The Psalms are a collection of God
inspired songs; beautiful, poetic reflections of the whole range of human
emotions coupled with deep, theological truths. Prayers to God, praises about
God, expressions of grief, sorrow, doubt, joy, and happiness. It's like they
were written for you, to say for us what we feel in words we could not express ourselves.
They are like a mirror to help us see and understand what is really going on in
our hearts. They are like medicine for the soul living in a sin cursed world,
giving healing to our emotions, helping us to lament, to praise, or repent. David
Murray wrote "We sing to Jesus in the Psalms, we sing of Jesus in the
Psalms, and we sing with Jesus in the Psalms.
The Psalter begins with something
everyone wants -- happiness. The Hebrew word translated "blessed" means
happiness, and Psalm 1:1 begins "Blessed is the man..." In a book
designed to worship the true and living God, the inspired songbook begins,
"happy is the man." God's word and God's commands are not contrary to
human happiness. In fact, true joy and happiness is only found with God. This
Psalm makes the case that loving and worshiping God is not only man's chief
purpose (Deuteronomy 6:4-5); but it is also man's chief joy.
The happy man is the one who doesn't
follow the ways of an ungodly society. He doesn't stand with the sinner or sit
with the scornful (Psalm 1:1). The happy
man doesn't find direction inwardly, or by following the crowd. He doesn't find
delight in the same things the world does, but the happy man finds his pleasure
in God's word. The meditation of God's word brings joy, as opposed to the ways
of the sinner (Psalm 1:2). When you live by faith and your heart is full of God's
word, the fruit that produces in your life is stability, joy, and godly living
(Psalm 1:3).
Why avoid the way of the sinner? Because,
even though the house of the sinner may seem to bring happiness in the "seat
of the scornful", the way of the sinner is death (Psalm 1:6). The path of
the ungodly is not the established life, like the tree planted by the water,
but is like the dead, light, temporary wheat chaff that blows away with the
wind. Whereas a strongly planted tree won't be moved, the sinner is blown about
by his own nature and the course of this world (Psalm 1:4). Where the happy man
refuses to sit with the scorners and stand with sinners, the ungodly man will
not stand in the day of righteousness judgment or sit in the congregation of
the righteous. The happy man will walk alone with God; the ungodly man will
walk with the majority now, and die alone without God. This psalm instructs us
on how to live, encourages us in pursuing godliness, warns of the dangers of
wickedness, and confirms the way to happiness is with God.
No comments:
Post a Comment