The idea of Jesus’ knocking on the door of our hearts is typically based on Revelation 3:20: “Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and eat with him, and he with me.” This verse is not addressing the status of the individual’s heart but is instead a call for the church in Laodicea to repent for having departed from the gospel of the kingdom Christ gave it to proclaim.
Years ago, I was sitting on my front porch reading when a voice rang out, “Sir, we would like to talk to you about whether you have invited Jesus in your heart.” These were not cultists at my door but evangelical Christians concerned with the state of my heart, pleading with me to open the door and let Jesus in. While I appreciated their zeal for Christian witness, I was troubled by their approach. If Jesus was waiting on me to let Him into my heart for salvation, I knew that door would never open.
This misunderstanding has brought about terrible consequences in the way people hear Jesus’ actual call to repent and believe. Having reduced Jesus from that of an enthroned King issuing His calls through His ambassadors to “kiss the Son . . . [lest] you perish in the way” (Ps. 2:12), we have made Him into a peasant on His knees, desperately hoping that we will accept Him—as if He were the One needing our approval. In this way, we have minimized the need for people to take Him seriously. If Jesus loves me and has a wonderful plan for my life, as is asserted in tandem with the plea to invite Christ into our hearts today, it really doesn’t matter if I let Him in, does it?
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