Psalm 35
The LORD be exalted, who delights in the well-being of His servant
Introduction
Psalm 35 is a lament Psalm written by David, where he spends the almost the entire Psalm asking for God to enact judgement on those who oppose him.
Summary
v1-10 In battle
v11-26 In false witnesses
v27-28 Praise
In battle
The first example David brings up is one of violence, of people who fight against him, who lay traps against him. He prays for God to rescue him and to destroy his enemies.
In false witnesses
The second example is on people who verbally attack David - by slander, by unreasonable questioning, by backstabbing him. He prays for God's vindication and for his enemies to be put to shame.
Praise
The final section is on praise - where David praises God for taking care of his well being.
Now this is interesting. Should God, who already twice-over owns us (due to creation and redemption), have to care for our well being?
Some people argue yes - a good master cares for his servants.
Some argue no - since we are nothing but God's creation
My answer to this is no - God is not obliged to care for us. If we die, if we turn away, we are inconsequential - after all there are 6 billion other people. However, at the same time, God being good - cares for us out of His unending mercy and love.
I've often put it this way - appreciate that even though we reject God, God still saved us - we are twice His.
I guess it's time to put it differently - God saved us and loved us. We are thrice His.
The LORD be exalted, who delights in the well-being of His servant
Introduction
Psalm 35 is a lament Psalm written by David, where he spends the almost the entire Psalm asking for God to enact judgement on those who oppose him.
Summary
v1-10 In battle
v11-26 In false witnesses
v27-28 Praise
In battle
The first example David brings up is one of violence, of people who fight against him, who lay traps against him. He prays for God to rescue him and to destroy his enemies.
In false witnesses
The second example is on people who verbally attack David - by slander, by unreasonable questioning, by backstabbing him. He prays for God's vindication and for his enemies to be put to shame.
Praise
The final section is on praise - where David praises God for taking care of his well being.
Now this is interesting. Should God, who already twice-over owns us (due to creation and redemption), have to care for our well being?
Some people argue yes - a good master cares for his servants.
Some argue no - since we are nothing but God's creation
My answer to this is no - God is not obliged to care for us. If we die, if we turn away, we are inconsequential - after all there are 6 billion other people. However, at the same time, God being good - cares for us out of His unending mercy and love.
I've often put it this way - appreciate that even though we reject God, God still saved us - we are twice His.
I guess it's time to put it differently - God saved us and loved us. We are thrice His.
Comments
Post a Comment