![]() The problem with these suggestions is Jesus’ own teaching. Maybe this is a judgment given when Israel was in a really bad place, and things got better with time. Maybe this is Jeremiah doing his “jeremiad” thing. ![]() ![]() And the reason that humanity is unwilling to admit this is because our wicked hearts are “deceitful above all things.” We are in double trouble: we are sick and unwilling to admit it, which means we will never look for a cure on our own.īut, we might think, maybe this is just an Old Testament thing. Human nature, in its natural state, is “desperately wicked” or depraved. If this is said of the heart, according to a biblical anthropology it must be said of human nature. It’s quite a jolt, then, when we read in Jeremiah 17:9 that the human heart is “deceitful above all things” and, in the King James Version, “desperately wicked” (ESV “desperately sick”). When the Bible wants to address who we are as human beings, it speaks of the heart. For example, when we talk about a person’s truly appropriating an idea or practice, we say, “She really took it to heart.” That is, it became a part of who she is through her regular thought and practice. We see this even in our common manner of speaking. References to the “heart” are replete in Scripture, because it is the Holy Spirit’s way of referencing our whole being or person. The roots of our resistance emerge from our hearts. And yet, we often hear expressions of absolute disgust at humanity alongside affirmations that “he’s basically a good person.” Why do we resist what seems so self-evident? Malcom Muggeridge famously observed that “the depravity of man is at once the most empirically verifiable reality but at the same time the most intellectually resisted fact.” On the face of it, this observation rings true.
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