T. M. Constance opens her reflection on Jeremiah 5:3 with a sobering observation: “The chastisements are ineffective when men’s hearts are stubborn and rebellious.” Jeremiah discovered this firsthand. He writes, “O LORD, do not your eyes look for truth? You have struck them down, but they felt no anguish… they have made their faces harder than rock; they have refused to repent.” The problem was not a lack of warning or consequence, but a refusal to respond. Pharaoh stands as an earlier example. No matter what God did, he persisted in disbelief, saying in effect, “Who is God, that I should obey him?” There is something deeply rooted in the human heart that resists correction. Even when the evidence is clear, the response can still be denial. It is a strange ability we have, to remain unmoved even when life is doing its best to get our attention.
That same hardness can quietly settle into everyday life. The film “Signs” captures this tension well, describing two kinds of people. Some see life as a series of random events, while others see meaning and purpose woven through it. I have noticed that my perspective can shift depending on the day. When things go well, it is easier to notice patterns and purpose. When they do not, the idea of randomness can feel more convincing. Yet the deeper issue is not the circumstances but the condition of the heart. A hard heart resists seeing God at work, even when the signs are present. It prefers independence, even if that independence leads to isolation. It is possible to experience much and still remain unchanged, which is a humbling thought. As Scripture says, “Today, if you hear his voice, do not harden your hearts” (Hebrews 3:15). The warning feels simple, but it touches something profound.
The New Testament reveals that a change of heart is not something we produce on our own. It requires a work that goes beyond effort or intention. John Bunyan observed that a steady look at Christ on the cross softens the heart. There is truth in that. When we see what Christ has done, the resistance begins to give way. Paul writes, “God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8). Even in hardness, God moves toward us. Spurgeon noted that a heart unmoved by God’s displeasure reveals its condition. Yet the gospel offers more than diagnosis. It offers transformation. In Christ, the heart that once resisted can become responsive, not through pressure alone, but through the quiet power of grace.
