Skip to content
cropped-ecclogo.png
  • About Us
    • Who We Are
    • Meet Our Leadership
      • Meet Our Pastors
      • Meet Our Elders
      • Meet Our Deacons/Deaconesses
    • Our Locations
    • Open Positions
    • Forms
  • I am new
  • Ministries
    • Children’s Ministry
    • Youth Ministry
    • Small Groups
    • Care Ministry
    • Missions Ministry
  • Events
  • Grow
    • Daily Bible Study
    • Weekly Reflections
    • Pastor Sam’s Devotionals
  • Worship
    • Sunday Worship Services
    • Sermon Archive
    • Sunday Schools
    • Online Bulletins
  • Give
  • About Us
    • Who We Are
    • Meet Our Leadership
      • Meet Our Pastors
      • Meet Our Elders
      • Meet Our Deacons/Deaconesses
    • Our Locations
    • Open Positions
    • Forms
  • I am new
  • Ministries
    • Children’s Ministry
    • Youth Ministry
    • Small Groups
    • Care Ministry
    • Missions Ministry
  • Events
  • Grow
    • Daily Bible Study
    • Weekly Reflections
    • Pastor Sam’s Devotionals
  • Worship
    • Sunday Worship Services
    • Sermon Archive
    • Sunday Schools
    • Online Bulletins
  • Give
  • English
  • 中文

Pastor Sam's Weekly Devotionals

A Heart of Sin

March 16, 2025
Back to list

Verse for Meditation:

“I see in my members another law waging war against the law of my mind and making me captive to the law of sin that dwells in my members. Wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death?” – Romans 7:23-24

The season of Lent is intended to prepare us to celebrate Easter, the death and resurrection of Christ. It is designed to help us explore why we need salvation by meditating on our human condition. In this third week of Lent, here is a devotion that gets at our heart of sin:

IN WORD – If you ask the little boy why he hit his sister, he won’t tell you it was because of the sin that’s in his heart. No, he’ll say, “She was bothering me.” If you ask the teenager why he came in so late, he won’t willingly take responsibility. He’ll tell you a long story of how there was an accident on the freeway, then a long train he had to wait for, and then a water main break that flooded the street he normally drives on.
If you ask the father why he is so angry all the time, he won’t tell you it’s because of the selfishness and impatience in his heart. No, he’ll say it’s because of his kids; they just drive him crazy. If you ask the single person why she’s so moody and discontent, she won’t say it’s because of the jealousy that resides in her heart. She’ll point to all the ways that life has been hard. If you ask the old man why he is so mean, he won’t tell you it’s because of the bitterness that has captured his heart. No, he’ll talk about all the times in his life when he didn’t get what he knew he deserved. Sometimes I think it’s the one biblical truth that no one believes.
When we do something wrong, we all tend to point outside ourselves for the cause: “This traffic makes me so angry”; “She gets me so upset”; or “My boss pulls the worst out of me.” It’s a comfortable, street-level heresy. It feels good to think that your biggest problems in life exist outside you and not inside you, but the problem is that it simply is not true. Jesus devastated the self-atoning perspective on human behavior in the Sermon on the Mount: “You have heard that it was said to those of old, ‘You shall not murder. . . .’ But I say to you that everyone who is angry with his brother will be liable to judgment. . . . You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall not commit adultery.’ But I say to you that everyone who looks at a woman with lustful intent has already committed adultery with her in his heart” (Matt. 5:21–22, 27–28).
IN DEED – Sin is a matter of the heart before it is ever an issue of our behavior. This means that your and my biggest problem in life exists inside us and not outside us. It’s the evil inside me that connects me to the evil outside me. So I must confess that I am my greatest problem. And if I confess this, I am saying that I don’t so much need to be rescued from people, locations, and situations. I am in desperate need of the grace that is alone able to rescue me from me. I can escape situations and relationships, but I have no power to escape me. This is exactly why David prayed in Psalm 51 that God would create a clean heart in him. God’s grace is grace for the heart, and that is very good news. “It’s the heart that’s the problem. People, locations, and situations don’t cause me to sin; they’re where the sin of my heart gets revealed.” – Paul David Tripp (in “New Morning Mercies: A Daily Gospel Devotional” by Paul David Tripp

People today generally think of themselves as “good people.” But it is important to remember that, while we were created good, sin has marred all Creation, including us. We may want to blame everyone and everything else, but unless we acknowledge our sinful nature, we can never experience the fullness of God’s grace.
Take time this week to reflect on James 4:1-10, Romans 1-3, and Romans 7, then use Psalm 51 to invite the Holy Spirit to soften your heart to God’s redeeming grace. You may find that each day becomes brighter and brighter as it is sustained by ever-increasing grace. Have a blessed week! – from Singapore, Pastor Sam

Previous The Apple of God’s Eye | A Heart of Sin Next
Youtube Envelope Mail-bulk Edit
© 2025 Evangelical Chinese Church of Seattle. All rights reserved.