Repair or Replace?

Not Smart Enough.jpg

By Tierce Green

It was a sad day in our family room, at least for me, when the plasma display I’ve owned since 2006 stopped turning on. Plasmas have been replaced by brighter, lighter, and better for the environment LCD displays. But in my opinion, brighter isn’t always beautiful. Plasmas delivered these rich colors contrasted by deep blacks that LCDs have yet to match. The question in this disposable electronics age is this: “Do I repair it or replace it?” But this isn’t a consumer electronics review. I want to switch channels and talk about something with eternal implications, one thing in particular that can’t be repaired.

Our heart is unfixable. It may be hard to accept, but we don’t have enough intelligence or skills for this job. Education is vital and valuable, but even the most educated and advanced people in the world have committed heinous crimes against humanity. Our heart—who we really are at the core—is defective. The only solution is revealed in the Book of Ezekiel. It exposes a systemic problem and reveals the drastic measures required to fix it.

Ezekiel was probably in his thirties when God sent him as a prophet to his people—people who were in God’s own words obstinate and stubborn (Ezekiel 2:3-6). They were described as a “rebellious house.” Ezekiel’s book paints a disturbing portrait of the disparity between what God intended for his people and what they had become. This disparity, as always, produced a deep despair among the people.

What was true then is true now. The real problems aren’t misogyny, racism, or an endless list of other social injustices. While addressing these issues is critical—and we must be passionate and tireless in our efforts to stand against them—behavior modification would only be a Band-Aid. These are just the weeds, symptoms of a deeper problem that can’t be fixed with new legislation. We need to keep cutting the weeds, but we must also attack the root.

We have a heart of stone. That was the diagnosis delivered by Ezekiel. When you have a heart of stone there’s no need to ask, “How long do I have to live?” because you’re dead already! Jeremiah, Ezekiel’s contemporary, concurred and proclaimed,

“The heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure. Who can understand it?” (Jeremiah 17:9)

The implications? Everything that flows from a heart like this will be infected and polluted. If there’s pollution downstream, you can keep treating the water, but it would be smart to go upstream and eliminate the problem at the source.

A heart of stone can’t be patched up and repaired. It must be removed and replaced. That was the plan—the New Covenant—laid out in Ezekiel 36:26 …

“I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit in you; I will remove from you your heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh.”

This is the most outrageous act in history. The cost is absolutely unaffordable. No one has enough money or influence or resources they can leverage to pay for it. But the good news is that the cost of a new heart has been provided by grace and can be immediately acquired through faith. It has been completely covered by the blood of Jesus.

“For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God—not by works, so that no one can boast.” (Ephesians 2:8-9)

Do you have a new heart? I received mine when I was nineteen. In my short lifetime, I had logged an impressive track record of religious involvement followed by a brief but dark detour driven by self-destructive experimentation. My heart of stone was infecting everything from the inside out. I investigated the claims of Jesus and discovered so much more than a religious fix or moral course correction. I saw evidence of Jesus in those who truly followed Him. I believed in Him and received His grace. To be clear, I didn’t fix myself, and God didn’t patch up my old heart. He replaced my heart of stone with a new heart.

Yet to all who did receive Him, to those who believed in His name, He gave the right to become children of God—children born not of natural descent, nor of human decision, but born of God.” (John 1:12-13)

This new identity doesn’t exempt us from standing in the trenches against social injustices and providing help for a fractured world. We don’t hide out in some moral or religious bubble. If we’re following Jesus closely, we actually get out more and get more involved. We fight harder, but we fight with a broader eternal perspective. We work to understand the reality of what is and dream of what could be. We re-calibrate to what God intended for us and fight the good fight of faith with a new heart.

[As for my plasma display, I found someone who could fix it, and it lasted another 18 months. Then, it went down for the count, and I replaced it with an OLED TV which is the next best thing to plasma.]


REMOVE and REPLACE is a principle that applies throughout our life as we continue to follow Jesus. As our new heart pulls us forward, our default nature tries to pull us backward. You can feel this tension in the Scriptures contrasting the old with the new:

“But now you must also rid yourselves of all such things as these: [REMOVE] anger, rage, malice, slander, and filthy language from your lips. Do not lie to each other, since you have taken off your old self with its practices and [have REPLACED it with] the new self, which is being renewed in knowledge in the image of its Creator … clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience. Bear with each other and forgive one another if any of you has a grievance against someone. Forgive as the Lord forgave you. And over all these virtues put on love, which binds them all together in perfect unity.” (Colossians 3:8-14)


Originally published as You’re Not Smart Enough To Fix This! on Huffington Post (April 18, 2017)

Tierce Green