The Impossible Heart
The disciples were stunned. A rich young man—moral, religious, eager—had just walked away from Jesus because he couldn’t let go of his wealth. If he couldn’t make it, who could?
Jesus’ answer shatters our self-reliance: Human effort has a ceiling. You can’t earn salvation, fix a broken marriage, or conquer deep-rooted sin through sheer willpower. The rich man kept the rules, but his heart was chained—and he couldn’t break free.
But Jesus doesn’t leave us in despair. He redirects our gaze from our ability to God’s ability. “With God, all things are possible.” Not some things. Not easy things. All things—including that stubborn, resistant heart of yours.
Here’s the catch—and the good news:
God will not bulldoze your will. He is not a divine kidnapper. When the rich man said “no,” Jesus let him walk away. Love that forces is not love. Your “no” is always respected.
But God can give you a new “yes.” He doesn’t bypass your will—He renews it. Philippians 2:13 says, “God is working in you, giving you the desire and the power to do what pleases Him.”
Notice: He gives you the desire first. Before you obey, He changes what you want. That stubborn heart? He softens it from the inside, so that one day you find yourself wanting what you used to resist. It’s not coercion; it’s a heart transplant (Ezekiel 36:26).
You are still involved. Even after God gives you a new desire, you still choose to act on it. The Prodigal Son’s father ran to him—but the son still had to get up and walk home. Grace meets you, but you take the step.
So what if you don’t even want to want to change?
Tell God that. Honest prayer is better than fake piety. Say: “Lord, I don’t have the desire. Give me the desire to desire You.” That prayer itself is already a movement of His Spirit in you.
The moment you truly surrender your stubbornness is not the moment you lose your will—it’s the moment your will becomes truly free for the first time. Freedom isn’t doing whatever you want; it’s being able to want what is good and actually do it.
Lord, I admit I’ve been trying to fix what only You can redeem. Forgive my self-reliance. But I’ll be honest—part of me doesn’t want to give up control. I don’t even know if I want to change. So I bring that stubbornness to You. If You can raise the dead, You can give life to my cold desires. Work in my “I don’t want to” until it becomes “I want to.” I’m not there yet—but I’m giving You permission to take me there. Today, I hand You my “impossible.” Work in me what I cannot work in myself. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
What is one area where you’re relying on your own effort and secretly resisting God’s work? Write it down. Then pray honestly: “Lord, this is Yours—and so is my fear of letting go.”