Archive for July 2, 2014

This is a second take at a post that I did back in 2008.

God is for those who love Him.  “The Lord knows the way of the righteous…”  That does not mean that He simply has knowledge of them.  That is evident from the second half of the verse.  The second half of the verse is a contrast intended to provide clarity to the first.  “but the way of the wicked will perish.”  In other words, “knowing the way” is contrasted with “perishing.”  In other words, the Lord will establish the way of the righteous but He will confound and destroy the way of the wicked.  Certainly the rest of the Psalm has eloquently (in the language of Hebrew poetry) born out this truth.

It may be helpful at this point to make clear the difference between the righteous and the wicked.  These two terms may at first seem to convey a sense of inherent morality.  But that is not the point.  The difference between those who are considered righteous and those who are considered wicked, in this Psalm is clearly their response to the law of the Lord.  The godly are those who delight in the law of the Lord and who take their meditation in it day and night (a Hebrew way of saying at all times).  To take delight in God’s word is to take delight in Him in the same way that lovers hang on every word of their beloved.  Those who are wicked, by obvious intended contrast, do not take their delight in the the Lord, nor in His law.  They are described as “wicked”, “sinners”, “scoffers” particularly because they do not walk in His way.

In other words, those who are righteous in the eyes of the Lord are those who take His word seriously.  They are those who take delight in His word as truth, as valuable.  They are those who long for His word and who seek His word often above all other knowledge and philosophy.  God’s word is truth and those whom He considers righteous, acknowledge His word as truth.  By contrast, those are considered wicked who fail to acknowledge the truth, value and rightness of God’s word.  They do not delight in His word.  They ignore and reject His word.  They essentially ignore and reject Him because they reject His word.  They seek to make their own truth.  They may say  “if that is good for you, that’s fine” “this is good for me, I have my own truth.”  And they find it virtuous to encourage relative truth.  Truth, cannot by definition be relative.  Truth is absolute and objective.  The wicked reject God’s truth and they scoff at those who hold to it.

And yet, again, God is for those who are righteous.  While the wicked may scoff at his taking delight in God’s law, God rewards his faithfulness.  Verse 1 speaks of the “blessedness” (or happiness) of the man who is righteous.  And the many blessings are laid out and described in vivid word pictures that follow.  He is pictured as a “tree planted by the streams of waters”.  To be planted by the streams of waters is to be given the best access to the source of life.  It is to be placed in the best possible location for the roots of the tree to find the vital nutrients and refreshment that it needs to live and thrive.  The one who is righteous is given such a connection.  And this connection that he has informs us of why the rest of what is said is true.  Because of this vital connection to the source of life where this tree is planted, he bears fruit, he does not wither and he prospers.  He is a tree that “brings forth fruit in season”.  This doesn’t promise that there will be seasons where fruit is not borne.  But it does promise fruit in its season, at the right time.  When it is time for this tree to produce fruit, He will ensure that it does.  Moreover, “its leaf does not wither”.  That means it will not lose its vitality.  It will not grow weary in producing fruit, nor in waiting until the season to produce fruit comes.  Its leaf will not wither.  The tree may grow old.  It will last as long as it is intended.  But while it lasts, its leaf will not wither.  And “whatever he does he prospers”.  This man (or woman) is made to prosper in whatever he does, not because of his own piety, but because he has held fast to the word of God.  Because He honors God.  Because He takes delight in God through His word, God promises to bless, to fill with happiness by prospering him in whatever he does.  Certainly the “whatever he does” means whatever he does in the context of God’s divine will and purposes for Him.  For God would not bless “whatever he does” if whatever he does is in contradiction to His word (or else he would then fall into the category of the wicked).  These are some of the many blessednesses/happinesses of the one who is righteous, who delights in the word of God.

Does this describe you?  You who consider yourselves righteous.  Are you one who delights in the word and ways of God?  Do you take delight in knowing His mind, in knowing His truth and His way?  Do you take delight in pursuing His way, regardless of what scoffers say?  How does your life measure up to the one described in Psalm 1.  Are you delighting in the Word of God today?  Are you delighting in His way, His wisdom or in the wisdom of the wicked of this world?  One way for you to know is to measure yourself against the blessed one of Psalm 1.  Are you bearing fruit in season?  Are you maintaining a vibrant spiritual life or are you withering?  Are you prospering in your work, whatever the Lord has given you to do?  We all have seasons of life where one or more of these things may not be true for other reasons.  But these things should be generally true of us if we are staying connected to the source of life.  If we have taken hold of and delighted in the Word of God, these things should be true of us.

Perhaps you are on the other side of the coin.  Perhaps you are the wicked.  God does distinguish between those who are righteous and those who are wicked.  And it has nothing to do with our concept of what is right or wicked.  It has everything to do with His absolutely sovereign decision to declare righteous those who take delight in His word, His truth.  Perhaps you are wondering, “who is able to do such a thing?”  Who is able to fully take delight in the word and way of God through His law?  Who has not transgressed His law?  Here is the good news.  The good news is that there is One who has taken full delight in the law of God.  And from that One, the Lord Jesus Christ, the blessed One, the Righteous One, we are invited to share in His blessedness, His happiness by faith.

“BEHOLD, I LAY IN ZION A CHOICE STONE, A PRECIOUS CORNER stone, AND HE WHO BELIEVES IN HIM WILL NOT BE DISAPPOINTED.” (1Pe 2:6 NAU)

“BEHOLD, I HAVE COME TO DO YOUR WILL.” (Heb 10:9 NAU)

Jesus said to them, “My food is to do the will of Him who sent Me and to accomplish His work. (Joh 4:34 NAU)

“Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied. (Mat 5:6 NAU)

“Sanctify them in the truth; Your word is truth. (Joh 17:17 NAU)

28 And we know that God causes all things to work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to His purpose. (Rom 8:28 NAU)

And if anyone sins, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous;
2 and He Himself is the propitiation for our sins; and not for ours only, but also for those of the whole world. (1Jo 2:1-2 NAU)

 

The first thanksgiving feast was held in 1621 by the Pilgrims who made it during their voyage to America, through the harsh Winter in a new land and through their first major harvest in November with the help of the Native Americans.  They gave thanks, likely both for their Native American allies and as many of them were God-fearing, gave thanks to the God who had sustained them all of that time.  Thanksgiving was sporadically celebrated until 1863 when “at the height of the Civil War, in a proclamation entreating all Americans to ask God to ‘commend to his tender care all those who have become widows, orphans, mourners or sufferers in the lamentable civil strife’ and to ‘heal the wounds of the nation.'”

Thanksgiving is a commendable holiday…but it is very empty.  Most people celebrate thanksgiving for the sake of the tradition.  Typically what people do at this time of the year is take off of work, make lots of food, have family over (or go to visit), perhaps talk about what/who they are thankful for and eat…lots.  And afterward, as they are waiting for their food to digest, they sleep for about 5 hours, wake up before the rooster crows and head out to fight against time and one another in order to procure all of the things that they are sorry for not having and can get at a bargain.  Wait one year and repeat.  For those dear folks thanksgiving is nothing more than a holiday tradition.  An exercise, as it were.  They are no more thankful in their hearts on Thanksgiving Day than they are the other 364 days of the calendar year.

Others may yet be thankful.  They think of things that they have gained throughout the year as well as things that they have lost.  They think of people who have come and gone.  They reminisce and have feelings of nostalgia with one another about times past and are thankful for the experiences.  And yet even for them, Thanksgiving can be very empty.

I say that Thanksgiving can be empty because often when Thanksgiving is spoken of, it is spoken of as an end of itself.  We are to “give thanks” and that is all.  It has become a virtue to simply be thankful.  It seems to never occur to those who would celebrate Thanksgiving in this way, that what must accompany gratitude is an object or else it is empty.  I mean, what use is it to simply be thankful to no one or no thing?  If there is no one who has brought all the things that we are thankful for to pass then it is really meaningless to give thanks.  Either things are subject to chance or we have worked out our own destiny under our own strength at which point we are giving thanks to ourselves…which all of us know (if we are honest) that we are really in control of very little, if anything at all (otherwise people would never feel “helpless”, “out of control”, “weak”).

If we are subject to chance then we are to give thanks to chance for things turning out “right.”  At which point we are forced to ask the question “what is chance?”  If chance is some thing or some one then chance would have to be God, in the way that people commonly refer to chance.  If chance is no thing or no one then it is pointless to give thanks to nothing.  If however we are subject to a “higher power” than when we give thanks, we must give thanks to him/her/it.  It would be presumptuous and insulting for us to do otherwise.

We all understand in our heart of hearts that there is One to whom we must give thanks.  Though we also recognize that if we give thanks to Him then we are acknowledging our dependence upon Him which is something that most are not willing to do.  And yet if we do not give thanks to someone then we are giving thanks to no one, which is in essence an exercise in futility.  So we should either forego the act of thanksgiving all together or simply acknowledge the One who is in fact worthy of our thanksgiving, namely God above.

Christians are commanded:

in everything give thanks, for this is the will of God for you in Christ Jesus.

“In everything” means in every situation and at all times.

“This is the will of God for you” as much as your sanctification, that your life be characterized by thanksgiving.

“This is the will of God for you in Christ Jesus”. This charge is for those who know Him, for those, above all men, ought to be the most thankful.

This holiday above all others should be owned by the Christian. We should have a word of thanks on our hearts and lips, not only once a year, but as a daily practice.

I will give thanks to the LORD with all my heart; I will tell of all Your wonders.
2 I will be glad and exult in You; I will sing praise to Your name, O Most High.
(Psa 9:1-2 NAU)

4 Sing praise to the LORD, you His godly ones, And give thanks to His holy name.
5 For His anger is but for a moment, His favor is for a lifetime; Weeping may last for the night, But a shout of joy comes in the morning. (Psa 30:4-5 NAU)

2 Give thanks to the LORD with the lyre; Sing praises to Him with a harp of ten strings.
3 Sing to Him a new song; Play skillfully with a shout of joy.
4 For the word of the LORD is upright, And all His work is done in faithfulness.
5 He loves righteousness and justice; The earth is full of the lovingkindness of the LORD. (Psa 33:2-5 NAU)

Oh give thanks to the LORD, call upon His name; Make known His deeds among the peoples.
2 Sing to Him, sing praises to Him; Speak of all His wonders.
3 Glory in His holy name; Let the heart of those who seek the LORD be glad. (Psa 105:1-3 NAU)

Oh give thanks to the LORD, for He is good, For His lovingkindness is everlasting. (Psa 107:1 NAU)