Devotionals

Pulse Check

How’s your heart?

Beth Thomas

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Pulse Check
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February is American Heart Month, a time dedicated to raising awareness about heart health through the American Heart Association’s initiatives. It’s an opportunity to focus on the physical care of our hearts, but it also invites reflection on our spiritual hearts. Scripture often uses the heart as a metaphor for our inner being—our thoughts, emotions, and relationship with God. Here are some biblical examples to inspire us to care for both. 

Guard Your Heart

Proverbs 4:23 says, “Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it” (NIV). Just as we guard our physical hearts by eating well and exercising, we must guard our spiritual hearts by filtering what we allow into our lives. Think of it like a gate around a garden: harmful influences are like weeds that choke out healthy growth. Regular prayer, Bible study, and godly friendships serve as the nourishing “water” for our spiritual garden. Let’s consider our “spiritual diet” alongside our physical one. Are we consuming media, conversations, or habits that uplift our hearts or harm them? 

A Clean Heart

Psalm 51:10 says, “Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a steadfast spirit within me.” Heart health involves keeping arteries clean and free of blockages, much like our spiritual lives need cleansing from sin and bitterness. Sin acts like plaque in our spiritual arteries—it builds up, blocking the flow of God’s love and joy. 

Just as doctors prescribe lifestyle changes for better heart health, God prescribes confession, repentance, and trust in His mercy. 

Let’s reflect on areas we may need God’s forgiveness and grace to cleanse. Just as doctors prescribe lifestyle changes for better heart health, God prescribes confession, repentance, and trust in His mercy. 

Love With All Your Heart

Jesus taught, “Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind” (Matt. 22:37). The American Heart Association encourages us to keep our hearts strong to live vibrant lives. Similarly, God desires that we love Him with hearts that are fully alive and devoted to Him. 

An object lesson for children is a flashlight. A flashlight without batteries is like a heart without love—empty and unable to shine. God fills us with His love, enabling us to shine His light to others. 

A Heart of Compassion

Ephesians 4:32 says, “Be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in Christ God forgave you” (NIV). Just as a healthy physical heart pumps life-giving blood to the body, a spiritually healthy heart overflows with compassion and kindness. 

Take Heart Month as a challenge to reach out. Show kindness to a neighbor, forgive someone, or encourage a friend. Small acts of love are like exercise for the heart—they build strength over time. 

As we are reminded to care for our hearts physically, let it also be a call to deepen our spiritual health. God’s Word offers wisdom for both. As we take steps to strengthen our physical hearts, may we also seek God’s transforming power to nurture hearts that are clean, guarded, and overflowing with His love. 

This February let’s honor God by stewarding both the physical and spiritual hearts He’s entrusted to us. After all, everything we do flows from them.

Beth Thomas

Beth Thomas is an assistant editor of the Adventist Review.

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