Guard The Imagination of Your Heart
Guard The Imagination of Your Heart
Guard The Imagination of Your Heart
1. Introduction: Notice and appreciate all that God has blessed you with
2. God’s Word brings complete healing and wellness to your entire being
3. Guard your heart above everything else
4. The heart consists of your imagination and thoughts
5. Guard your heart by guarding your imagination
6. Lean in to receive faith pictures and visions from God when you pray
7. Possess God’s blessings by first possessing them in your thoughts and imagination
8. Replace every negative thought with faith pictures from God’s Word
9. Salvation Prayer
10. Closing Prayer
11. OWN THE WORD (life application)
In a world that is dark, filled with hopelessness and pessimism, it is easy for us to
become depressed. Even though today, we have inventions and devices that allow us to
be more connected than ever before, many of us are still unhappy.
We crave what we can’t attain and discredit what we have. We tend to appreciate the
people or things we cannot attain and take for granted the people and things we have.
We are often more polite to strangers than our loved ones. Let us appreciate and
express that appreciation to our loved ones.
The greatest gift that God has given us is Jesus Christ, His Son. We are so blessed—we
are saved and we know Him who loves us in spite of ourselves.
We are not saved or justified by our own efforts but by Jesus alone. He is our
righteousness. No matter what season you are in, whether you are feeling good about
your walk with God or not, you can be confident that Jesus is your righteousness. When
you allow this truth to sink into your heart, you will have a sense of peace and assurance
because you will realize that God will not withhold any blessing from you.
Declare this: “Father God, I thank You that Jesus Christ is my righteousness. Your
beloved Son and all that He is, You have credited to my account, You have imputed to
me. On the cross, Jesus became sin with my sins that I might be made the righteousness
of God in Him. Thank You, Father. Jesus is my righteousness—He is the measure of my
right standing before You.”
When we pray this before we make our requests before God, we remind ourselves of the
truth that we have right standing before God because we are in Christ. This is what
builds our faith.
Picking up from before, we tend to crave what we don’t have and fail to appreciate what
we do. Pastor Prince shares how much he appreciates the corporate gathering of God’s
people (coming back to church physically).
Israel was held captive for 70 years in Babylon because of idolatry. Before they fell into
idolatry, when they were still worshiping God, they were offering sin offerings (a
representation of the real offering, Jesus, who would eventually come to take away the
sins of the world). On account of these sin offerings, God looked past their sins.
Let’s say sin is represented by an ink stain. In Hebrew, to “atone” for sin means to
“cover” it. That is why the mercy seat, which was placed over the symbols of sin in Old
Testament times, was actually called the “covering seat.” The mercy seat would have the
blood of the animal sacrifice sprinkled on it and cover the sins of God’s people. In the
past, the stain of sin was covered by sacrifices so that God would not see it. Yet, the
stain was still there until Jesus died on the cross (John 1:29). His sacrifice on the
cross fully removed all our sins once and for all. Today, God does not just overlook our
sins. To Him, our sins have been completely removed. This does not mean we are
sinless. There is still sin in our flesh, but when we come before God, He sees absolutely
no sin on us at all.
When Israel was worshiping God, they were offering sin offerings and their sins were
covered. However, once they fell into idolatry and stopped worshiping God, they also
stopped offering sin offerings and their sins were exposed. That’s when they went into
captivity. After those 70 years of captivity, they never reverted to idolatry again.
For us who have lived through the pandemic, we can feel like we “went into captivity”
for 2 years. And during this time, we learned many things—one of which is to appreciate
what we have. For example, we begin to appreciate the resources that God has provided
for us to come together, such as having spaces to congregate as a church. We thank
God especially for the people in our church.
Similar to children, we can have a tendency to discredit what we have. Kids tend to want
the toys that other kids want to play with. For example, a child can own a toy and be
uninterested in it until another child comes to the house and wants to play with it. Then
the toy suddenly becomes more attractive to the child who owns it. This is immature
thinking, yet many adults still have this way of thinking.
For example, there are men who only start appreciating their wives when another man
gives her attention. So if you are married, appreciate the spouse God has given you
before somebody else does. Husbands, appreciate the beautiful virtues and wonderful
traits that God has given your wife to bless you. At the same time, wives, if you receive
flattery from other men, don’t let that flattery win you over because flattery will not carry
you far in a relationship.
The childishness to crave what we can’t have is of the flesh. Let us be aware of it so we
don’t allow ourselves to be swept up by it.
Pastor Prince believes that the word that is going to be shared in this sermon is a
warning from the Lord that He is giving us out of love. He wants us to flow with Him and
understand what He is doing in our lives.
We need to know His ways. God’s ways are not religious. His way is not to demand us to
perform good works in order to obtain righteousness.
The cross cost Jesus everything and it cost us nothing except to believe. Just by
believing in the finished work, our sins are forgiven and we are made whole.
Pastor Prince encourages us to use physical Bibles instead of our smartphones because
there are many things on our phones that are competing for our attention.
“give attention to my words; Incline your ear to my sayings. Do not let them
depart from your eyes”— The first step to giving attention to God’s Word is to guard
our ear-gate (what we hear) and our eye-gate (what we see).
“Keep them in the midst of your heart” — It is via our ears and eyes that things enter
our hearts. God’s word to us today is to guard our hearts by watching what we hear and
see.
“they are life to those who find them, And health to all their flesh” — This is God’s
remedy for every part of our physical bodies. It is medicine that doesn’t have any side-
effects. God’s Word is one of God’s perfect gifts to His children (James 1:17). When you
hold your Bible in your hand, you’re holding a piece of heaven, you’re holding God’s
grace gift to you. It is God's instruction manual, the manufacturer's handbook, and the
only medicine that is health to all your flesh. The only side-effects are joy unspeakable
and peace that surpasses understanding. The apostle Paul was an example of this, even
in the face of fierce persecution (Acts 26:2, 29). We are meant to have joy, peace, and
radiant personalities that witness to the world that we are saved.
There are times we receive instant healing when the gifts of healings are operating, but
most of the time, we receive our healing as we give attention to God’s Word. We are to
receive His Word daily (Matt. 6:11).
His Word must enter our hearts via our ears and eyes before it becomes life and
health to all our flesh.
“Guard your heart with all diligence” — In the Hebrew, this means that of all the
guarding we do, we must guard our heart. This is the priority because our heart is where
all the forces of life come from.
Often, we tend to guard the things that matter to us such as our families, finances, and
health, thinking that by doing so we are guarding ourselves. There’s nothing wrong with
keeping these areas of our lives in consideration, however, they are all external and they
flow out of the heart.
In a world where there is no more privacy, and the only real privacy you have is what is
in your heart, be sure to guard your heart. No one except the Holy Spirit should enter
that precious space.
Some may say that your heart is your spirit. However, in Greek, “spirit” is “pneuma” and
“heart” is “cardia.” Meanwhile in Hebrew, “spirit” is “ruach” and “heart” is “lev.”
Essentially, your heart is not your spirit.
We are tripartite beings. Each of us is a spirit that has a soul and is housed in a body.
Our spirit connects us with God, our soul engages us with what is happening in our
surroundings, and our body connects us with the physical world.
Today, we will learn more about the heart by learning what it does. What does a heart
do?
With all your guarding, guard your heart. Jesus told us, “Let not your heart be troubled”
(John 14:27).
Our part is to let not our hearts be troubled. When you hear bad news, quote John 14:27
under your breath. That’s one of the ways to guard your heart.
How else can we guard our hearts? We can discover this when we know how our hearts
function.
“And GOD saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every
imagination (‘yeser') of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.”
—Genesis 6:5 KJV
“every imagination (‘yeser') of the thoughts of his heart” — The word ‘imagination’
is ‘yeser’ (noun) in Hebrew. Why is imagination so important? Because God knew that
once something is in the imagination, it will manifest outwardly. Already, at this time,
mankind was already doing many wicked things. But this wickedness started from the
imagination of the heart.
In all the earth, God only managed to find Noah and his family who were pure in His
eyes. Noah’s ark was covered on the inside and outside with “pitch,” which means
“atone” in Hebrew, so Noah and his family were safe inside the ark. This is a picture of
believers today—no matter how many times we fall, we fall inside the safety of the ark.
We are saved once and for all.
God was the One who invited Noah and his family into the ark before the flood and
asked them to go out of the ark after the flood. Here, God demonstrates His style of
leadership—first one in, last one out.
Pastor Prince encourages the congregation to lean in and respond to the preaching of
the Word because this is how we shake off the dust of the world that we may have
picked up—whether it is bad news, social media content, or entertainment that is
causing depressive thoughts and negativism.
The word “imagination,” which is “yeser” in Hebrew, appears again after the flood.
“And the Lord smelled a soothing aroma. Then the Lord said in His heart, “I will never
again curse the ground for man’s sake, although the imagination (‘yeser') of man’s
heart is evil from his youth; nor will I again destroy every living thing as I have done.”
—Genesis 8:21 NKJV
“the imagination (‘yeser') of man’s heart is evil” — Although God could have simply
said that “man’s heart is evil,” He chose to say, “The imagination of man’s heart is evil.”
“I keep asking that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the glorious Father, may give
you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation, so that you may know him better. I pray
that the eyes of your heart may be enlightened in order that you may know the hope
to which he has called you, the riches of his glorious inheritance in his holy people. . .”
—Ephesians 1:17–18 NIV
“the Spirit of wisdom and revelation” — Wisdom is something for us to seek after.
Wisdom brings length of days, riches, honor, pleasure, peace (Prov. 3:16–17). How does
the Spirit of wisdom and revelation operate?
“the eyes of your heart may be enlightened”— The Spirit of wisdom and revelation
operates through the eyes of your heart. The eyes of your heart speak of vision and
imagination.
The word “imagination (‘yeser’)” first appears in the Bible in the story of creation:
“And the LORD God formed (‘yeser’) man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into
his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living being.”
—Genesis 2:7 NKJV
“formed (‘yeser’)” — This is the verb form of the word. It has to do with creation,
formulation. To God, imagination is creative. It is not just something insignificant or
inconsequential that happens in your mind.
“Your young men shall see visions, Your old men shall dream dreams” — Both
dreams and visions refer to pictures given to you by God, either when you’re sleeping or
awake.
Go about your daily life meditating on pictures like this. You are meditating on God’s
Word—not just words but pictures. Imagine it: you are a tree planted by the rivers of
water; you are not just a tree growing wild somewhere, but you are planted because
Someone cared enough to plant you. That person is Jesus.
Your imagination has the power to create. That is why Jesus said:
“. . . For out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks. A good man out of the
good treasure of his heart brings forth good things, and an evil man out of the evil
treasure brings forth evil things.”
— Matthew 12:34–35 NKJV
“out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks” — We often hear teaching
about the power of confession, e.g. what you say is what you get. When it comes to
salvation, we also put an emphasis on confession. However, there are two parts to it:
confessing in the mouth and believing in the heart. Which one comes first? Based on
this verse, it is the heart that is moved first, then the mouth follows.
It is by spending time in God’s Word that your heart is filled. It is not just about
confession. First, fill the imaginations of your heart with God’s Word.
If you are sick, spend time listening to healing scriptures. As you keep listening, your
heart is being filled with hope instead of filled with imaginations of the worst case
scenario.
How do you know if you are guarding your heart? Take note of what your imagination is
filled with. If it is filled with lust, with pessimism, with depressive thoughts, then you are
not guarding your heart.
“. . . For out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks. A good man out of the
good treasure of his heart brings forth good things, and an evil man out of the evil
treasure brings forth evil things.”
— Matthew 12:34–35 NKJV
“A good man out of the good treasure of his heart brings forth good things” —
These “good things” are positive visions from God. He fills your heart with His visions,
and only then do these visions manifest outwardly.
“an evil man out of the evil treasure brings forth evil things” — The devil
understands this principle too, and that’s why he tries to fill your heart with evil things.
In fact, the very first sin in the Garden of Eden happened after the devil planted an evil
imagination in Eve’s heart.
“So when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, that it was pleasant to
the eyes, and a tree desirable to make one wise, she took of its fruit and ate. She also
gave to her husband with her, and he ate. Then the eyes of both of them were opened,
and they knew that they were naked; and they sewed fig leaves together and made
themselves coverings.”
— Genesis 3:6–7 NKJV
“the woman saw that the tree was good for food, that it was pleasant to the eyes,
and a tree desirable to make one wise” — How could Eve see all this when she had
never touched the fruit before? She imagined this because the devil gave her this
picture.
“the eyes of both of them were opened” — This refers to spiritual eyes. God wanted
their spiritual eyes to be opened by another tree, the tree of life, a picture of Christ. But
when their eyes were opened by the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, all they
saw were their shortcomings. Before partaking of the forbidden tree, God clothed man
in His glory; it was a radiant protection. However, man forfeited the glory of God when
they sinned and had to cover themselves with fig leaves.
Through the cross, Jesus gave us back that glory that Adam and Eve had lost. There is a
radiant glory surrounding all of us today.
Wisdom for marriage: From this story of the fall of man in the Garden of Eden, we can
see that It is so important to guard our imagination because it can bring destruction. If
you are married and fantasize about another person besides your spouse, this doesn’t
mean that you will end up with that person, but you will likely end up seeing destruction
in your marriage. Adultery, even in the imagination, destroys. Instead, fill your
imagination with positive pictures of marriage from God’s Word.
Possess God’s blessings by first
possessing them in your thoughts and
imagination
“And the Lord said to Abram, after Lot had separated from him: “Lift your eyes now and
look from the place where you are—northward, southward, eastward, and westward; for
all the land which you see I give to you and your descendants forever. And I will make
your descendants as the dust of the earth; so that if a man could number the dust of the
earth, then your descendants also could be numbered. Arise, walk in the land through
its length and its width, for I give it to you. Then Abram moved his tent, and went
and dwelt by the terebinth trees of Mamre, which are in Hebron, and built an altar
there to the Lord.”
— Genesis 13:14–18 NKJV
“Arise, walk in the land through its length and its width, for I give it to you. Then
Abram moved his tent, and went and dwelt by the terebinth trees of Mamre” —
Although God told Abraham to walk through the land that He was giving him, Abraham
did not walk through the land physically but instead built a tent. Why? Because he knew
that God was referring to walking through the land in his imagination. God was telling
him to see himself possessing all the land and its produce in the north, south, east, and
west.
Pastor Prince encourages us to have physical pictures of the “land” that we believe God
wants us to possess and to fill our thoughts with His visions for us. For example, if you
have a photo of yourself from your youth or your prime, keep on looking at that picture.
Instead of feeling like your best days are behind you, let that picture serve as a faith
picture of that “land” that God wants you to repossess.
This does not mean that we should become carnally minded and fill our minds with only
material luxuries. There’s nothing wrong with trusting God for provision and practical
supply, but more than anything else, this principle is for the things that really matter
in life, especially our health and families.
“I keep asking that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the glorious Father, may give
you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation, so that you may know him better. I pray
that the eyes of your heart may be enlightened in order that you may know the hope
to which he has called you, the riches of his glorious inheritance in his holy people. . .”
—Ephesians 1:17–18 NIV
We have learned that the way the Spirit of wisdom and revelation operates is through
the eyes of our hearts. To see something in our hearts means to have an understanding
of it. When the Spirit of wisdom comes upon you, you will be able to look at a situation
and see the solution or the answer.
This wisdom is not something that can be taught but needs to be prayed for, just like
the apostle Paul and King Solomon prayed for it.
When you pray, the Lord may show you visions of the person you are praying for,
whether it is yourself or someone else. Be alert to the pictures that come up. For
example, you may be praying for your wife’s health and suddenly you see a picture of
her in her childhood when certain deep-set fears began. You can say, “In the name of
Jesus, I bind that fear and free her from it.” It could be that the sickness she has is the
fear, and you just prayed against it. Or you could be praying for your son who is
depressed, and you may have pictures coming up in your heart of your son’s future—
smiling, having fun outdoors, depression-free. This is a positive picture that you can
claim in Jesus’ name. You can pray, “Thank You, Father. I see my son this way.”
This is what prayer can be like. It is you communing with the Holy Spirit and Him
speaking to you and delivering His answers to you in pictures. Prayer is not supposed to
be you just desperately asking God for things based on fear.
God wants you to see your sons and daughters this way. He is deliberately giving you
pictures to fill your heart with.
The world is always giving us pictures that fill our minds with negativity. The only way to
overcome these images is to fill our minds and hearts with the wonderful visions that
God has given to us in His Word.
God wants you to imagine rightly. Parents, fill your hearts with these visions of your
children that the Lord has given to you. When you start experiencing worries or negative
thoughts about your children, replace those thoughts with the positive pictures that
God has given you.
“our sons may be as plants grown up in their youth” — This is a picture of sons being
mature and becoming great in their youth.
“That our barns may be full, supplying all kinds of produce; that our sheep may
bring forth thousands and ten thousands in our fields” — This is a picture of
abundant provision.
“That our oxen may be well laden; that there be no breaking in or going out; that
there be no outcry in our streets.” — The word “outcry” means “complaining.” There
will be no complaining in our streets. This is a picture of us rejoicing and praising the
Lord all the days of our lives. When good things happen, we praise the Lord. When bad
things happen, we praise the Lord anyway because we know that all things work
together for our good!