Wednesday, October 13, 2021

Pride's Defeat

 October 12, 2021

 

Worship in WORD


Ps 31:14-18

 

14 But I trust in you, O Lord;

I say, "You are my God."

15 My times are in your hands;

deliver me from my enemies

and from those who pursue me.

16 Let your face shine on your servant;

save me in your unfailing love.

17 Let me not be put to shame, O Lord,

for I have cried out to you;

but let the wicked be put to shame

and lie silent in the grave.

18 Let their lying lips be silenced,

for with pride and contempt

they speak arrogantly against the righteous.

NIV

 

Ps 31:14-18

14 But I am trusting you, O Lord,

saying, "You are my God!"

15 My future is in your hands.

Rescue me from those who hunt me down relentlessly.

16 Let your favor shine on your servant.

In your unfailing love, rescue me.

17 Don't let me be disgraced, O Lord,

for I call out to you for help.

Let the wicked be disgraced;

let them lie silent in the grave.

18 Silence their lying lips—

those proud and arrogant lips that accuse the godly.

 

Holy Bible, New Living Translation ®, copyright © 1996, 2004 by Tyndale Charitable Trust. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers. All rights reserved.

Ps 31:14-18

14 But I trusted in thee, O LORD: I said, Thou art my God.

15 My times are in thy hand: deliver me from the hand of mine enemies, and from them that persecute me.

16 Make thy face to shine upon thy servant: save me for thy mercies' sake.

17 Let me not be ashamed, O LORD; for I have called upon thee: let the wicked be ashamed, and let them be silent in the grave.

18 Let the lying lips be put to silence; which speak grievous things proudly and contemptuously against the righteous.

 

KJV

Ps 31:14-18

14 But I trust in you, O Lord;

I say, “You are my God.”

15 My times are in your hand;

rescue me from the hand of my enemies and from my persecutors!

16 Make your face shine on your servant;

save me in your steadfast love!

17 O Lord, let me not be put to shame,

for I call upon you;

let the wicked be put to shame;

let them go silently to Sheol.

18 Let the lying lips be mute,

which speak insolently against the righteous

in pride and contempt.

ESV

 

I. Hope – vv. 1-8

                A.  Action – v. 1

                B.  Appeal – v. 2

                C.  Acknowledge – vv. 3-4

                D.  Abandon – v. 5

                E.  Abhor – v. 6

                F.  Acclaim! – vv. 7-8

II. Help! – vv. 9-18

A.  Sorrow – vv. 9-13

1. Soul sickness – vv. 9-10

2. Societal scorn – vv. 11-13

B.  Sovereign – vv. 14-18

1.       Surrender – vv. 14-15

2.       Shine – v. 16

3.     Shame – v. 17

4.     Silence – v. 18

III. Hail – vv. 19-22

IV. Heart – vv. 23-24

 

Thought flow: HopeHelp!HailHeart


David fled to the LORD for refuge (vv. 1-5). He felt the warm, calming breeze of God’s presence in the eye of the storm (vv. 6-8). In verses 9-13, he is fretting over the increasing volume of lies spewing from the mouths of his enemies. Lies that have caused many of his so-called friends to flee from David as well. Feeling forgotten by all, he turns to the friend that “sticks closer than a brother (Proverbs 18:24b).” In verses 14-15, he professes his confidence in the LORD and pleas for rescue from his persecutors. He continues his petition through verse 18.

Verse 15 & 16 follow the same pattern from different focal points. In verse 15, David focuses on God’s hand that has the power to deliver him.

My times are in your hand; rescue me from the hand of my enemies and from my persecutors! ESV

In verse 16, David focuses on the face of God that can bring favor and salvation.

Make your face shine on your servant; save me in your steadfast love! (ESV)

He follows in verses 17 & 18 with a quadruplet of  “Lets.” First, he starts out with a continuation of his petition in verse sixteen but from a negative standpoint.

O Lord, let me not be put to shame, for I call upon you (v. 17a ESV)

He follows it with three imprecations against his enemies. * (see note below concerning this if you wish)

1. let the wicked be put to shame (v. 17b)

2. let them go silently to Sheol (v. 17c)

3. Let the lying lips be mute, which speak insolently against the righteous in pride and contempt (v. 18)

In his prayer, it is as if David is asking God to shine His face on him in such a way that His glory will be reflected in David’s face and not the shame of his enemies. That this shame, instead, will be reflected in the face of his enemies. Not only this but their lips will be silenced as well.

Did David wish ill on his enemies out of a vengeful spirit? I don’t think so. Did he want them dead? Perhaps, but not so much from the hurt they brought David alone, but for the harm they brought to the “righteous” (v18) in general. And as God’s anointed king over His people, these lying enemies spoke ultimately against God Himself. They were God’s enemies!

Death is the ultimate silencer in the present. If that is what it took to stop the lying, then so be it. Verse 18 puts it another way and clarifies what David wanted to happen: “Let the lying lips be mute (ESV).” Verse 18  also displays the depravity of the persons these lips represented. These were lips that rolled off lies “with pride and contempt (NIV)” from hearts that “speak arrogantly against the righteous (NIV).”

God’s word has much to say against the proud and arrogant. Here are just a few:

·        Prov 16:18

      Pride goes before destruction,

      a haughty spirit before a fall.

      NIV 

·        Prov 3:34 (see also James 4:6; 1 Peter 5:5 which quote this verse)

He mocks proud mockers

but gives grace to the humble.

NIV 

·        Mal 4:1-3

"Surely the day is coming; it will burn like a furnace. All the arrogant and every evildoer will be stubble, and that day that is coming will set them on fire," says the Lord Almighty. "Not a root or a branch will be left to them. 2 But for you who revere my name, the sun of righteousness will rise with healing in its wings. And you will go out and leap like calves released from the stall. 3 Then you will trample down the wicked; they will be ashes under the soles of your feet on the day when I do these things," says the Lord Almighty.

NIV 

·        Zeph 2:10-11

10 This is what they will get in return for their pride,

for insulting and mocking the people of the Lord Almighty.

11 The Lord will be awesome to them

when he destroys all the gods of the land.

The nations on every shore will worship him,

every one in its own land.

NIV


Liars fare no better:


Rev 21:8

But the cowardly, the unbelieving, the vile, the murderers, the sexually immoral, those who practice magic arts, the idolaters and all liars — their place will be in the fiery lake of burning sulfur. This is the second death."

NIV


Even Psalm 31 itself contains a warning to the Proud:


Love the Lord, all his faithful people!

    The Lord preserves those who are true to him,

    but the proud he pays back in full. (v. 29 NIV)

 

Pride is self-idolatry. It sets up a wall between itself and God and His people. Pride has its fingers in its ears to block out the truth. Its foundations are sinking sand. Pride is selfish and self-destructive. Many others may be destroyed when pride finally implodes upon itself.

David knew this and sought instead the favor (“shine upon Your servant”) of the one in whom he found shelter. He knew that a humble spirit is the substance of the building material that God uses to build up His people. In vain do they build, who build with the wood, hay, and stubble of pride. In vain do they build, who build without the help of the Lord.

Unless the Lord builds the house,

those who build it labor in vain.

Ps 127:1 ESV

 

The Message (a paraphrase) puts it rather colorfully:


If God doesn't build the house,

the builders only build shacks.

(from THE MESSAGE: The Bible in Contemporary Language © 2002 by Eugene H. Peterson. All rights reserved.)rved.)

 

Ø Pride builds a shack – Humility builds a stronghold

Ø Pride builds a shoddy shanty – Humility builds a sturdy shelter

Ø Pride builds an unholy hut – Humility builds a holy haven

 

Worship in Witness:

 

So I must ask myself: Do I seek His face? Or to save face? Do I build with the eternal materials found in God’s word? Or the inferior materials of the flesh? Do I follow the designs of the Devine architect? Or the flawed blueprint of this fallen world? Do I build in such a way that gives all the credit, recognition, and glory to the LORD? Or do I seek the praise of this world or even of other believers? For, in the end, it is God who is in us that wills and works for His good pleasure (See Phil. 2:13).

 

And just in case you are wondering what God’s design will look like when He’s finished, consider these verses:

            Romans 8:29

For those God foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the likeness of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brothers.

  NIV

2 Cor 3:18

18 And we, who with unveiled faces all reflect the Lord's glory, are being transformed into his likeness with ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit.

NIV

1 John 3:2

Dear friends, now we are children of God, and what we will be has not yet been made known. But we know that when he appears, we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is.

NIV

 

The Father’s plan is for us to look like His Son!


And lest we think that we  can just sit back and watch the master-builder build while we take an extended break, John exhorts us:

1 John 3:3

Everyone who has this hope in him purifies himself, just as he is pure.

NIV

I alluded above to Paul’s promise to the Philippians in Chapter 2 verse 13, but note what precedes it:

Phil 2:12-13

12 So then, my beloved, just as you have always obeyed, not as in my presence only, but now much more in my absence, work out your salvation with fear and trembling; 13 for it is God who is at work in you, both to will and to work for His good pleasure.

NASB

 

Father,

Let me build my life according to the pattern of Your Son.

May I use the materials that You have provided,

not slothfully, but skillfully by the power of Your Holy Spirit.

Let me build with humility, 

seeking Your favor to shine upon me,

not ashamed of the Son, 

whose image You are constructing in me.

I know I am surrounded by mockers and liars who threaten me -

“There is terror on every side.” (v. 13)

But I am surrounded by Your presence.

I am protected in Your armor.

I wield the mightiest of weapons - 

the power of Your word.

Let me labor with one hand on the work - 

with the other on Your sword.

Amen

 


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Worship in Promise, Poem, Prayer, and Praise

 



Pride’s Defeat


Tear down the walls of pride

Behind which we try to hide

Uproot the root of conceit

That blossoms into defeat

Build in us the image of Christ

Who for our sins, was sacrificed

Plant within us seeds of humility

That gives us a humble ability

To walk in the strength of meekness

And not with haughty weakness

 

Your Boundless Supply

 

Lord,

 

I’ve built my life with useless things

The wood of worry, the hay of haste

The straw of sin, all bound with strings

 

Yet to this life may I apply

The gold of good, the silver of sacrifice

The jewels of joy from Your boundless supply

Amen

 

Empty Me by Chris Sligh (A song that has more meaning if you know he was an American Idol finalist in year 6 of the show)

 

I’ve had just enough of the spotlight when it burns bright

To see how it gets in the blood

And I’ve tasted my share of the sweet life and the wild ride

And found a little is not quite enough

 

I know how I can stray

And how fast my heart could change

 

Empty me of the selfishness inside

Every vain ambition and the poison of my pride

And any foolish thing my heart holds to

Lord, empty me of me so I can be

Filled with You

 

I’ve seen just enough of the quick buys, of the best lies

To know how prodigals can be drawn away

I know how I can stray

And how fast my heart could change

 

Empty me of the selfishness inside

Every vain ambition and the poison of my pride

And any foolish thing my heart holds to

Lord, empty me of me so I can be

Filled with You

 

‘Cause everything is a lesser thing

Compared to You, compared to You

‘Cause everything is a lesser thing

Compared to You so I surrender all

 

Empty me of the selfishness inside

Every vain ambition and the poison of my pride

 

Empty me of the selfishness inside

Every vain ambition and the poison of my pride

And any foolish thing my heart holds to

Lord, empty me of me so I can be

Lord, empty me of me so I can be filled with You

Oh, filled with You

Empty me

Lyrics and Video: https://awesomechristianmusic.com/chris-sligh/empty-me

 

 

* Note: Some may be struggling with a problem these imprecations in verses 17 & 18 might bring in the light of our Lord’s teaching in Matthew 5:4 to “love your enemies.” I do not wish to go into an extended discussion of this. I have already done this in a previous journal entry. Here is the link to it if you want to delve further into the subject:

https://journal4christ.blogspot.com/2019/01/january-7-2019-word-ps-281-5-28-to-you.html

I have also included a rather lengthy excerpt below in the “Further Notes:” section. It is identified by the title: Imprecations in the Psalms

 

Further Notes:

 

Here is the fourth excerpt from Lange’s commentary (Phillip Schaff, General Editor).

 

 

[Matth. Henry: They that have in sincerity avouched the Lord for theirs may expect the benefit of His being so, for God’s relations to us carry with them both name and thing.

 

—It is the wisdom and duty of every one of us solemnly to commit our spirits into the hands of God to be sanctified by His grace, devoted to His honor, employed in His service, and fitted for His kingdom.



—Those know not how to value their hope in God who cannot find joy enough in that hope to balance their grievances, and silence their griefs.

 

—Let those that are airy and gay take heed of running into extremes, and never set sorrow at defiance; God can find out ways to make them melancholy if they will not otherwise learn to be serious.

 

—Such swallow friends the world is full of, that are gone in winter. Let those that fall on the losing side not think it strange if they be thus deserted, but make sure a Friend in heaven that will not fail them, and make use of Him.

 

—There is enough in God’s goodness both for the portion and inheritance of all His children, when they come to their full age, and for their maintenance and education during their minority. There is enough in bank, and enough in hand.

 

—The saints are God’s hidden ones.

 

—Special preservations call for particular thanksgivings.

 

*******************************************************************

Psalms 31:16-18

The misery of the godly is the absence of the smile of heaven. The soul cannot be still while such darkness and such chill continues. It knows that the Lord can instantly cause brightness to return. Hence the strong petition, "Make Your face shine." This light is full salvation. Therefore faith adds, "Save me for Your mercies' sake." God's mercy is the only plea, but it is mighty and prevails. Mercy implored is mercy won. Grace ceases to be grace if it rejects the supplicant's cry. Prayer will never hang down its head abashed.

(from Commentary on the Psalms, by Henry Law, Biblesoft formatted electronic database Copyright © 2014 by Biblesoft, Inc. All rights reserved.)

 

 Imprecations in the Psalms

Many of the lament psalms include an imprecatory prayer (3:7; 5:10; 6:10; 7:14–16; 28:4–5; 31:17–18; 37:2, 9–10, 15, 20, 35–36; 40:14–15; 54:5; 55:9, 15, 23; 59:12–13; 63:9–11; 64:7–9; 71:13; 79:6, 12; 139:19–22; 140:9–10). These psalms are ascribed to David (35; 58; 69; 109), to Asaph (83), and to an unknown writer (137). The expression of hatred and the desire for vindication is not to be limited to the Psalms. It is also found in the prayers of Jeremiah (11:18–20; 15:15–18; 17:18; 18:19–23; 20:11–12) and Nehemiah (6:14; 13:29).

  In these prayers the people of God prayed for the Lord’s judgment, vengeance, and curse (execration) on their enemies. Their hatred for their enemies seems so opposed to the teaching of Jesus Christ and to the Christian emphasis on love that we must ask, How can a Christian read, sing, or pray the imprecatory psalms? How do these expressions of hatred correspond to Christ’s teaching on love? These psalms force us to look at prayer against the enemies of God and of the psalmists’ relationship between the Old and the New testaments.

  The Old and New testaments hold in tension the requirement of love and the hatred of evil. The requirement of love, including one’s enemy, comes from the OT (Lev 19:17–18; Prov 25:21). God is constant in his expectations, as he exemplifies love for his creation (Ps 145; Matt 5:45), even by the giving of his Son (John 3:16). But the NT also teaches that people are accountable to the Lord for their deeds (Acts 17:30–31) and as such are subject to God’s wrath. The Lord Jesus proclaimed a judgment on Korazin and Capernaum (Matt 11:21–24; Luke 10:13–15) and strongly rebuked the leaders and the unbelief of the Jews (Matt 7:23; cf. Ps 6:8; Mark 11:14; 12:9). The apostles counted the heretics and evildoers likewise accursed (1 Cor 5:5; 16:22; Gal 1:8–9; 5:12; 2 Tim 4:14 [cf. Ps 62:12]; 2 Peter 2; 2 John 7–11; Jude 3–16). In the parable of the unjust judge, our Lord encouraged the godly to persevere in prayer, confirming the conviction that God is just, as he will “bring about justice for his chosen ones, who cry out to him day and night” (Luke 18:7).

  In this spirit we must appreciate the cry of the martyrs in heaven, as they pray for God’s vindication (Rev 6:10) and rejoice in the judgment of the wicked (18:20; 19:1–6). The apostle Paul also encouraged oppressed Christians to look forward to the return of our Lord as the time appointed for God’s vindication of the church (2 Thess 1:6–10; cf. Ps 79:6). In this light we may appreciate the perspective of the psalms. Brueggemann writes,

 

    The Psalms are resources for spirituality.… That is, the spirituality of the Psalms is shaped, defined, and characterized in specific historical, experiential categories and shuns universals. Such recognition does not require a fresh exegesis of each psalm, so much as hermeneutical insistence about the categories through which the psalms are to be understood. But if I read it rightly, these Psalms characteristically subordinate “meaning” to “justice.” The Psalms regularly insist upon equity, power, and freedom enough to live one’s life humanely. (Message of the Psalms, pp. 175–76)

 

  But indiscriminate hatred is wrong. The psalmists wrote under the inspiration of God regarding the nature of evil. They were intoxicated with God’s character and name (9:16–20; 83:16–17) and were concerned with the manifestation of God’s righteousness and holiness on earth. Since evil contrasts in every way with God’s nature and plan, the psalmists prayed for divine retribution, by which God’s order would be reestablished (109:6–21) and God’s people would be reassured of his love (109:21, 26). C.S. Lewis, too, was sensitive to the piety of the psalter when he wrote on the place of justice and judgment in the Psalms. He observes that the cry of the psalmists may be explained, because they “took right and wrong more seriously” (Reflections on the Psalms, p. 31).

  Thus the imprecatory psalms focus on the reality of evil and the hope of restoration. This is a very relevant question. C.S. Lewis rightly asks us to use the Psalms as a way of seeing this world as it is: “Against all this the ferocious parts of the Psalms serve as a reminder that there is in the world such a thing as wickedness, and that it … is hateful to God” (ibid., pp. 19, 33). Further, we caution against a wooden interpretation of the imprecations, as Kidner observes, “Here we should notice that invective has its own rhetoric, in which horror may be piled up on horror more to express the speaker’s sense of outrage than to spell out the penalties he literally intends” (Psalms 1:27).

  For the Christian it is most important to uproot any selfish passions, judgmentalism, and personal vindictiveness, because those who practice these come under the judgment of God (Gal 5:15; James 4:13–16). These psalms help us to pray through our anger, frustrations, and spite to a submission to God’s will. Only then will the godly man or woman be able to pray for the execration of evil and the full establishment of God’s kingdom.

VanGemeren, W. A. (1991). Psalms. In F. E. Gaebelein (Ed.), The Expositor’s Bible Commentary: Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Songs (Vol. 5, pp. 830–832). Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House.

1 comment:

  1. Wow, what a thorough study and teaching. Awesome! God bless

    ReplyDelete