God transforms our hearts when we believe and confess that Jesus is Lord. It is within the heart that convictions are formed, loyalties are established, and affections are anchored either in God’s truth or set adrift by the currents of this age.
The heart discloses the true object of our affections, the source of our deepest fears, and the master we ultimately serve. Solomon understood what was at stake — “The heart of the discerning acquires knowledge, for the ears of the wise seek it out” (Proverbs 18:15). A discerning heart does not simply receive what it is given. It seeks, it tests, and it measures everything against the truth of God’s Word.
Governments may enact laws. Institutions may shape culture. Churches may provide fellowship and instruction. Yet none possesses the power to transform a human heart. The human heart is easily drawn by pride, fear, self-interest, and the subtle deceptions of this present age. Lasting transformation does not come through civil laws, political systems or even the mere accumulation of biblical knowledge. When faith in God diminishes in public life, dependence on institutions grows to fill the space. But no institution can reach what only God can reach. Transformation comes as the Holy Spirit renews the mind through the truth of God’s Word.“And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what that good and acceptable and perfect will of God is.” (Romans 12:2)
The spirit of this age offers attractive substitutes for God. Paul identified its source without ambiguity — “The god of this age has blinded the minds of unbelievers, so that they cannot see the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ” (2 Corinthians 4:4). This is not a metaphor. Scripture speaks of “principalities… powers… the rulers of the darkness of this age… spiritual hosts of wickedness in the heavenly places” (Ephesians 6:12).
These unseen spiritual authorities operating in the dark unseen realm are actively shaping the values, desires and assumptions of every generation. They promise fulfillment through self-discovery and measure human worth by success. They offer the illusion of security through earthly wealth. They numb the soul with endless distraction and speak of peace while leaving the heart restless. Every substitute for God ultimately returns the soul to the same emptiness.
Jesus described this tension directly — “You cannot serve God and mammon” (Matthew 6:24). Mamōnas refers to wealth or possessions trusted as a source of security and confidence. It is more than money. Mammon represents every rival allegiance that promises the security only God can provide — wealth, status, comfort, approval, achievement or anything that asks the heart to trust in what cannot save.
This exchange is as old as the Fall itself—the soul gradually surrendering what is eternal for what is immediately gratifying, echoing Adam’s failed decision. Esau stands as one of Scripture’s most sobering portraits of that exchange. He was the firstborn, the heir, the one who stood in the place of greatest covenant privilege within Abraham’s family. Yet in a single moment of hunger he surrendered it — “Thus Esau despised his birthright” (Genesis 25:34).
The bowl of stew did not sow contempt — it simply exposed Esau’s disrespect and indifference toward Abraham and God’s covenant promise. Those attitudes had been forming long before the stew was served. That is how the exchange is almost always made — not in dramatic acts of defiance but in quiet moments when temporary satisfaction is more attractive than waiting on God.
Esau’s birthright was far more than material inheritance. It represented the covenant promise and the privileges of the firstborn son — an inheritance of immeasurable worth. He abandoned his heritage and filled his belly. That has been humanity’s oldest exchange — the eternal surrendered to the temporary pleasures of the world. Jesus asked:“For what profit is it to a man if he gains the whole world, and loses his own soul? Or what will a man give in exchange for his soul?” (Matthew 16:26).
Nothing gained in this world is worth what is lost for eternity. The question is not whether Esau made a tragic exchange, but whether we recognize the quieter exchanges taking place in our own hearts. What sacred inheritance are we trading for the temporary?
Esau’s warning speaks to every heart — but it is not the final word. Through Christ, that promised inheritance now stands before every generation. Paul described it as something the natural mind cannot begin to contain — “Eye has not seen, nor ear heard, nor have entered into the heart of man the things which God has prepared for those who love Him” (1 Corinthians 2:9). Our inheritance is far more than the forgiveness of sins or the promise of heaven. It is God’s invitation into His eternal purpose — to become a new creation, to share in His divine nature as sons and daughters, to reign as co-heirs with Christ and to participate in a Kingdom that will never end.
Salvation is not God’s futile attempt to improve fallen humanity. The Adamic nature was inherited through the fall — defined by sin, death and separation from God. The old Adam is crucified with Christ at the cross (Romans 6:6). What rises in new birth is not a renovated version of the old man. It is something genuinely new.
Every person ultimately stands before a choice between two inheritances — the inheritance of Adam, which ends in death, or the inheritance of Christ and eternal life. Yet many believers miss the full scope of their mission and stop growing after the miracle of conversion. They rejoice that they have been born again yet often fail to recognize that the new creation within them has been entrusted with a mission — God “has given us the ministry of reconciliation” (2 Corinthians 5:18).
New birth is not merely an entrance into eternal life. It is the beginning of a life commissioned for Christ’s own work. Jesus declared — “He who believes in Me, the works that I do he will do also; and greater works than these he will do” (John 14:12). The Greek word translated “greater” is meizōn — not greater in kind or quality but in scope and reach. They describe the combined reach of His entire body — the church operating across every nation, language, and generation through the power of the Holy Spirit.
Being born again restores what Adam lost — direct communion with the Father. We become spiritually alive, able to hear His voice. Renewal then becomes the lifelong unveiling of Christ within us — a progressive work of growth. Through our relationship with our Heavenly Father, we gain access to our true identity as His sons and daughters. Our perspective is lifted from the temporal to the eternal, and we begin to see life from heaven’s vantage point rather than through the limitations of the natural mind.
“Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold, all things have become new.” (2 Corinthians 5:17)
Hidden within Paul’s words is one of the greatest revelations in all of Scripture. The Greek expression translated as “new creation” is kainē ktisis. The word kainē speaks of something entirely new in its nature, quality and essence — not the Greek word neos, which simply describes something recently made or young in age. Rather, kainē describes something unprecedented — a reality unlike anything that had previously existed. The second word, ktisis, means a creation, an act of creating, or an entirely created order. Together, kainē ktisis proclaims far more than a forgiven sinner or an improved human life. It declares that God has brought into existence a completely new order of humanity.
God’s new creation must be nourished through a continual and fresh yielding to the Spirit of God — not by preserving yesterday’s experiences. True spiritual revival is not a strategy for gaining momentum or growing a ministry. It cannot be engineered or reproduced by recreating the conditions of a previous outpouring. Much of my work during the 1990s involved helping ministries articulate their mission and vision. Through countless conversations with ministry leaders, I gained an insider’s perspective on the convictions, priorities, and assumptions that shaped their ministries. During those years, renewal gatherings drew thousands across North America. I witnessed authentic hunger for God and lives genuinely transformed. But I also watched a familiar pattern emerge. The stories of what God had done gradually became expectations of what He must do again. This is how narratives shape belief. People assume this is how God works — and try to reproduce it. When revival becomes an attempt to imitate the past, it ceases to be the fresh work of God’s Spirit and becomes a movement sustained by human enthusiasm. God moves where He wills, in response to genuine surrender. He has never required a multitude to begin His work.
“For where two or three are gathered together in My name, I am there in the midst of them.” (Matthew 18:20)
The temptation has always been the same. God moves profoundly in a meeting, and the collective experience does something real — it awakens faith, builds courage, and reminds people that what is invisible is actually present. But testimonies gradually become shared expectations and expectations become methods. Before long, people are attempting to reproduce the atmosphere rather than seeking the God who created it.
Israel understood this temptation — and surrendered to it with devastating consequences. After suffering defeat at the hands of the Philistines the elders concluded that repentance was unnecessary — “Let us bring the ark of the covenant of the LORD from Shiloh to us, that when it comes among us it may save us from the hand of our enemies” (1 Samuel 4:3). They carried the symbol of God’s presence into battle as though it were a weapon and suffered a devastating defeat. The ark had become a talisman in their hands — a sacred symbol they trusted more than God.
Throughout history, humanity has been prone to transfer its devotion to God toward objects and experiences associated with His presence. Despite centuries of searching, no discovery of the Ark of the Covenant has ever been credibly verified. And perhaps God has good reason for this. Having fulfilled its purpose, the ark is a shadow pointing toward a profound truth. The dwelling place of God is no longer represented in a gilded chest carried on poles but in the heart of every believer in whom Christ dwells — “Christ in you, the hope of glory” (Colossians 1:27).
Every believer must exercise both humility and diligence. This is not ultimately about what a denomination teaches or what a scholar concludes. It is not about what a movement proclaims or a tradition preserves. Nor is it about simply believing what I have presented here. I have labored over my conclusions and continue to discover the remarkable facets of God’s Word, yet at the end of the day I alone am accountable to God for what I believe and what I teach.
No denomination, teacher or theological system will ever stand between Jesus and me — or you — “So then every one of us shall give account of himself to God” (Romans 14:12). I would rather build my convictions upon the plain testimony of God’s Word than upon theories and assumptions that cannot be clearly established from Scripture.
This is why genuine renewal cannot rest solely upon external authority. God desires a people who know Him personally, search His Word diligently, and whose convictions are anchored in His truth rather than inherited tradition. Such convictions are not formed merely by repeating what others have taught but by testing Scripture for yourself and walking out your salvation. Biblical truth is not merely a position to defend. It is a life to be lived.
Christianity’s roots in America run deeper than the founding documents, deeper than the Constitutional Convention and deeper even than the Revolution itself. Those roots were cultivated through generations of colonial life long before independence was declared. They took hold in homes, churches and communities where men and women sought to order their lives according to Scripture. God’s redemptive work has never centered on governments, institutions or celebrated leaders — but on the lives of those who have been changed by His grace.
The strength of any nation has never been found in its founding documents but in the character of its people. And character is not inherited. It is formed — one surrendered heart at a time.
“For there is one God and one Mediator between God and men, the Man Christ Jesus.” (1 Timothy 2:5). No government, church, priest, pastor, or religious institution can occupy that place. Reconciliation with the Father comes through Christ alone. One heart at a time, that message continues to change lives.
God Transforms the Human Heart — Sources and Further Reading