In the end, it doesn’t matter how well we have
performed or what we have accomplished—a life without heart is not
worth living. For out of this wellspring of our soul flow all true
caring and all meaningful work, all real worship and all sacrifice.
Our faith, hope, and love issue from this fount, as well. Because it
is in our heart that we first hear the voice of God and it is in the
heart that we come to know him and learn to live in his love.
So you can see that to lose heart is to lose
everything. And a "loss of heart" best describes most men and women
in our day. It isn’t just the addictions and affairs and depression
and heartaches, though, God knows, there are enough of these to
cause even the best of us to lose heart.
But there is the busyness, the drivenness, the fact
that most of us are living merely to survive. Beneath it we feel
restless, weary, and vulnerable.
Indeed,
the many forces driving modern life have not only assaulted the life
of our heart, they have also dismantled the heart’s habitat—that
geography of mystery and transcendence we knew so well as children.
All of us have had that experience at one time or
another, whether it be as we walked away from our teachers, our
parents, a church service, or sexual intimacy; the sense that
something important, perhaps the only thing important, had been
explained away or tarnished and lost to us forever.
Sometimes little by little, sometimes in large
chunks, life has appropriated the terrain meant to sustain and
nourish the wilder life of the heart, forcing it to retreat as an
endangered species into smaller, more secluded, and often darker
geographies for its survival.
As this has happened, something has been lost,
something vital.