The Great Heart Changer by Charles
Spurgeon The heart of the natural man,
like marble, is stone-cold towards spiritual things. No arguments
have power to move a soul so steeled, So thoroughly stony,
hard, and impenetrable. O rocks of iron and hills of
brass, You are softer than the proud heart of man. Fallen man
is like the death-adder, Which will not be charmed, charm we
ever so wisely. tears are lost on him. Threatenings
are but as the whistlings of the wind. The preachings of the
law and even of Christ crucified, all these are null and void and
fall hopelessly to the ground, so long as the man's heart continues
what it is by nature, dead and hard and cold. The heart of man
grows harder, whether it be the soft sunshine of love, or the
harsh tempest of judgment that falls upon it. Mercy and love
alike make it more solid, and knit its particles closer together,
and surely, until the omnipotent himself speak the word, The heart
of man grows harder, and harder, and harder, and refuses to be
softened or broken. Granite may be ground and be
broken into pieces, but unless God gets the hammer in His hand,
and even He must put both hands to it, the great granite heart
of man will not yield in any way. You may smite a man's heart
right and left with death, with judgment, with mercy, with tears,
with entreaties, with threatenings, and it will not break. No, not
even the fires of hell do not melt man's heart, for the damned
in hell grow more hard by their agonies, and they hate God and
blaspheme Him all the more because of the suffering they endure.
Only omnipotence itself, I say, can ever soften this hard heart
of man. Christ is the great heart changer. Lord, melt my heart. None but a bath of blood divine
can take the flint away. But do it, Lord, and you shall
have the praise.