True change begins when God deals with the nature behind behavior instead of merely correcting outward habits. Romans 8:5-8 presents two kinds of people, not simply two possible moods or two daily choices: those who are according to the flesh and those who are according to the Spirit. The issue is not surface conduct alone, but the center of a person’s life. As was said, “The problem was never the habit. The problem is the nature behind it.” A mind set on the flesh produces death because it is turned inward on self, cut off from the life of God, and unable to please Him. A mind set on the Spirit produces life and peace because it flows from a heart that has been changed by God.
Regeneration means God does more than declare a sinner forgiven. Regeneration means God changes the person from the inside out. “You don’t have to become spiritual, you are spiritual” captures the heart of this truth for those who are in Christ. Justification changes the verdict, but regeneration changes the person. God does not offer a renovation project for the old self. He gives a new heart, a new center, and a new life through the indwelling Holy Spirit, who is not merely a standard to admire but the power by which believers live.
Isaiah 6 gives a picture of what this transforming encounter looks like in practice. Isaiah saw the holiness of God, recognized his own uncleanness, and then received cleansing at the very place he confessed his sin. “Your guilt is taken away and your sin is forgiven” led to a new posture: no longer shrinking back in fear, but stepping forward in surrender. A person touched by God is not merely cleaned up but commissioned. The new heart produces a new direction, and those marked by the Spirit are sent into the world carrying life and peace.
As you reflect on this message this week, consider the following:
God does not simply modify behavior; He changes the heart that produces behavior. Reflect on areas of your life where you have tried to manage habits without allowing God to transform the deeper motivations behind them. What would it look like to let the Holy Spirit reshape the center of your life instead of only adjusting outward actions? The difference between the flesh and the Spirit is not merely a change in conduct but a change in identity. Think about the statement, “You don’t have to become spiritual, you are spiritual.” How would your daily decisions change if you truly lived from the reality that God has already given you a new heart and placed His Spirit within you? An encounter with the holiness of God reveals both our need for cleansing and our calling to be sent. Consider Isaiah’s response after his guilt was taken away: “Here am I. Send me.” Where might God be inviting you to carry life and peace into the people and places around you this week?The post New Heart, New You appeared first on Revival Life Church Boca Raton, FL.