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“Look! I stand at the door and knock. If you hear my voice and open the door, I will come in, and we will share a meal together as friends. Revelation 3:20 (NLT)

Closed doors can send a variety of messages. We close doors for protection at night or when we leave home, making sure they are locked to keep out intruders. We close doors for privacy when we need time for ‘personal business’. We close doors for time to think about issues of the heart. Sometimes we close doors to hide. We could be hiding for simple reasons like a friendly game of ‘hide and seek’, of because we are guilty and afraid or ashamed. Generally speaking, a closed door means ‘do not disturb’.

Physical doors are relatively easy to deal with. We can see a door to a room or building and know if it’s open or closed. We can try the handle and tell if it’s locked or unlocked. In emergency situations we can break it down and enter by force.

The door to our heart is quite a different matter. The door to our heart is impregnable. We close the door to our heart for a variety of reasons. We close the door to our heart to protect us from further damage. We get hurt in love and vow never to be hurt again. We close the door to our heart due to fear. We opened it once and it was abused, neglected or stomped on. We are afraid to open it again because it may bring more pain. We close the door to our heart in anger when people or God don’t measure up to our expectations. We close the door to our heart when the feelings of guilt or inferiority are too great.

Perhaps you can add your own reasons to the list. Reasons why you have shut up your heart to others or to God. Some may be perfectly understandable. Others, you’d admit are suspect. Whatever the reason for your closed heart, here is something you need to know. Jesus is at the door knocking.

People knock at a door for two reasons. People knock at a door because they desire admittance. Let that sink in for a moment in regards to Jesus. He knows your heart. He knows every room. He knows every secret sin. He knows where you store the feelings of anger and hate and bitterness. He knows where the box of unforgiveness is stored and the jar of judgmental attitudes is found. Still, regardless of the condition of your heart, Jesus desires to come in.

The people in thechurchofLaodiceahad done some things that were repulsive to Jesus Christ. They are likened to a drink that is lukewarm when it should be hot or cold. Their condition is such that were they to be drunk, would be vomited out of a person’s mouth. Even so, Jesus longed to enter in. Such Grace! Such Mercy! Such Love!

Secondly, a knock at the door means that the person knocking realizes and respects the right of the owner to keep the door closed. I don’t have to open the door of my house, my room, my business to you. I don’t have to open the door of my heart to Jesus.

Jesus Christ will never force himself on you. He’ll always respect your right to choose, but he earnestly desires for you to choose him so he can enter in and built a relationship of love and grace. He earnestly desires to come in and help clean out the corners of your heart that haven’t been touched in a long time.

I grew up hearing sermons on this verse in a variety of ways to refer to winning the lost to Christ. While there may be some justification to that line of thought, the letter was written to the church. Jesus stands at the door and knocks and calls to us. Will you recognize his voice? Will you realize his desire to enter in to heal those damaged rooms of your soul? He’s waiting patiently. He’ll never force himself on you. He loves you too much for that.

PRAYER: Lord Jesus, you know my heart. You know the doors I’ve closed to you and others. You know the feelings of guilt and fear I have when I think of opening those doors. Thank you for your grace and mercy. Empower me by your Spirit to be willing to open myself completely to you. Every door. Every closet. In your name I pray, Amen.


If you are willing and obedient, you will eat the good things of the land; but if you resist and rebel, you will be devoured by the sword.” For the mouth of the LORD has spoken. Isaiah 1:19-20

Some see God as being a tyrant; some see him as being an old man who is either unable to change things or unconcerned about others pain; some see him as an angry father who will, at any moment take revenge on us for the evil deeds that we do.

When people see God in one of these roles it’s no wonder they become disillusioned, fearful and question His very existence. Most of us have plenty of people in our lives that are at the ready to remind us of our failures. What we want is a God that will tell us we are okay when we aren’t and take revenge on those who have hurt us. What we need is a God that will comfort us in our time of need.

We hear it said that God is a loving Father but then see children starving to death, women and children being abused, and medical and natural disasters running rampant. In all that we question God: “If you are a loving Father, then why?”

There are no easy answers to the why in life because as mortal, human beings we have a natural tendency to this earthly life as all there is. We have this mistaken idea that God promised us that we could have lives of peace and prosperity. Since God is love (we say) then it makes perfect sense that an all-powerful, all-loving God would make everything work out happy.

God has never promised that we’d see life without adversity. From the moment that Adam and Eve sinned in the garden, God told us we would see emotional, spiritual and physical pain ending ultimately in death.

These verses in Isaiah tell the tale of two people. On the one hand we see a person who obeys the word of God and enjoys prosperity. On the other hand we see the person who has decided to go his own way and reject the message of God. The former person enjoys peace in the midst of the storm because he/she knows that this pain may last throughout our physical lives, but is well worth the reward we receive on ‘the other side’ when we join our Lord and Savior in Heaven. We live with peace in our hearts because our sins are forgiven.

The latter person, the one who rejects God may have earthly wealth and great physical health most of their lives, but inside they are empty and seeking to fill a void that only God’s message of love and forgiveness can fill.

God’s message through the prophet Isaiah is one that a loving father would tell his children. He says to us, listen to my advice. I know what I’m talking about. If you obey my word and follow Jesus you will experience pain here on earth, but one day join me in eternal joy and happiness.

If, on the other hand, you reject me, then the natural consequences of life will lead to emotional and spiritual emptiness here on earth and life separated from me in a place of torment for eternity.

The life you live in obedience now is the only way to assure a life of victory in the future.

PRAYER: Father I confess to you that at times I act like a spoiled two-year-old. I want everything for me. I want to be comfortable, be in charge and have my own way all the time. Forgive me for choosing my own way. Help me grow in relationship to you so that I can find inner peace here on earth and eternal life beyond the grave. In Jesus name I pray, Amen.

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