Proverb 3:1
“My son, forget not my law; but let thine heart keep my commandments.”
—Proverbs 3:1 (KJV)
Here the Heavenly Father speaks directly to His son—and through His son, to all His children in Christ. The command is simple, yet infinite in depth:
Do not forget the law, and let your heart be the keeper of the commandments.
The law is not merely instruction written on stone or scrolls; the law is the divine order of reality. The law is as within, so without. The law is cause and effect. The law is you reap what you sow. The law is the principle that governs creation itself.
“Be not deceived; God is not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.”
—Galatians 6:7 (KJV)
The Father’s law is the rhythm of righteousness,
the architecture of heaven,
the structure of moral reality,
the consequence system of the universe.
When He says “forget not my law”, He is saying:
Remember how reality works.
Remember that actions produce outcomes.
Remember that thoughts shape consequences.
Remember that the inner world becomes the outer world.
For what a man does within produces results without.
And what a man does without returns back within.
The law reflects the man back to himself.
This is the law of the Great Mother—
the law of consequence, the law of return, the law of wisdom,
who teaches by mirroring a man’s deeds back to him until he learns righteousness.
Then the Father continues:
“…but let thine heart keep my commandments.”
Not your mind alone.
Not your memory alone.
Not your ritual alone.
Let your heart—the core, the cup, the center—keep them.
The heart is the home of intention.
The heart is the temple where commandments take root.
The heart is where obedience becomes identity.
If the commandments do not live in the heart,
they will not live in the life.
To let the heart keep the commandments means:
Let your inner being hold fast to the Father’s instructions.
Let your motives be shaped by righteousness.
Let your impulses be governed by wisdom.
Let your decisions arise from purity.
Let your reactions be disciplined by truth.
Let your desires be aligned with God’s will.
And how does a man accomplish this?
By meditating upon the law day and night.
“But his delight is in the law of the LORD;
and in his law doth he meditate day and night.”
—Psalm 1:2 (KJV)
To meditate upon the law is not to empty the mind, but to fill it—
to consider one’s actions,
to contemplate consequences,
to reflect upon choices,
to weigh one’s paths,
to align with righteousness,
to adjust oneself continually toward uprightness.
Meditation is self-examination under the light of divine truth.
It is asking continually:
“What am I sowing?
What am I reaping?
What am I creating?
What am I becoming?”
Jesus confirmed this principle in His own teachings:
“For a good tree bringeth not forth corrupt fruit; neither doth a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit.”
—Luke 6:43 (KJV)
A man’s fruit is the outward manifestation of his inward law.
A man’s life is the harvest of his inward seed.
If the heart keeps the commandments,
the life will bear righteous fruit.
If the heart departs from the commandments,
corrupt fruit will follow.
Jesus also said:
“If ye love me, keep my commandments.”
—John 14:15 (KJV)
Love is shown through obedience.
Obedience is rooted in the heart.
The heart is proven by the fruit.
Thus Proverb 3:1 is not simply a reminder—it is the blueprint for spiritual formation. It instructs the child of God to hold fast internally to the law so that externally he may walk in the straight path.
It is a continuation of what we have seen:
• the upright shall remain in the land,
• the wise receive the Spirit poured out,
• the righteous inherit the Kingdom,
• and the perfected endure forever.
Each proverb builds upon the last, revealing that the Kingdom is established in the earth through those whose hearts hold the law, whose souls are aligned with wisdom, and whose lives reflect the righteousness of God.
Here a little, there a little:
Heaven’s order shaping the heart of man.
Our Daily Morning Yahweh Practice
  1. Wake up early before the sun rises and give thanks to the Lord in proper prayer.
  2. Pray for the people who need praying for—using a list of names in your prayer journal.
  3. Read the chapter of Proverbs that corresponds to today’s date.
  4. Choose one proverb that speaks to you and post it beneath this proverb.
  5. Begin your daily morning surrender practice as the sun rises, and then start your day.
This is how we begin each day here at www.RealizeUs.me.
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Michael Smith
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Proverb 3:1
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Do you have the Holy Spirit &/or seek to experience the Kingdom of Heaven within? Come! Come buy Truth without Money. Learn how to clean thy cup. Amen
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