“Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation;
The old has gone, the new has come!”
–2 Corinthians 5:17
Sometimes an unbeliever will ask, “With so many different religions out there, how can you be sure Jesus is the only true way to God?”
My answer, based on 2 Corinthians 5:17 is, “Because only the One who made me could re-make me.” No one else would have the authority or ability to do so. Other religions can only impose rules on a person in an attempt to control that person from the outside. But the Creator can be Lord of my heart, working to change me on the inside. All other religions are patently false, because they fail to provide their adherents with anything but rituals, practices, and ways to look holy. Jesus is the way to actually be holy.
I know Jesus is the Lord, because He has made me something that I never could have been through my own effort: A new creation. Only Jesus can do that.
Category: Devotionals
Jailhouse Concert

“About midnight Paul and Silas were praying and singing hymns to God, and the other prisoners were listening to them.”
–Acts 16:25
How do you handle it when things don’t go so well for you in ministry and the people don’t receive your message? Do you complain to God? Do you give up and quit? Do you speak ill of those who oppose you?
Paul and Silas’ response was to worship with their whole hearts.
God had sent them to Philippi to preach the gospel, and there they were accosted, falsely accused, severely beaten and thrown in prison. There, in the middle of the night, locked in stocks so that they couldn’t even nurse their wounds or recline to sleep, they praised the Lord.
Their midnight praise & prayer session became a jailhouse concert, because as they ignored the pain of their circumstances to focus on the glory of their God, all the other prisoners were listening to them. And that’s no surprise. Would you not take notice if you saw people in such a trying situation praising the Lord with their whole hearts and calling upon His name?
They had been placed in an inner cell, because the jailers thought it would make it impossible for them to break free; but it appears that it was really God’s plan, putting them at center stage so that all in the place could hear them glorify Him and know that He is God and the God who saves.
The freedom their souls had found in Christ Jesus was so great that the walls of a prison couldn’t contain their testimony of faith or restrain their passion for God.
If you’ve got the “winter blahs” or things just aren’t going all that well for you, remember to focus your attention on the God who is bigger than your problems and circumstances, and give thanks all the more. What a witness it will be to unsaved family members, friends, or coworkers who know what you’re going through if you live your life not complaining, but saying, “Hallelujah” and giving Him honor in the midst of difficult times.
Because the unsaved people around you go through tough times, too. They might even be in the same “prison” you’re in. And if you praise Him, they will be listening. And it just might make them want what you have to be thankful for.
Don’t let any circumstance keep you from saying “Blessed be the name of the Lord.” If anyone had a reason not to praise the Lord, Paul and Silas did. But they rose to the challenge and praised Him anyway. And God was glorified. Their hearts were already free, and because they praised Him, their bodies were also set free from prison later that night, with the family of the jailer who had imprisoned them becoming Philippi’s next converts for Jesus.
The Evangelism Alliance

The Spirit and the bride say, “Come!”
–Revelation 22:17a
It is the age of grace. A time when eternal salvation is being freely offered to everyone on earth who is willing to receive it. To let them know, the Holy Spirit is engaged in a wonderful alliance with the bride of Christ — the church. The message this alliance preaches is so simple and clear that it can be voiced in one urgent word: “Come!”
Come experience salvation. Come experience the forgiveness of all your sins. Come receive the free gift of fellowship with your Creator. Come know the peace and joy of being inhabited by the God of the universe and being made holy and righteous by Him. Come, all of you who have not yet become a child of God; Come to Him and drink freely of the water of life.
Ever since Pentecost, the work of the Church and the work of the Holy Spirit have been one and the same. By His own choice, the Holy Spirit does not work alone. By His own design, every move He makes follows the prayers of His people. His every Word of witness to the lost world is spoken through Christians whose mouths He controls and whose lives He sanctifies to the glory of the Father in heaven. Every action of His people on His behalf is inspired by Him, and carried out to completion by Him through His indwelling power and the gifts He bestows.
When the Spirit and the bride work together, as it should be, their voices become inseparable, inviting the world to “Come!” But it is so easy for our churches to become distracted from this noble purpose. Buildings, facilities, programs, committees, power struggles, fundraising campaigns, procedures, traditions, self-centeredness, inward focus, sinful attitudes, arguments — everywhere we turn, there is another circumstance or situation that seems ready-made to take our attention off the purpose defined for us in Revelation 22: to be the mouthpiece of the Spirit of God. Before long, we no longer operate in alliance with the Spirit Who lives in us, and we begin to quench His fire and turn the living organism of the church into a mere organization built by feeble human hands, designed by inferior human intellect, and sustained only by failing human strength.
If that is happening in your life, or in the church you attend, the Spirit calls to you today, saying, “Come back.” Come back to the purpose for which you were called. Come back to the evangelism alliance where you and the Holy Spirit join hearts, minds, and voices to beckon the lost and dying souls of the world to come to Jesus and be saved.
The Greatest Gift

For it pleased the Father that in Him all the fullness should dwell, and by Him to reconcile all things to Himself, by Him, whether things on earth or things in heaven, having made peace through the blood of His cross.
–Colossians 1:19-20
2000+ years have come and gone, and yet another celebration of the most wonderful event in human history is being observed. And I find myself with a sense of sadness along with all of the joy. I’m saddened because of the fact that Christmas is celebrated by far more people than have any reason to celebrate.
And my heart aches to think that in the midst of competing messages about the “reason for the season,” the true meaning of Christ’s redemption of the lost is the most ignored and least understood message out there. One of the songs of Christmas rings in my mind as I ponder it. A song in which a little four-word phrase summarizes the true meaning of Christmas. The phrase is “God and sinners reconciled.”
Christmas means that although we do not in any way deserve God’s favor, He became one of us to take the punishment we deserve and bring us reconciliation with a Holy God. It was a plan well-pleasing to the Father, because the sacrifice made by Christ on our behalf would be completely sufficient to save us forever.
The Creator of the universe, Who lay on a bed of cattle feed that first Christmas, grew up and lived a perfect, sinless life. “But He was wounded for our transgressions. He was bruised for our iniquities. The punishment that (earned our peace with God) was upon Him, and by His wounds we are healed.” (Isaiah 53:5) Healed of the great physically and spiritually terminal disease of our sin. If you have placed your trust in nothing but Jesus’ sacrificial death in your stead to make things right between you and God, then you have received this great Christmas gift of reconciliation. If you haven’t, then God awaits your decision, so that He can save you from your sins and from the penalties your sins have earned you.
That’s why my heart turns directly to you today. I want to ask you, dear reader, what about you? Have you been reconciled to God through the blood shed by Christ on the cross to pay the penalty for your sins? Or do you remain unreconciled? I’m not asking if you are religious. I’m not asking if you’re good. I’m not asking if you’re sorry for the bad things you’ve done. I’m not asking if Christmas and thoughts of Jesus make you feel warm inside.
I’m asking you if you have received God’s forgiveness of your sins by taking the gift of Jesus’ death as your own road to heaven. It’s the greatest gift. Please don’t mark it “Return to Sender.”
It’s important that you receive salvation, if you have not already. Because if you do not do so, there is no Christmas peace in your future. There is no hope in your future. There is no love in your future. There is no comfort or joy in your future. The only thing that awaits you if you haven’t understood the true meaning of Christmas and received this greatest of gifts is the pain of being eternally separated from God. The pain of being punished forever by His holy wrath is your inescapable destiny. Ten trillion centuries will pass by and the suffering of those who have rejected Christ’s offer of free salvation will not be over, but just begun.
However, heaven will be a wonderful place! I want more than anything in the world for you to be there with me one day. (And God wants that even more. Heaven will be a place where you’ll never hurt again. You’ll never be lonely, bored, angry, frustrated, scared, sick or unfulfilled again. The perfect and perfectly satisfying intimate fellowship with a wonderful God for whom you were created will be yours forever. And you shall never be in want of anything else for all eternity.
Are you sure you’re saved? Are you sure your eternal destination is heaven with God? Be sure. Be very sure. And be sure now You can come to Jesus today, right where you sit in front of your computer, because God will hear you call upon Him, and “Everyone who calls upon the name of the Lord shall be saved.” (Romans 10:13)
Simply turn to Jesus now, and in your heart confess to Him that you have sinned against Him. Tell Him in your own words that you acknowledge you have done things that violated His law and made you unacceptable to God.
Then express to Him that you believe He loves you and that He came and died on the cross, willingly taking the punishment you deserve for sinning against God, and that He rose again from the dead.
Then tell Him that you are receiving the forgiveness of your sins that He promised you, and ask Him to be your Savior, giving you the gift of an everlasting relationship with God.
It’s that simple. No one who comes to Him will be turned away. Don’t delay. Accept God’s loving gift of salvation today. Then pass this message on to others you know need to hear it. (You can even put it in an email that you send to others, so that they, too, can receive the greatest gift this Christmas.)
The Uneven Trade

Being in the form of God, (Christ) did not consider it robbery to be equal with God, but made Himself of no reputation, taking the form of a servant, and coming in the likeness of men. And being found in appearance as a man, He humbled Himself and became obedient to the point of death, even the death of the cross.
–Philippians 2:6-8
He came from Heaven.
He was the Good Shepherd, Whose unmatched love for the sheep of His flock moved Him to humble Himself and become one of them. As their Maker, He had every right to come as a judge and condemn them for their rebellion. But in love He chose to come instead to save them from the condemnation their sins had earned. Voluntarily emptied of His rights as their Holy God, He would live among them and serve them. He would show them how to live, to honor their Creator, and to love each other.
All the while He knew that one day He would willingly suffer their rejection and scorn. And by His own permission, they would violently kill Him. On that day this Shepherd-turned-sheep would become the Passover’s sacrificial Lamb of God, and be led up Calvary’s Road to be slaughtered.
It would be there on that hill that He would offer us the most uneven of trades: He would take from us the punishment we deserved for our sins against God, and give to us the reward He deserved for His righteousness.
Later, He would rise from the dead so that all who trust in Him for salvation might live with Him forever.
God is With Us

“Therefore the Lord Himself will give you a sign.
Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a Son,
and shall call His name Immanuel.”
–Isaiah 7:14
Immanuel, as you may know, means “God with us.” When we understand the meaning of that Christmas promise, made by prophecy from God centuries before Christ came, then we begin to understand why Christmas is something to celebrate.
Without understanding the name’s meaning, some have thought that the special thing about the virgin birth was the virgin herself. They have the impression that she might even be worthy of worship or someone close enough to the throne of God to intercede for them there when they pray. But this first announcement God made of the virgin birth long before it happened shows us that it wouldn’t be the virgin that should be noticed. The sign of the virgin birth was that the child would be “Immanuel” – “God with us.” That’s what is so special about this event. The Child would have no human father, because while He would be a person like us, He wouldn’t be just a person. He would be God. God, Who had come to be with us. To be one of us. To be for us.
And when that Child was born, truly it was “good news of great joy, which shall be to all people,” as the angel promised the shepherds. Because if God is with us, out of that truth flow solutions to every problem. God is with us. That is good news!
It’s especially good news for the person whose loneliness is magnified at Christmas. God Himself is with us who know Christ.
It’s good news to the sinner, who fears the judgment and condemnation his life has earned. God is with us. And for us. And He loves us enough to come to us, live with us, die for us, and rise again to life to save us.
It’s good news to the agnostic, who wonders if God is really there, and if He really desires involvement in our lives.
It’s good news to the hurting and the oppressed, to know that God will take up their cause as a strong Defender.
It’s good news to those who mourn the loss of loved ones, knowing that the God of eternity is with us, and will reunite us with those to whom we had to say goodbye.
It’s good news to those who have an aching emptiness because they haven’t found a fulfilling purpose in life—to know that they were created with a purpose and that the Creator is with them to find it.
Even better news–If you have received Christ, then God is not just with you, but in you. He was with Herod, the Pharisees, and other religious leaders, but they rejected Him, so He was not in them.
By faith, you can have God with you, and living in you, giving you new life and life eternal. Don’t miss that great Christmas miracle. Because this God, the Savior, Who is with us, is Wonderful, Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, and the Prince of Peace. In each of those things, He is a truly wonderful Gift. “For God so loved the world, that He gave His only Son, so that whoever believes on Him would not be destroyed, but have everlasting life.”
The God Vaccine

“These people honor Me with their lips, but their hearts are far from Me. They worship Me in vain; their teachings are but rules taught by men.”
–Matthew 15:8-9
In the last several weeks, you may have gone to get a flu shot, to vaccinate yourself against getting the flu this season. It’s interesting how they make a flu vaccine, and how it works. You see, the flu vaccine is essentially an altered strand of the previous year’s flu virus.
When this harmless strand is injected into your body, it triggers your immune system, in effect training it to know what to look for, so that when you are exposed to the flu virus this year, your body will recognize and reject it before it infects you. In simplest terms, the flu shot gives you a little bit of something that looks to your body like the flu, in order to keep you from getting the real thing.
But did you know that in this season of the year, there’s another thing people are unwittingly “vaccinated” against? Unfortunately, they’re being vaccinated against an “infection” they need to have in order to live.
Here’s how it happens: They go to church and celebrate Christmas. They take communion and sing carols about the birth of Christ. They watch Christmas plays and listen to messages about the Christ child. They give and receive presents and cards. They pray with great sincerity about “peace on Earth.” They shake hands with people, smiling and wishing them a “Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.” They don’t realize they’re injecting themselves with that little bit of something that looks like a relationship with God that keeps them from getting the real thing.
Jesus warned against that kind of worship that people are so prone to at Christmas and Easter. He warned us that God isn’t impressed by lips that sing His praises if they come from a heart He hasn’t been allowed to utterly change.
My friends, you don’t want to get a “God vaccine” this Christmas. Don’t let mere religion immunize you against a relationship with Jesus Christ. Get the real thing, if you haven’t already. Get a relationship with God, that guarantees you eternal life with Him in heaven.
It’s not about going through the motions of religion, at Christmastime or anytime. Following traditions and teachings of mere men is worshiping God in vain, Jesus said. In vain. Worthless. Of no value. Such worship will gain you absolutely nothing for eternity.
The Good News of Christmas, though, is that it doesn’t have to be that way; because “the real thing” is God’s Christmas gift to you. And this gift is not like the “free gifts” the world offers, where you get something for “free, when you buy . . . .” I’m talking about a real gift that is truly free: The gift of salvation from your sins and everlasting joy in heaven. It costs you nothing, because Jesus has already paid for it so that He could give it to you. The blood He shed on the cross is your gift certificate, purchasing your eternal peace with a holy God.
The first “Christmas tree” ever was cut down, and its boards were made into a cross. On it, Jesus, the perfect Son of God, hung and bled and died for only one reason. It wasn’t to set an example for you. It wasn’t to inspire you. It wasn’t to found a religion for you to follow. It was to completely pay the debt you owe God for breaking His perfect laws.
Jesus absorbed all of the punishment you deserve for your sins, and rose again from the dead to give you eternal life. All you must do is believe that, and you will be saved.
Redeem your “gift certificate” from Christ today, right where you are. Tell Jesus you know you have sinned against Him. Tell Him you believe that He died in your place, being punished for your sins. Ask Him for forgiveness of your sins. Tell Him you’re trusting Him to give you now the gift of eternal life in heaven.
If you do that, then you can truly celebrate Christmas, with a new heart, given to you by Christ Himself. You will no longer be vaccinated from the truth that sets you free. You’ll have the real thing. And you’ll wonder how you made it through so many Christmases without it.
Whiter Christmas

Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean;
Wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow.
–Psalm 51:7
Experiencing a whiter-than-snow Christmas isn’t just something you have to dream about.
Snow is the purest, brightest, whitest substance that exists. Anything else you would call “white” could be held up next to clean snow, and you’d have to call it “off white.” But God’s word tells us that when a dirty, dark sinner comes under the blood of Christ, God washes him even whiter than snow.
That’s how complete God’s cleansing is. It makes us whiter than the whitest. Purer than the purest. Cleaner than the cleanest things we can imagine. And that’s what we who truly celebrate Christmas from the heart have experienced.
What’s more, this is not just a surface cleaning, not just a whitewashing of the outside that leaves the inside dirty. God’s cleansing of the repentant heart is a “purging with hyssop.” Purging is complete cleansing of our souls from the inside out. When we trust in Christ, God digs deep, cleansing us to the core.
The hyssop branch was used in Old Testament times to sprinkle the altar with blood, thus purifying it. And on the cross, Jesus drank from a sponge lifted to Him on a hyssop branch. The Purest of the pure consumed our sinfulness, so that He could give us pure living water to drink and be cleansed. He who knew no sin became sin for us and our sin was crucified with Him.
Now, we who knew no righteousness have become righteousness by drinking of the cup from which flows His precious blood, that washes away all of our sin. We who were so sinful that God in His holiness was unable to look upon us have now become purer than freshly-fallen snow, glistening in the unsurpassed light of Christ’s eyes that shine upon us. As we reflect His light, we are made so spiritually bright that the sinful eyes of the unregenerated world can hardly bear to look upon us without squinting.
When we first trusted in Christ alone to save us, our hearts were baptized clean by the living water of the Word of God and the purifying fire of the Holy Spirit. The sepulchers of our carnal bodies became temples of the Holy Spirit, and now we are forever inhabited by God Himself. We are no longer ashamed, for “all who look to Him are radiant.”
Brothers and sisters, rejoice in this greatest of all miracles this Christmas, and share it with others. (When someone you know celebrates that you are having a white Christmas this year where you live, or bemoaning the fact that you aren’t, use it as an opportunity to tell them why your heart is full this Christmas regardless of the weather.)
And as the new year begins, dwell and walk each day in this greatest of all joys: The joy of being so deeply purged and cleansed that even a God of unmatched holiness finds you flawless, and wants to use your life to bring others to Him also.

A Father’s compassion

As far as the east is from the west, So far has He removed our transgressions from us.
As a father pities his children, So the LORD pities those who fear Him. For He knows our frame; He remembers that we are dust.
–Psalm 103:12-14
A few Decembers ago, I was eating lunch at a restaurant that had an “angel tree” for Christmas. As you may know, an angel tree has paper angels on it, with the names of needy children. People are asked to take an angel, buy a Christmas gift for the child, and return it to the restaurant.
As I ate, I saw a father and his little boy approach the tree. The small boy was going to pick out an angel for them to take, but as he reached out for the one of his choice, with his hand he accidentally dislodged one of the tree’s ornaments from the branch and it fell with a crash. Shards of shiny broken glass scattered across the floor.
The boy saw what he had done and immediately looked up to the face of his Dad. Pulling on his Dad’s pants leg with one hand and pointing at the shattered mess on the floor with the other, the boy said, “Sorry. Sorry. Sorry.” The tone of his voice indicated he was asking a question more than making a statement, though. “Sorry? Sorry? Sorry?”
The question the boy was asking was, “Do you forgive me? Will you make it all right, Daddy? I just messed up and I don’t know how to fix it. What do I do now? Will you fix this for me?”
In that moment, I wondered, a bit nervously, if this Dad would pass the test before him. I couldn’t help smiling when he did.
Without one unkind word or expression, the father put his hand on the boy’s shoulder to reassure him that it would be all right. His comforting look into the boys eyes completely changed the child’s demeanor in an instant. The panic over what had happened vanished from the boy’s face, and he was at peace.
Then the boy reached down to start cleaning up the mess, but his Dad held him back, saying softly, “Wait now, don’t touch. It’s sharp and it can cut you.” Then the father stooped down and began to clean up the broken pieces himself with his own hands while the boy watched.
As a father pities his child, so is the Lord’s compassion for His children.
How many times we have wanted to serve Him well and failed, only to find Him a Father who is merciful and compassionate beyond our ability to imagine. When we “fear Him” and turn to Him in our times of failure, hoping once again to find forgiveness, He always passes the test of being faithful to forgive just as He promised.
After that boy had received his father’s assurance of forgiveness, the Christmas ornament was still broken. In the same way, there are consequences for our sins. But time and time again our compassionate Father in heaven stoops down to help us deal with the consequences of the sins He has forgiven. Sometimes those consequences are sharp and they cut us. But when we let Him, He does a mighty work and cleans up the messes we can’t fix. Mending hearts shattered by our rebellion. Repairing relationships damaged by our thoughtlessness. Restoring trust that has been broken by our spiritual carelessness. Resurrecting that which we have destroyed.
And this Christmas season, we celebrate the greatest Divine stooping of all time. When God came all the way to earth, completely entering the human race Himself to take upon Himself all of the eternal consequences for our sins, that we might be forgiven, set free, and made clean and holy. Indeed, we do have a Father who is compassionate toward us.
Come and worship.
For YOU He came

Do not be afraid, for behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy which will be to all people. For there is born to you today in the city of David a Savior, who is Christ the Lord.
–Luke 2:10-11
What a proclamation! God had become a man, and it wasn’t just so He could have fellowship with the special, or the rich, or the smart, or the good-looking, or the influential, or the powerful, or the “good.” Upon His arrival, no angel went to the Pharisees to proclaim Him. King Herod had to hear about it from gentile Magi who traveled from a distant land. The Roman emperor was so caught up in counting the people under his oppression that he took no notice.
But to a group of tired, cold, overworked shepherds who stood watch over flocks in the field through the night, God sent His messengers with the word, “The Savior is here. And He has come for you.”
Two thousand anniversaries of this most blessed birth have come and gone, and still the message remains the same. It doesn’t matter if you have no prestige, no power, no popularity, and no position. The all-powerful God who created the world and everything in it has come, and He came for you. He loved you, and came to die so that you might have life eternal.
Unto you was this child born. Unto you was this Son given. Unto you the Savior calls. Come and worship.
Joy to the world, the Lord is come!
Let earth receive her King
Let every heart prepare Him room
And heaven and nature sing.
He rules the world with truth and grace
And makes the nations prove
The glories of His righteousness
And wonders of His love.
Why Bethlehem

“But you, Bethlehem Ephrathah, though you are small among the clans of Judah, out of you will come for me one who will be ruler over Israel, whose origins are from of old, from ancient times.”
–Micah 5:2
That little town of Bethlehem, though insignificant in the world’s eyes, had been very significant to Biblical history, even for centuries before our precious Savior was born there.
The lineage of Christ could trace its family ties to Bethlehem as far back as the book of Genesis, for it was where Israel’s patriarch Jacob buried his wife Rachel.
When Ruth the Moabitess was brought to Israel to make Naomi’s God her own, it was in Bethlehem that she lived with her new husband Boaz, and it was there that they bore the child who would be an ancestor of Christ.
The family line was still in Bethlehem when Jesus’ ancestor David, a shepherd who would be king, watched over the flocks of his father.
David would later lead his armies against the pagan Philistines, who were establishing a stronghold over Bethlehem. Then he longed for a refreshing drink from Bethlehem’s well, and one of his “mighty men,” who was from Bethlehem, joined some others in a quest that brought him that water.
Then came the dark years. The kingdom of Israel was divided. In that moment of time, when it seemed least likely that God could bring forth His promised Redeemer from Israel, God’s prophet Micah declared that Bethlehem would be on the map again, in a way so special that generations to follow would almost forget the tiny village’s significance in Old Testament times. The previous events of Bethlehem would pale in comparison.
Because this little town of Bethlehem would be the location of the birth of the Christ child, who had existed from eternity past. Yes, the events that would change our world forever would all begin in Bethlehem. And when you look at the history of this little town, you’ll see that God couldn’t have chosen a better place.
This little village that was populated by shepherds who raised flocks for the temple sacrifices would be the birth place of the Lamb who would bring those sacrifices to their final fruition, sacrificing Himself to take away the sins of the world.
Like David, this Child of Bethlehem would be a trustworthy Shepherd for the flocks of His Father and a King whose throne in Jerusalem would be established forever.
Like Boaz, this Child of Bethlehem would be the Redeemer who purchased for Himself people of faith in Him from all nations.
It was important for the Christ child to be born in Bethlehem. So when the proper time arrived, God would take the reins of world history, working through a powerful Roman emperor who thought he was thinking for himself, just to arrange for Mary to be brought back to that little town.
There, in a poor humble stable, she would bring forth her firstborn Son, and lay Him in a manger. The eternal God, the Everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace, the All-Powerful Creator and Sustainer of the universe, would become a baby and sleep that first night on a bed of hay in Bethlehem.
“Come to Bethlehem and see Him whose birth the angels sing. Come adore on bended knee Christ the Lord, the newborn King!”
This one says it
I’m not a big fan of poetry in general. In fact, I’m so much not a fan that when I read a book in which the author quotes some poetry, I’m most often apt to actually skip over it because of how much it feels to me a complete waste of my time to figure it out.
But every once in a while, someone actually says something deep and heartfelt in verse, that speaks words I want to say. Such is the case of the old worship hymn, “Come Thou Fount,” and this verse of it, that says things we usually wouldn’t dare share about ourselves, and yet they are all too true:
“Oh, to grace how great a debtor daily I’m constrained to be;
Let Your goodness, like a fetter, bind my wand’ring heart to Thee;
Prone to wander, Lord, I feel it;
Prone to leave the God I love;
Here’s my heart, Lord, take and seal it;
Seal it for Your courts above.”