Guard Each Others Hearts

If you’ve been in the evangelical Christian circle for sometime than you know all the fun catchphrases we like to use… “do life together”, “seasons”, “intentionality”, “missional”, “community”, “guard your heart”, etc.

I love words. I like putting a word to an idea. But I find that, sometimes, we throw around words without understanding their implications, practically, to our lives and our walk with Christ, and more importantly, the lives of those we are speaking into. Those phrases above have a lot of weight and wisdom behind them, but speaking a single phrase cannot adequately convey a complex, and highly personal, issue of the heart.

The Line

Usually in the context of dating and relationships, people really love to advise you, with good intentions, to “guard your heart”. It sounds great. Guard – that’s a pretty strong word for ‘protect’. Hearts are important. We should protect them! I’ve read a handful of “guarding your heart” articles whose main objective seemed to be selling the reader on the idea that guarding your heart was important in order to remain emotionally and spiritually healthy and sexually pure. At some point, you’ll actually agree that a heart, especially a woman’s heart, is a delicate thing, and it’s important to nurture and protect. But then the thought drifts to…. what does guarding your heart (and hers) actually look like?

I don’t necessarily know the ‘right’ answer to that question. But I have a few observations:

  1. Women have given too much
  2. Men (or boys) have taken too much
  3. Jesus specializes in brokenness repair. That’s kinda His ‘thing’.

There’s a conversation to be had around guarding your heart – but it needs to go beyond simply ‘why’ to ‘how’?

Where does the idea of “guarding your heart” come from?

The Bible has quite a bit to say about our hearts.

While what we physically do is important, in Jeremiah 17:10, we get the idea that God is very much concerned about the condition of our hearts:

I the Lord search the heart and examine the mind, to reward each person according to their conduct, according to what their deeds deserve.

We read something similar in Hebrews 4:12

For the word of God is alive and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, it penetrates even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow; it judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart.

As Proverbs 3:5 suggests, we come to the Lord with our hearts and not our minds:

Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding.

Our heart is where salvation is born. Romans 10:10 says:

For with the heart one believes and is justified, and with the mouth one confesses and is saved.

It is so utterly important, for our spiritual health and perspective, to have a right heart.

Matthew 5:8 says:

Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God.

Mark 7:21-23 offers a sobering reminder of where our depraved sinful hearts can go without the redeeming work of Jesus Christ and without feeding and nurturing them:

For it is from within, out of a person’s heart, that evil thoughts come—sexual immorality, theft, murder, adultery,greedmalicedeceit, lewdness, envyslanderarrogance and folly. All these evils come from inside and defile a person

Think of the worst Hollywood relationship. Think of the relationships in the juiciest drama or reality TV show. Can any of the above words describe those relationships? They all can.

All this is WHY we need to heed Proverbs 4:23

Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it.

The tension

Whether in the context of dating relationships or even just friendships, if you’re trying to get to know someone, you have to be vulnerable to some extent. You have to open up. You have to share who you are. If you don’t, you’re not going to have that other persons attention for very long.

As a Christian, I feel this difficult tension between our Gospel call to love one another (as radically as Christ’s love for us) while ‘spur[ing] one another on toward love and good deeds’ and guarding your heart.

Maybe that tension doesn’t need to exist. Maybe those two things aren’t at odds. Maybe what we’re telling people is too generalized and thus too constricting.

Take, for example, C.S. Lewis’ words in ‘The Four Loves

To love at all is to be vulnerable. Love anything and your heart will be wrung and possibly broken. If you want to make sure of keeping it intact you must give it to no one, not even an animal. Wrap it carefully round with hobbies and little luxuries; avoid all entanglements. Lock it up safe in the casket or coffin of your selfishness. But in that casket, safe, dark, motionless, airless, it will change. It will not be broken; it will become unbreakable, impenetrable, irredeemable. To love is to be vulnerable.

Being vulnerable sure sounds like the opposite of being guarded.

One size doesn’t fit all

And herein lies the problem… sweeping generalizations and catch phrases used to protect ourselves or to freely love don’t work because we’re all different. We all have different capacities to love, to protect ourselves, to give, to receive. We need to go deeper. We need to have heart-to-hearts amongst ourselves (and God) and figure out our personality.. our heart.. and then come up with a way to guard our hearts – to protect them from Satan, to protect them from harmful relationships, and to protect them FOR God.

Relationships and matters of the heart are tricky and highly personal things. There’s no 1-size-fits-all answer. God knows your heart. God knows His plan. At the end of the day, chase after God’s own heart, seek to glorify God, and ask Him how you should be guarding your heart so you can love deeply… the right way.

So what now? Like I alluded to earlier, guarding your heart is paramount, not just in dating/romantic relationships, but in friendships and even family relations. Those are really tough areas where people from different perspectives and backgrounds may speak into your situations or sway you to do or believe something you know isn’t right. In the interest of this post I want to focus on new dating/romantic relationships.

Girls: What does guarding your heart look like?

I could come up with ideas based on conversations I’ve had with girls… or I could hand the topic over to my friend Elyse and let her offer her own unique perspective. Elyse Jankowski is a Jesus-loving 20-something from New Jersey. She enjoys photography, vegan food and uninterrupted sleep. She blogs at standoutscripture.blogspot.com.

Disclaimer: I’ve only been a Christian for two and a half years, and I haven’t dated anyone since being saved. So, my perspective includes both where I’m at now spiritually and the experiences I’ve had in the past.

Dating a believer

If you haven’t kissed dating goodbye, make sure you’re dating a Christian guy! A legit one. I dated a non-legit Christian (ironically, before I was saved), and that’s another story. I’ve also dated many a “bad boy,” who can make you weak in the knees, but before long, you learn there isn’t much substance under the spark. Not trying to be rude, just keepin’ it real. Dating a guy who puts Christ first means he should be intentional in guarding your heart as well. Of course, we all falter, and he will ideally desire to right his wrongs, first with God, then with you (and we ladies should do the same!).

Taking it slow

I know what it’s like to give my heart away too soon. I’ve done it about a bagillion times, often within the first few dates! In the past, I was desperate for love and didn’t know Christ had more of it than I could even fathom. So, pretty much any guy who showed an interest got all of me, both emotionally and physically. Can you say recipe for disaster? Now, believing that Jesus has cleansed me of my past sin, I will be much more deliberate in taking it slow. I hope my future husband and I friend-zone each other for a bit before even dating! It’s not just about guarding my heart; it’s also about guarding his. As much as I’ve been hurt, I’ve hurt guys, too, and that’s just not gonna fly anymore!

Being accountable

I think back to the first boyfriend I ever had and how many people said I was flat out insane for dating him. In retrospect, I absolutely was! But I didn’t listen at the time. We must listen! To the Holy Spirit, trusted friends, family members, and spiritual mentors. We also must be honest with them, sharing even embarrassing details if they arise. Being held accountable helps us think twice about our words and actions. Praying with an accountability partner can expose areas that need healing, thus benefiting the relationship.

Being in prayer

Speaking of prayer, guarding your heart means putting it in the hands of the One who will not and cannot ever break it. The more connected we are to God, the better we can love others and love ourselves. I believe no prayer is too small or too big for Jesus to hear and address in His own special way. That might mean praying about what you wear for your dinner date or praying about whether or not you should kiss him. Wherever you’re at, however you feel, talk to Him about it, and He will guide you.

As Philippians 4:6-7 says:

Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.

Guys: What does guarding each others heart look like?

As men, we have a ton of responsibility; for ourselves and the women God puts in our lives. Whether they are ‘independent’ or strong-willed women, we still have the duty to do our part in protecting their hearts and souls from what we do or say.

Get yourself together. Prepare

Give up the porn. Stop lusting. Stop ‘getting fresh’ with every girl that gives you the opportunity. Get your life together: your spiritual life and your physical life. Get out from under your parents wings, put down the video games, get some life experience, and figure out, generally, where you’re going. Figure out what currently has your heart – if it’s money, status, a career, girls, or possessions you might want to check yourself. Know what you desire, get your boundaries set, and mature yourself enough to be able to say ‘no’.

I love this quote from Brandon Andersen at Mars Hill Church:

The truth is that when you’re in a relationship, you get their crap on top of your crap. That’s double crap. It is hard to start a healthy relationship with two immature people drowning in crap. Men, get your life together first, know where you are going, then invite a girl to come along (Prov. 16:1–9)

Live out 1 Corinthians 13:11

When I was a child, I talked like a child, I thought like a child, I reasoned like a child. When I became a man, I put the ways of childhood behind me.

Be intentional

The first date probably isn’t the right time to profess your love to her… But after a few dates you should let her know where you see the ‘relationship’ going. Whether it’s towards exclusive dating and pursuing a serious relationship or ‘just being friends’. Dragging things out as long as possible in hopes that you’ll find someone more interesting is not fair to her and certainly isn’t protecting her heart. The point is, YOU take the risk of defining the relationship – not her. Don’t make her wonder where she stands. When you know it’s over – end it, respectfully.

Encourage & point to Christ

I once heard that it was best to keep your spiritual lives separate in a dating relationship – to not become dependent on the other person. The thought was 1) That if things didn’t work out in the dating relationship one, or both people, would abandon God as well 2) That you both start to wean off pursuing God and instead primarily pursue each other. That, generally, was probably the worst advice I’ve ever heard.

While depending on a boyfriend or girlfriend to be your spiritual leader and confidant is not a good idea (I’m talking about early on in dating – not when you’re closer to marriage), it certainly IS a good idea to put Christ at the center of your relationship. You both should be on the same track of growth towards being more Christ-like. You both should grow in Christ along with your mentors and close Christian community, but you should also be growing together, as a couple, with Christ as the leader. There’s that popular pyramid/triangle example where both people are points on the bottom of the triangle and, in the relationship, they are travelling up towards the top point – aka. Christ.

Heed 1 Corinthians 8:9

Be careful, however, that the exercise of your rights does not become a stumbling block to the weak.

Get accountable

Being accountable to, and in fellowship with, spiritually mature people is super important. It gives you an outlet to ask questions, get advice, receive encouragement, and be disciplined if you’re going off track. You might as well get used to being uncomfortable. Often times, those uncomfortable conversations with mentors are the ones that are going to bring new light to your relationship; ultimately making the relationship better.

As Proverbs 27:17 says:

As iron sharpens iron, so one person sharpens another.

It’s not hopeless

If you think you’ve already blown it… If you’ve already given your heart away too many times and ultimately had it broken that many times… If you’re cynical about the possibility of someone out there caring for and actually sticking with you. If you’re lead girls on. If you’ve taken things you shouldn’t have taken. You’re not alone.

FIRST, surrender your heart to the God who delicately ‘knit you together in your mothers womb’ (Psalm 139:13), whose ‘love endures forever’ (Psalm 136), and who will never let you go. Ever. (John 10:28-29, Deuteronomy 31:8).

Just be smart

Many of the above suggestions can go both ways. Guard your own heart but also guard each others hearts. Be cognizant of the fact that your actions and your words impact people.

Go live your life. Go have an adventure. Go love on kids, and old people, and the less fortunate. Give yourself. Freely spread agape love to those who need it. Work on yourself. When you’re ready, take a chance and get in a relationship (or don’t, ’cause singleness is a gift, too) and enjoy the other person! But for the love of Pete, stop giving so much of your heart and soul away, so quickly or so much, to people just because they’ve shown you interest. Recognize the importance of a pure heart. Save the ‘real stuff’ for someone who has their heart abandoned to Jesus… who works to earn your trust.. who you feel confident has guarding your heart, and pointing you to Christ, higher on their priorities than anything else.

 

We love because he first loved us.

-1 John 4:19

Lessons Learned

While culturally time appropriate, this post originally had nothing to do with New Years or resolutions. I actually drafted most of the ideas back in October but I’m just now getting around to finishing it up. I suppose because the calendar is such a pivotal part of our world, its somewhat natural to use the first of the year to decide on some changes or goals, but honestly, change should be happening throughout the year – whenever it’s necessity is recognized. Life is a process of growing.

With that said, last December, in looking ahead to 2013, I wrote this:

What an amazing year full of great memories & learning experiences. The past couple months have been rough but God has done and shown me such amazing things in this time. He’s answered prayers that I didn’t even know to pray. So that’s why I am hopeful and excited for 2013. I have no “resolutions” other than to continue to serve and be available to whatever other crazy stuff He puts in my path. Constant courage in unchangeable circumstances with an unwavering faith in an unchanging God.

I had no idea what was in store

2013 has been an interesting year to say the least. I’ve done things I never would have believed I’d do. I have desires I never thought I’d have. I’ve met and built relationships with strangers who I never imagined meeting.

Before I get so used to how I live now, and as things just naturally come to me, I want to remind myself of what I’ve learned – where I’ve come from. I think it’s important to look back and recognize where, why, and how change occurred – what things have transpired – in hopes that you take that reflection and awareness of change and continue to build on it as you move forward in growth.

These may not be earth shattering revelations to you, but recognizing or following these things (some new and some with just a renewed focus) changed my life this past year.

Get uncomfortable and say ‘YES’

As I’ve gotten older, I’ve had the opportunity to do more and more things. With that freedom, I’ve had to the ability to say “no” to things that I didn’t feel 100% comfortable doing. Being part-introvert and exceptionally comfortable “doing my own thing”, if I didn’t feel like doing something or if I wasn’t sure it would go relatively smoothly, I would just not do it.

Then I started to say ‘yes’…

To pretty much everything.

This was not always the best approach. Sometimes it became overwhelming. Sometimes it was wrong. BUT, often times it opened up new opportunities to meet new people, hear their stories, share my experiences, eat new things, visit new places, experience different ideas, and see how God’s plan is much bigger and better than mine.

I’ve discovered the joy, excitement, terror, heartache, and adventure of stepping out of what’s comfortable – of what’s safe – of what is tolerable – and into the unknown.

You may find yourself in the middle of the country at a missions conference with thousands of people from all over the world. Or at a bar in Hampden for the 26th straight week with a bunch of strangers who have become friends. Or on yet another date that you can’t believe you landed. Or sharing your testimony in front of your church. Or being interviewed for a leadership position in your church. Or planning a trip to Africa to serve on a floating hospital ship. Or taking a homeless lady out for dinner. Or nervously answering questions at the Canadian/US border at 4AM. Or realizing you don’t want to settle for the ‘American dream’.

There’s no place for fear in the life of someone who truly wants an adventure. Get. out. there.

Every ‘season’ of life is valuable

There may not be any more “Christianese” phrase than “seasons of life”. Oh my goodness, sometimes I shudder at that phrase. The trouble with trying to criticize that phrase is that it’s biblical. See Ecclesiastes 3:

There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens

a time to be born and a time to die,
a time to plant and a time to uproot,
a time to kill and a time to heal,
a time to tear down and a time to build,
a time to weep and a time to laugh,
a time to mourn and a time to dance,
a time to scatter stones and a time to gather them,
a time to embrace and a time to refrain from embracing,
a time to search and a time to give up,
a time to keep and a time to throw away,
a time to tear and a time to mend,
a time to be silent and a time to speak,
a time to love and a time to hate,
a time for war and a time for peace.

Wow does that passage speak to me. At the time I may not have felt it, but looking back at all of those times I can see God’s hand right there in it. When I thought it was me… it was actually Him. When I gave it up to Him He gave it back to me and showed me the gifts He gave me to use for His glory.

The low season – while you count making it through each day a victory, the high season – where things are happening left and right, the dry season – where you’re just maintaining- nothing incredible is happening – it’s just kind of mediocre. All the seasons have something to teach you. It’s up to you to dig your heels in and look for what that is. That “season of singleness” isn’t a time to wallow. It’s a blessing. If you have any intentions of ever being in a serious relationship and eventually pursuing marriage, that single season is the blessing of having time to yourself – to work on yourself, work on your relationship with God, and work on your relationships with others.

Serving is the ultimate satisfaction

It sort of sounds selfish, but the more you serve others, the better you feel. I think that’s ok – so long as the primary purpose of serving isn’t to get that warm fuzzy feeling. I think it’s just a natural by-product of doing something for someone else – we were made to feel good about it. When I do something that has a positive impact on someone else, I’m happy that they’re happy. I’ve learned that there is more joy in pouring into someone else than there is in seeking your own pleasure. When you open up to serve someone else be prepared to be changed yourself.

I know who I am

With my identity rooted in Christ, and Him as the ultimate judge of character and person, I’m free to be who He created me to be – even if I am a bunch of contradictions. I know who I am and I’m not trying to be anybody that I’m not. I’m not trying to live someone elses dreams. I’m not trying to do things I’m not made to do.

There’s so much good out there

My biggest area of realization of this is not where I’d imagine it would come from. In dating, I’ve met a lot of different people with a lot of storied backgrounds. I’ve listened to their stories. I’ve heard their dreams. I’ve been encouraged. I’ve learned from nurses who love what they do – even in their double 12 hour shifts – who see people at their weakest and offer them dignity with compassionate and judgement free care. I’ve learned from teachers who spend hours upon hours of their own time at home developing the best ways to reach “their children” right where they are – to give them every possible chance to rise above the status quo of societies standards. I’ve learned from social workers who put themselves through endless schooling and accept such little pay in order to be the listening ear to people who are emotionally and mentally drained. I’ve learned from people who give up their cushy lives in the US to travel abroad and offer medical care, teaching, farming, and the Gospel to impoverished nations. I’ve served along side of those who spend their lives helping the poor… those working to end human trafficking and sex trafficking.

We hear over and over of all the evil that is in the world. We know it. It’s time to seek out, encourage, and celebrate those who don’t accept what’s happening and instead spend their lives and themselves in pursuit of creating a better world the best they can.

There’s life beyond Baltimore, MD

All this learning has opened up doors and thoughts and dreams outside of my own little world. Growing up, I was never really aware of possibilities of life outside the area. It sounds ridiculous now, I know. As open as I am, now,  to packing up a U-Haul and moving to wherever-USA (or beyond, to some extent), I’m encountering ways everyday, here, in Baltimore to serve and grow. While I’m here I’m committed, but I can’t say that my head isn’t peaking out the door for where God may be leading.

Get rid of stuff

As I’ve encountered other people, I realize I have too much stuff. Literally, more physical stuff than I need and stuff that’s just a hindrance to daily life. When you’re tripping over things or you can’t find an empty shelf in your apartment because there’s a stack of clothes you haven’t worn in 2 years or gadgets you don’t use anymore – maybe it’s time to let it go. But on deeper level, there were things I’ve held too tightly – control, ideas, the past, apathy, doubt, comfort.

I’m both better & worse than I thought

By God’s grace, I’ve been able to do some things well beyond what I thought I could. For those experiences, I’m eternally grateful. In discovering who I am (and who I’m not) I’ve realized how messed up I am. Not in the “Breaking Bad Walter White cooking meth without his family knowing” sort of way – but in the day-to-day grind of life – actions, words, and thoughts sort of things. Romans 7:15 pretty much sums it up:

I do not understand what I do. For what I want to do I do not do, but what I hate I do.

Sometimes it’s not even in things I do or think – but simply a lack of caring – being apathetic towards things that I, as a man, as a Christian, as human, should care about – and stand up for or against. But the redeeming part of this realization is that I believe in a God whose specialty is calling, healing, and sanctifying for His glory. I believe in a God who says as long as you’re still alive, it’s never too late to make a change and live for Him.

I don’t know what I’m doing or where I’m going.. & I’m ok with that.. Sort of

There is certainly nothing wrong with planning – to an extent. There are many stories in the Bible that point to the importance of planning – farmers planning their crop – Noah planning the ark – warriors preparing for battle, etc.. But what I’ve found, is that within the planning, there’s also praying – there’s seeking wise counsel and there’s daily steps towards the calling God has for you – without necessarily seeing the end. Faith is primary – but faith without doing – is useless. I really had no idea what God was doing late last year – but I had enough faith to be terrifyingly ok and excited for the unknown. Now, I understand it much much better. I’m not “there” yet – and I’m glad. I don’t want to be “there” – because there means it’s over. I want to continue living the life God has for me and seeing what else He can do.

You have 1 life. Don’t waste it.

This whole year has been about experiences – experiences that were about me discovering more of myself and God but almost always involving someone else. If you’re living purely for yourself – seeing how far you can “climb” up in this world – than you’re wasting your life. In John Pipers book “Don’t Waste Your Life”, he says, “Desire that your life count for something great! Long for your life to have eternal significance. Want this! Don’t coast through life without a passion.” If you claim to be a born-again Christian, but yield no lasting fruit and show no evidence of a changed heart in how you live, than you’re wasting God’s gift of life. But, beyond, that extreme, I think “waste” is pretty relative. What is it that you fell called to do that you aren’t doing – perhaps that’s wasting your life.

 

I don’t want to waste my time here.

I want adventure.

I want fun.

I want to serve others.

I want to serve God.

I’ve come to realize those are not mutually exclusive.

 

Standing on this mountaintop
Looking just how far we’ve come
Knowing that for every step
You were with us

Kneeling on this battle ground
Seeing just how much You’ve done
Knowing every victory
Was Your power in us

Scars and struggles on the way
But with joy our hearts can say
Yes, our hearts can say

Never once did we ever walk alone
Never once did You leave us on our own
You are faithful, God, You are faithful

Kneeling on this battle ground
Seeing just how much You’ve done
Knowing every victory
Was Your power in us

Scars and struggles on the way
But with joy our hearts can say
Yes, our hearts can say

Never once did we ever walk alone
Never once did You leave us on our own
You are faithful, God, You are faithful
You are faithful, God, You are faithful

Scars and struggles on the way
But with joy our hearts can say
Never once did we ever walk alone
Carried by Your constant grace
Held within Your perfect peace
Never once, no, we never walk alone

Never once did we ever walk alone
Never once did You leave us on our own
You are faithful, God, You are faithful

Every step we are breathing in Your grace
Evermore we’ll be breathing out Your praise
You are faithful, God, You are faithful
You are faithful, God, You are faithful

You are faithful, God, You are faithful
You are faithful, God, You are faithfu

‘Never Once’ by Matt Redman