means to an end.
You don't do it because it will get you something else.
it's what you want it's one of the things that gives you meaning in life now here's what edward said
a person with a new heart stops obeying god just because he has to or she has to just stops obeying
god because it gets you somewhere else but begins to aesthetically find god beautiful in and of who he
is in himself just to be near him just to delight him just to please him you see people without a new
heart, obey God to get things, to get forgiveness, to get blessing, to get heaven.
They obey God to get God, but people with new hearts obey God just to get God, just to get
him, just to be near him, just to delight him.
And as a result, people with this new heart may actually have been in the church for years
and know all about various doctrines, but once you get the new heart, the doctrines start to live.
that is to say they were abstractions but now they become realities you see the love of god and before
you just knew about it you taste the power of god but now before maybe you just believed in it
in other words things that were just sort of abstractions become incredibly galvanizing and
moving and and life changing which brings me to the third point
Love? Oh, the second point. Okay, pardon me, the second point. So the first sign of a, pardon me, of a
changed heart, a circumcised heart, is that you love God for who he is in and of himself, and you
begin to sense who he is, as opposed to just believe in him abstractly. But secondly, it changes
your life. It changes you. You see, the whole point of this whole passage, the whole thrust is,
because you have this changed heart, now you obey, right? You don't obey.
to get the changed heart.
The changed heart is not the result of obedience.
The obedience is the result of the changed heart.
The changed heart comes as a gift of grace,
and from the changed heart flows a life now in conformity
to the joyful unselfishness of the law of God.
But you know what this means?
If you really have a new heart, you get changed.
See, there are people who say,
like what you just said about Jesus moving me. Well, I love it when I come to Redeemer. The songs
move me. The preaching moves me. Good. I love your servants. That's great. But Jonathan Edwards is
not impressed unless here's the real... Jonathan Edwards says, I'm glad you liked Tim Keller sermons.
I'm glad. I don't care. And maybe they make you weep. That's wonderful. And you feel,
I really feel God's spiritual reality. Well, let's see. Do the people who know, who
know you best. The people around you who really see you, are they saying you are becoming more
and more unselfish, more and more generous, more and more kind, more and more self-controlled,
more and more courageous as the weeks go by? If you're not changing in the way you actually
live, then you don't have that new heart. Your emotions are being stirred. Your emotions are being
stirred. That's all. So you have a new heart. You have a new sense of God's spiritual reality
on you. Secondly, you have a changed life. But thirdly, you start growing.
I love, you know, you'd almost miss it, unless you're looking for it carefully.
Verse 6 says,
The Lord your God will circumcise your hearts that you may love him and live.
Live.
What does that mean?
Weren't they alive before?
It's not talking about biological life.
It's talking about spiritual life.
And here's what's important.
Biological life comes gradually.
So does spiritual life.
See, I'm sure some of you are a little worried from these first two points.
You know, love God, meaning he becomes the ultimate beauty of your life, and you start to change,
and you start to say, well, I don't, ooh, hmm, you know, well, this might, this, this point may comfort
you. Think of how biological life starts out. Look at babies. Look at them. They're basket cases.
They can't do a thing. They can't do a thing. Have you ever had a baby? I mean, they just take and take,
and they can't do anything. You've got to take them everywhere. You've got to protect them from the cells all
the time. I can't tell you how many times when my kids were at 18 months old, they were screaming
and crying about something, and I said, if only I could reason with you. Didn't help. But think
of how slow that works. Well, spiritual life. Look, in spite of the fact that the moment your heart
is circumcised, the moment you receive the new heart, there is a new love implanted in you. It's a
seed, and it takes a long time to grow into a tree. It just takes time. You know, Paul says in
Romans 7, I delight in the law of God in my inmost self. That's a new, that's a circumcised heart.
He says, the thing I most want, the thing I most passionately love is I want to delight him.
And yet he says, I see all these other desires still in my life that vie with that and they
draw me away from doing what I should do in many cases. I'm improving, but I'm, but you know,
it's gradual. It's fits and starts. It takes time, yes. But it's also organic.
What I mean by organic is this.
Real spiritual, a real new heart grows organically, not mechanically.
Now, for example, you can grow a pile of bricks, couldn't you?
You could just put the, how do you grow a pile of bricks?
You just keep throwing bricks on it.
It's growing.
But it's growing through an external action, and it's growing only in quantity.
But now, how does a bulb grow into a tulip?
That's growth too, but it's organic growth, not mechanical growth.
It's growth from the inside, not the outside, and it's growth in quality, in complexity.
The organism is becoming more and more complex.
It's not just growing in quantity.
And that real spiritual growth, the sign of a new heart is you don't just grow mechanically.
You don't just learn more Bible texts and learn more doctrine and get more perfect attendance pins
and rise up in the church and heap up good deeds.
No, no, no. Organically, you become wiser person as the years go by. Deeper. Happier and sadder at the same time. More tender-hearted, more sensitive to other people. At the same time, happier yourself, more able to admit you're wrong, tougher and tender at the same time. You grow in grace. You grow in spiritual life. You grow in spiritual character. Very different than just mechanical growth. Do you have this heart?
heart? Do you have this heart? Maybe I should, this new heart. Look, some of you say, well,
I mean, have you been born again? I'm asking you. Some of you are maybe saying, well,
that's for some people. There are born again Christians. Sometimes they've had hard lives. It
helps them. Jesus said to Nicodemus, pillar of the community, Bible teacher, you must be
born again, period. And if Nicodemus needed to be born again, he was so good and so great,
anybody has to be born again, and that's Jesus' point. And you say, well, I don't know,
are you talking about a dramatic kind of conversion experience? Not necessarily. You know,
when John Wesley, the founder of the Methodist Church, describes his conversion experience,
he was at a meeting, and they were reading the Bible or reading a book about the Bible,
and he says, to describe his conversion experience, my heart was strangely warmed.
Now, maybe that is dramatic for an Englishman.
Sorry.
But put it another way.
that you can you can have an experience like that and have no idea that that was the beginning of your new heart it might be weeks later months later years later you look back and say that was the beginning of the new spiritual awareness that was the beginning where i stopped just knowing about god and began to be a spiritual reality that's where all the changes started sometimes it's not dramatic you don't know right away you have to look back and find it but you must be born again you must get your heart circumcised you must get a new heart do you have it do you see these things in yourself
well if you don't how do you get it and here's my suggestion to you don't say god give me a new heart
you know i need a new heart why because i want to be a better person it won't come that way
here's what i want you to do i want you to see how god procured a new heart how did god get a new heart for us
look we've been banished we've been exiled go to adam and eve you say well that's the jews okay
adam and eve that's all of us adam and eve were put in the garden of eden paradise
and because they wanted to be their own master their own saviors and lord they were banished
they were exiled so we're all in the same boat how could god possibly in spite of all the
curses that we deserve, just give us a new heart. How can he do it? The answer is in the right
of circumcision. Let's go back and for a minute think about circumcision. A lot of you're saying,
I don't want to think about circumcision. Gee, why is that the way the Israelites made their
contract with God, you know, made their commitment with God? Why? I mean, how about a tattoo? How about
a, you know, cutting a lock of hair. Why? Circumcision. Ew. Gross and bloody and
ugh. That's the point. Yes, now you're getting the point. Because when Abraham made his covenant
with God in Genesis 15, he walked between the torn pieces of a dead animal. Why? As he was making
his promise, he walked through the pieces of the dead animal. Why? He was acting out the penalty
for disobedience. He was acting out the curse of the covenant. By walking through the pieces,
He was saying, I promise you my allegiance and, Lord, if I don't do what I'm promising today,
may I be torn to pieces.
That's what circumcision is.
When the Israelites were circumcised, what they were saying is we will obey you,
and if we are not obedient to you, may we be cut off.
Because circumcision was an enactment, a dramatization of the curse of sin, the curse of the covenant.
What is the penalty for sin?
When you lie, it cuts you off from other people.
When you cheat, when you're cruel, it isolates you.
You can even see it there.
The punishment of sin, the curse for sin is banishment.
It's exiled.
It's being cut off.
Cut off from people.
Cut off from your country.
Cut off from God.
Circumcision represents the thing that we ought to experience.
Circumcision.
How did God give us a new heart?
On the cross.
centuries later, on an afternoon that turned into a dark and stormy night,
Jesus was cut, a spear, thorns in his brow, spear in his side, nails in his hands,
he was being cut.
And when he said, my God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?
What was happening?
He wasn't just being physically cut.
It says right here in Isaiah 53 what happened to him.
He was pierced for our transgressions.
He was crushed for our iniquities.
the punishment that brought us peace was upon him, and by his wounds we are healed, for he was cut off
from the land of the living. And now, and only now, because you just sat through 30 minutes
of this sermon, you'll have any idea what that strange passage in Colossians 2, 11, and 12 means.
Because when you, Colossians 2, 11, and 12 says, Christians, you have been circumcised in the
circumcision of Christ on the cross, and you were baptized in the baptism.
of Christ on the cross. And you read that and you say, what? But now maybe you understand.
On the cross, Jesus Christ was experiencing the cosmic cutting off that circumcision represented.
He was experiencing the circumcision of judgment. He was being cut off from us. He was getting
what we deserve for not doing the good we know we ought to do. He was taking the penalty.
You know, at the gate of the Garden of Eden, barring Adam and Eve going back was a flaming
sword, the sword of God's judgment. But the sword
came down on Jesus. He was cut. He was cut off. So now we can go
in. As you
see, now, did you hear all that? As you think about Jesus
doing that for you. As you think about Him
doing it for you. As you think about how
Jesus Christ procured a new heart
for you, does it move you?
if the way he procured the new heart moves you that's the beginning of the new heart in you
did you understand that see if you just ask god oh god you know give me a new heart why oh for blessing
because i because i because i just need something in my life never work but if you look at what
jesus christ did if what jesus christ did his cutting off his experience his what he did for you
if that moves you, what he did to procure your new heart moves you, that's the beginning of
the new heart in you. Why? That's the beauty that makes pleasure and duty one. Because the
hymn goes, our pleasure and our duty, though opposite before, since we have seen his beauty
are joined apart no more. But what is the beauty? The next verse goes, to see the law by Christ
fulfilled and hear his pardoning voice, transforms a slave into a child, and
and duty into choice.
The beauty of what Jesus Christ did on the cross,
taking your cosmic cutting off for you,
if that moves you,
then that's the beginning of the new heart in you.
You wouldn't be moved except God's already working.
Isn't that amazing?
He's already working.
You know, birth isn't something you can just decide to do.
Nobody ever says, I think I get born.
Birth is something that happens to you,
but you're active in it.
And that's what I'm suggesting to you.
Do you have this new heart?
If you don't, then look at what Jesus Christ did, and if it begins to move you so that you say,
now give me this new heart, not because of anything I have done, but because of what Jesus
Christ has done, he took it all for me.
That's the beginning of the new heart.
You wouldn't even be asking, except God's already working in you.
That's how you get the new birth.
That's how it works.
And guess what?
If you've already got the new life in you, maybe you've had it for many years, that's also how
the new life is stirred up to greater organ.
growth. Look at what he did and receive it. Let's pray. Thank you, Father, for giving us what we need
in order to have new hearts. And then to have that new life in us stirred up. So we pray that you
would show us the beauty of what Jesus did and weld together, our pleasure and our duty.
So that you, O Lord Jesus Christ, become the center of our lives. We pray this in Jesus.
name. Amen.
Thanks for listening to today's teaching. It's our prayer that you were encouraged by it
and that it helps you apply the gospel to your life and share it with others. As you may know,
August is Go and Share Month at Gospel in Life. We believe God uses small acts to do great things.
If you've already taken a step, maybe you've shared a resource or started praying for someone.
We'd love to know. You can encourage.
others by marking your location on our go-and-share map.
Just go to gospeland-life.com slash share and let us know you've participated.
Today's sermon was recorded in 2007.
The sermons and talks you hear on the Gospel and Life podcast were recorded between
1989 and 2017 while Dr. Keller was senior pastor at Redeemer Presbyterian Church.
Thank you.