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Watch your back

This is what the LORD says: “Cursed are those who put their trust in mere humans and turn their hearts away from the LORD.” — Jeremiah 17:5

In our culture one is constantly advised to watch one’s back and cover one’s tail. The conventional wisdom is that people cannot be trusted and will abuse any trust another may place in them.

This is a sad state of affairs, but there’s nothing new about it. God Himself expressed such a view when He told Jeremiah, “Cursed are those who put their trust in mere humans and turn their hearts away from the Lord” (Jeremiah 17:5). Modern man thinks it is smart not to trust mere humans. He’s right—he will be cursed if he does!

This does not mean that no one should ever trust anyone. Rather, it is a condemnation of transferring trust away from the Lord and putting it in humans, as though there were nowhere else to turn for support.

The issue is the human heart. People cannot be trusted because they have sinful hearts. Man roundly resists and resents this idea, even while working hard to protect himself from those he cannot wholly trust! But the Lord says, “The human heart is most deceitful and desperately wicked. Who really knows how bad it is?” (17:9).

The Lord answered His own question: “But I know! I, the Lord, search all hearts and examine secret motives. I give all people their due rewards, according to what their actions deserve” (17:10). If people do not trust the Lord, and if they do not commit their actions to His evaluation, their human relationships will be deficient or, more accurately, “cursed.”

Fortunately, the Lord does more than search hearts; He changes them, too. That is why Jeremiah called on the Lord to bless him in his difficult and dangerous situation. “O Lord, you alone can heal me; you alone can save” (17:14).

In this world it is a good idea to watch your back. We all have wicked hearts, so it is not stupid to be on your guard. But to be really blessed, you need to trust the Lord—like a tree by a riverbank reaching deep roots into the waters of His unfailing trustworthiness (17:7-8).

That means trusting He is right in what He says, right in what He does, and right in what He promises. He is reliable to reveal your own twisted motives and to alert you when you begin to place unwarranted confidence in man and deficient confidence in God.

Him alone you should fully trust. So watch your back—and watch your heart!

For further study: Jeremiah 17:5-18

Content taken from The One Year Book of Devotions for Men by Stuart Briscoe. Copyright ©2000. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers. All rights reserved.