Was blessed by some thoughts from
Waking the Dead by John Eldredge on this very topic...that of giving out and also caring for my heart.
He contrasts a canal with a reservoir...a canal spreads water around as it goes and ends up depleting itself, but a reservoir fills to overflowing before it shares, at no cost to itself. He points out that God is like a reservoir, he gives out of the abundance of his heart.
This analogy comes in the middle of a discussion about our hearts...that my heart does matter to God and it will always matter to God. As he says...it is one thing to say we believe that, but quite another to discover it is true. I think for me the light bulb is coming on.
When I read those words, that my heart matters to God, I felt some strong emotions, which usually means that something has touched a nerve...
Did anyone else get the impression that our hearts are 'desperately wicked and deceitful'? Because I definitely got that message, that I couldn't trust my heart because it was bound and determined to deceive me. As a result, I think I have had a really hard time hearing God because I tend to think that it's just wishful thinking or my so-called 'deceitful heart'.
Waking the Dead points out that Proverbs 4:23 says "Above all else, guard your heart", what, as if it were a dangerous outlaw? We tend to assume this warning is to keep us out of trouble, but the rest of the verse says to guard your heart because it is the wellspring of your life, because it is a
treasure. It's like God saying, "Be careful with this, it means a lot to me."
So God intends that we treat our hearts as the treasures of the kingdom, ransomed at tremendous cost, as if they really do matter and matter deeply. Caring for my heart isn't selfish, it's how I begin to love and how I handle my own heart is how I will handle others' hearts as well. Do I take care in how I treat others' hearts?
I don't feel like my heart was handled as a treasure by others and therefore it seems, sadly, that I didn't learn how to handle it as a treasure either...but I'm learning now! I know I can't live merely regretting the past, but sometimes I do wish these lessons had come a little sooner in life...