A Heart That Honors God First
The Bible in a Year
“And he said, Lord God of Israel, there is no God like thee, in heaven above, or on earth beneath, who keepest covenant and mercy with thy servants that walk before thee with all their heart.” — 1 Kings 8:23
As I walk through this moment in Scripture, I find myself standing alongside Solomon at the dedication of the Temple, listening carefully to how he begins his prayer. He does not start with requests. He does not begin with needs. He begins with praise. That alone reshapes how I think about my own prayer life. The Hebrew word for praise here carries the idea of honoring or lifting up, recognizing God for who He truly is. Solomon’s opening declaration sets the tone: “There is no God like thee.” Before anything is asked, God is acknowledged. Before any burden is laid down, God is exalted. And I realize that if my prayers lack this foundation, I may be speaking words, but I am not yet truly praying.
Solomon’s words draw attention first to the character of God. He declares that there is no one like the Lord “in heaven above, or on earth beneath.” This is not poetic exaggeration; it is theological truth. The Hebrew phrase emphasizes total supremacy—there is no rival, no equal, no comparison. In a world then filled with idols and false claims of divinity, this statement dismantled every competing voice. It still does. Today, we may not bow to carved statues, but we are tempted to elevate success, control, or even ourselves above God. Yet Solomon reminds us that the Lord alone is sovereign. As Matthew Henry once wrote, “The better we know God, the more we shall admire Him.” When I begin my prayers by recognizing who God is, it corrects my perspective. My problems shrink, and His greatness expands.
From God’s character, Solomon moves naturally into God’s covenant. He speaks of the One “who keepest covenant and mercy with thy servants.” This is where theology becomes deeply personal. The Hebrew word for covenant, בְּרִית (berith), speaks of a binding promise, a relationship established by God and sustained by His faithfulness. Unlike human agreements that are often broken, God’s covenant stands firm. He does not forget. He does not waver. He does not change. This is echoed throughout Scripture: “Know therefore that the Lord thy God, he is God, the faithful God, which keepeth covenant and mercy” (Deuteronomy 7:9). When I pray, I am not speaking into uncertainty. I am speaking to a God whose Word is dependable. That truth steadies my heart. It reminds me that even when circumstances shift, His promises do not.
But Solomon does not stop with God’s character and covenant. He brings us to a challenging truth—the condition from God. He speaks of those “that walk before thee with all their heart.” The phrase “all their heart” comes from the Hebrew לֵבָב שָׁלֵם (levav shalem), meaning a whole or undivided heart. This is where the tension enters. God is faithful, but He calls for faithfulness in return. Not perfection, but sincerity. Not partial devotion, but wholehearted pursuit. I have to pause here and examine myself. Do I approach God with divided attention? Do I offer Him fragments of my life while holding back the rest? It is easy to expect God’s best while offering Him what is left over. Yet Scripture is clear—God desires our full devotion.
This truth becomes even more striking when I consider the life of Jesus. In Mark 12:30, Jesus reaffirmed this command: “And thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy strength.” The call has not changed. God still desires a complete response from His people. And yet, Jesus also demonstrates what that looks like. In the Garden of Gethsemane, He prayed with full surrender: “Not my will, but thine, be done” (Luke 22:42). That is a wholehearted heart. That is what it means to walk before God with sincerity. It is not simply about words spoken in prayer, but a life aligned with His will.
There is an insightful observation from Warren Wiersbe that captures this balance: “True prayer is not telling God what to do; it is asking God to do His will and trusting Him to answer.” When I begin with praise, I am reminded of who God is. When I reflect on His covenant, I am reassured of His faithfulness. And when I consider His condition, I am invited into a deeper level of commitment. Prayer becomes less about changing God’s mind and more about aligning my heart with His.
So as I continue this journey through Scripture, I am learning that the success of my prayer life is not measured by how much I say, but by how I begin. If I rush past praise, I miss the foundation. If I neglect His character, I weaken my confidence. If I ignore His call for wholehearted devotion, I limit what He desires to do in me. But when I start where Solomon started—lifting God up, acknowledging His faithfulness, and offering Him my whole heart—I find that prayer becomes not just a discipline, but a relationship.
And perhaps that is the invitation today. Before I bring my needs, I will bring my praise. Before I ask, I will acknowledge. Before I speak, I will remember who He is. Because when prayer begins in the right place, everything that follows is shaped by truth.
For further study on Solomon’s prayer and its meaning, consider this resource: https://www.biblestudytools.com/commentaries/matthew-henry-complete/1-kings/8.html
FEEL FREE TO COMMENT, SUBSCRIBE, AND REPOST, SO OTHERS MAY KNOW