Broken Bows and Slaying Swords, Pt. 1 (Psalm 37:12-15)
A righteous versus wicked conflict permeates Scripture from Genesis to modern times. Through Psalm 37, we see how the wicked plot against God's people with drawn swords and bent bows. Yet despite this hostility, the righteous are assured of God's protection and ultimate victory. The sermon examines this spiritual warfare and its implications for believers today—an exposition of Psalm 37:12-15.
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Transcript
You're listening to the expository preaching ministry of Kootenai Community Church located in Kootenai, Idaho We pray that Christ is exalted and your spirit is blessed by the teaching of God's Word For more information about Kootenai Church, please visit us online at Kootenai church org
Returning now back to Psalm 37. It's been a few weeks So in case you are new or in case you have forgotten where we were at and what we were doing
I'll give you a brief review of Psalm 37 and what we have covered so far This is a psalm that addresses the issue of the prosperity of the wicked and how the righteous should respond to that Prosperity and to the wicked and really the emphasis or focus of the psalm is on what the righteous receive from God Rather than focusing on what the wicked get in this life
The psalmist focuses our hearts and attention upon what the righteous will receive in the life that is to come
In verses 1 to 8 and well, let me back up when we started this psalm I gave you an an eight -point outline for this psalm eight headings as it were
Verses 1 to 8 describes the peace of the righteous this describes how it is that we live
The righteous can be at peace in a world surrounded by the wicked In verses 1 to 8 we're told how that is possible verse 3
We're to trust in the Lord verse 4 We are to delight ourselves in the Lord verse 5 commit our way to the
Lord and verse 7 rest in the Lord That is the path to peace in this world surrounded by the wicked then in verses 9 to 11
We saw the promise to the righteous. That is that the righteous will receive an eternal prosperity in a renewed land
That is blessed by God and purged of the wicked The wicked will be cut off and the righteous will inherit the land that is the central
Promise of this psalm as the psalmist brings back to our minds again and again that Old Testament Promise that the wicked will be cut off and the righteous will receive the land in fulfillment to what
God promised to Abraham in fulfillment What God promised to David in fulfillment to what
God promised through all of the prophets even up to the very end of the Old Testament Era, the righteous will inherit the land that is a land that will be renewed
Regenerated and it will be a land that is purged of the wicked Now we come to the third heading of the psalm verses 12 through 15 and we notice the protection of the righteous
So let's read verses 12 through 15 and then I'll break this down a little bit and show you how we're going to tackle it today verse 12 of Psalm 37 the wicked plots against the righteous and Gnashes at him with his teeth the
Lord laughs at him for he sees his day is coming The wicked have drawn the sword and bent their bow to cast down the afflicted and the needy to slay those who are upright in Conduct their sword will enter their own heart and their bows will be broken
And in those four verses we see that God's judgment on the wicked will bring all of their evil back upon their own heads
God's judgment on the wicked will bring all of their evil back upon their own heads What the wicked devise what they plan what they plot what they purpose will all be turned back on them to their own
Destruction. This is the ultimate end of all the wicked The evil that the wicked bring upon others is visited on their own heads as they suffer
The very things that they had planned and plotted and purposed for others We would call this poetic justice and it is certainly an expression of God's justice
It is not unjust for the wicked to receive the very thing that they have plotted and and purposed for others in their wickedness and in their oppression
So verses 12 and 15 is one year versus 12 through 15 is one unit and I want you to see how there is a structure
To these verses. There's actually two different kinds of Hebrew parallelism here Not only parallelism between verses but parallelism between sets of verses
So notice verses 12 and 14 are parallel ideas Look at verse 12 the wicked plots against the righteous and gnashes at him with his teeth verse 14 the wicked have drawn the sword and bent their bow to cast down the
Afflicted and the needy and to slay those who are upright in conduct Those two verses are saying the same thing in different words.
So those two verses are similar There's a parallelism there between those two then there's a parallelism between verse 13 and verse 15 as well
This is the parallelism of the response or the justice that comes look at verse 13
The Lord laughs at him for he sees his day is coming describing the day of judgment
Verse 15 their sword will enter their own heart and their bows will be broken so in verses 12 and 14
The parallelism describes the actions of the wicked their plots their plans what they're doing how they're doing it why they're doing it describes what they're doing
Then verses 13 and 15 Describe the justice that is going to come upon them so what you have in verses 12 and 13 is a description of the wicked and a description of something that happens to them and then in verses 14 and 15 you have a
Description of the wicked and a description then in verse 15 is something that happens to them So 12 and 13 go together 14 and 15 go together 12 and 14 go together 13 and 15 go together
So that those two 12 and 13 go together with 14 and 15. Do you see all that brilliant, isn't it?
You didn't even notice that was there Did you till I pointed it out and even some of you still don't understand what I just said you're like I don't have a clue how that's parallel, but I'll take your word for it
Okay, if you're gonna take my word for it, then here's what we're gonna do We're gonna group together the similar verses that is 12 and 14 and deal with those under one heading since they kind of go together
And then we'll take 13 and 15 and deal with those under one heading since they kind of go together
So here is our two -point outline for the passage first in verses 12 and 14
The psalmist describes the pernicious plans of the wicked in 12 and 14
Then in verse 13 and 15 the psalmist describes the poetic Punishment of the wicked their pernicious plans and their poetic judgment their poetic punishment
All right So let's deal with 12 and 14 and we're gonna deal with that the pernicious plans of the wicked
Verse 12 and 14 today and then next week. We will address the poetic punishment that comes their way
I had originally sort of put all of this together into one message and then I had to make a
Game -time audible decision this morning to break this into two because I thought there's no way that you can talk about the beauty of poetic justice in verses 13 and 15 and Cram that in after everything
I plan to say this morning So we're gonna break it into two parts first the pernicious plans of the wicked in verses 12 and 14
Let's read together verses 12 and 14 again The wicked plots against the righteous as gnashes at him with his teeth the wicked have drawn the sword and bent their bow to cast down the afflicted and the needy and to slay those who are upright in conduct
Now you can notice that the language of those two descriptions is the language of conflict and war opposition hostility enmity strife
Conflict you can see it in the words that are used the military imagery of the swords and the bows
It is describing a battle between two forces or two camps the righteous and the wicked between Two forces or camps that are set against each other in an animosity and a hostility one with another
That's what's being described here the wicked against the righteous Now it didn't start in psalm 37 it didn't start in David's day
It didn't start with David's dad or his grandfather or his great -grandfather. Where did the enmity start in?
The garden is where it started in fact This distinction between the righteous and the wicked goes all the way back to the
Garden of Eden in Genesis chapter 3 When after Adam and Eve rebelled and ate the fruit
God condemned the man condemned the woman and then also Issued a judgment upon the serpent
Genesis 3 15 says I will put enmity notice the language of hostility and conflict
I will put enmity between you and the woman and between your seed and her seed and He shall bruise you on the head and you shall bruise him on the heel
Now that is a prophecy of the Messiah It is the very first proclamation of God's gospel
That there would come one who would come from a woman the seed of the woman is unique language there in Hebrew and it is
Intended I think as a foreshadowing of the virgin birth of the Lord Jesus Christ there would come one who would be born of a woman whose triumph would be to crush the serpents head and In the process his that is the seed of the woman his heel would be bruised
So there is obviously a conflict between the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent that is the offspring of the woman all of Adam and Eve's descendants and there is this a conflict or sorry the seed of the woman being the righteous seed of the woman and then there is a conflict between all of those who
Are of the serpent who go along with his his seed his people there's two camps and there is enmity and hostility between these two camps and there always has been since the garden and There always will be
Until the Prince of Peace comes back and until that enmity is removed When as we see in Psalm 37 the wicked are cut off and the righteous inherit the land
Then there will be no enmity and no hostility But until that time Genesis 3 15 describes this constant conflict
God's people against the serpents people the serpent being the devil So it is a war or a conflict and enmity between God's people and the devil's people
This is not a hot conflict in the sense that we use weapons and we go to war and we draw our swords
That is not the point of the passage. The point of the passage is that there is a truth war There is a spiritual war that is waging between the forces of darkness and the forces of light
The righteous are on one side and the wicked on the other the chosen out of this world on one side in one camp and Satan's offspring his
Spiritual descendants his spiritual workers of iniquity are on the other side Jesus described this hostility in John 15 18 and 19 the world hates you
You know that it has hated me before it hated you and if you were of the world the world would love its own But because I chose you out of the world and you're not of the world.
Therefore the world hates you That's John 15 notice what Jesus did there divided all of humanity into two camps those whom he has chosen and The world that is everyone else there is no middle ground
Between no common ground between those two camps and there is no third category in the middle
All of humanity is divided into those two camps the sheep and the goat the wheat and the chaff it is divided between the righteous and the wicked the seed of the serpent and the seed of the woman between those who belong to God and Those who do not between those who are of Christ and chosen by him and those who are in the world
Those are the two camps You're reconcilable spiritual moral intellectual and an eternal hostility between those two camps and there can be no
Partnership between them because there is no common ground and there is no common convictions between them that are of any kind of lasting import or significance
This conflict is repeatedly described in the Psalms and and we look already looked at two of them when we're in Psalm 1 and Psalm 2
You remember we saw the same conflict there are those who walk according to the counsel of the wicked who stand in the path of sinners and Sit in the seat of the scoffer and then there is the blessed man.
Those are the two camps and The Lord knows the way of the righteous but the way of the wicked will perish.
There's two ways and The righteous are like a tree planted by the rivers of water that flourishes and prospers and bears its fruit and its season and the wicked
Are like chaff there is that distinction right at the head of the Psalter the very first Psalm and then
Psalm 2 Gets into that same conflict why do the nation's rage and the people's plot a vain thing the kings of the earth take their stand and the rulers take counsel together against the
Lord and against his anointed saying let us tear off their chains and cast their fetters from us there is this conflict or this war the kings of the earth take their stand against the king of kings and Those who follow the kings of the earth take their stand and wage war in hostility and animosity
Against those who belong to the king of kings and so is there there is this war between the seat of the serpent and the seat of the woman
The war between the righteous and the wicked it is a war ultimately
That is the world's hatred on the righteous because they represent Jesus Christ That's really what it boils down to their hatred of the righteous is a hatred of us because we represent
Jesus Christ How do they express it look at verse 12 the wicked plots against the righteous those are the two camps
But look at verse 12. He gnashes at him with his teeth The imagery there shows their hatred and their anger
This is how the wicked fret Remember we talked about fretting back in verses 1 to 8 Do not fret over the evildoer or be anxious because of their envious of the wicked there.
What does it mean to fret? fretting in verse 1 and mentioned again in verse 7 and then in verse 8 that fretting meant to become hot or angry to Heat oneself up in vexation you get stirred up in your spirit anxious
Driven over these things you get boiling on the inside. It's a form of anger fretting is a form of anger
That word fret is sometimes used to describe God's anger. It's sometimes used to describe man's anger
How is it that the righteous are tempted to respond to the wicked by fretting getting angry? But look at the anger as it is as as describes the wicked
The wicked are angry as well and that is expressed through the gnashing of the teeth That is vivid imagery, isn't it the gnashing of the teeth?
Do you live with somebody who just grinds their teeth all the time? Sometimes that can be just like a habit that you have because nobody's ever slapped you and told you not to grind your teeth
So you just grind your teeth this is not that kind of a habit This is the same idea the grinding or the gnashing of the teeth, but here it describes the deep -seated anger it's the imagery of a wild beast that would chew and Consume and devour something the gnawing of the teeth the clenched jaw the imagery the language is intended to describe not just sort of a
Casual hostility that might exist between two unreconcilable camps But on the one side that is with the wicked the very real angry angry murderous and violent desire to destroy those who are the righteous they would devour if they could and Let us not let us not be confused about this
If there were no restraining hand of government and law and if there were no restraining hand of God's grace and If there were no restraining hand in others able to defend themselves
The wicked if they had their way would devour the righteous off the face of the earth eliminate them entirely we should realize that and Be thankful that we have the restraints in place that we do have
That keep that from happening to the degree that it would happen if it were not for those restraints
Psalm 2 verse 1 describes the nations in an uproar But we talked about that in Psalm 2 the language there describes like the tossing of the sea the raging the frothing of the waves
This describes the nations the nations are in this uproar this angry frothing state
Why is that because they are allied against the Lord and against his anointed it is the righteous that they hate
They grind their teeth Spurgeon says by this quote the wicked show by their gestures what they would do if they could
If they cannot gnaw they will gnash and if they may not bite they will at least bark close quote.
That's beautiful It's poetic speaking about poetic justice That's poetic language if they can't gnaw at you, then they will gnash their teeth without you
But it does describe their anger their visceral hatred So as believers we are told not to fret we are called to not fret verse 1
Do not fret because of evildoers not be envious of the wicked the wrongdoers Verse 7 and 8 rest in the
Lord wait patiently for him Do not fret because of him who prospers in his way because of the man who carries out evil schemes
Verse 8 cease from anger and forsake wrath do not fret it leads only to evil doing so here We as the righteous are are called are commanded to not respond in our own form of anxious vitriolic anger over the prosperity of the wicked that the psalm describes
So there's an anger that we can fall into as well We need to be aware of that and there is an anger that the the wicked have at the righteous and that is described in Verse 12 with that phrase he gnashes at him with his teeth
We are we are not called to gnash our teeth back in response at the wicked that is easy to do
When you see people who deserve prison given presidential medals of freedom
Lined up like candy in a PEZ dispenser and they're handed out one right after another
The response of the righteous could be to just gnash your teeth at such injustice and corruption
Probably most of us here wanted to do that at some point say in the last three or four days
Just tempted to do that. But our response is not to do that Not to fret and not to gnash our teeth back at the wicked
Especially when they prosper in their way. It's the point of the psalm One has to wonder then why is it that the wicked in this psalm are so angry?
Why are they so angry? You see the language that's used to describe it. They're gnashing their teeth Why are they so angry?
What are the righteous ever done to deserve that you wanted that? What did I ever do to elicit the hatred of the wicked?
The answer that is nothing Likely unless you've done something, but I guess I'll speak for myself personally
I don't think I've ever done anything to elicit the hatred of the wicked Why are they so angry?
Why should they be so angry since they are the ones prospering in their way, right? Doesn't that what verse 7 says do not fret because of him who prospers in the way
Isn't it true that the wicked in this world usually get all the things that they want and desire they have their way
They do their sin. They commit their sin and they're the one who prospers in it Meanwhile, we would adopt the language of Psalm 73 where ASAP says
I've been chastened every day. I go without I'm Under affliction. I have to deal with difficulties and trials and temptations and tribulations and illnesses and sicknesses and and want and these things are the things that come upon the righteous and then you look at the wicked and you see them they are at ease and they
Are comfortable and they die at ease and they die in comfort and they are remembered and everybody lauds them and celebrates them and the righteous
Don't get any of that. Why could the why are the wicked so angry? Why are they so hostile when they are the ones who are prospering in this world their plans succeed?
They benefit from their iniquity. They are in ease and comfort. They have this world's goods it seems in abundant measure the world applauds their iniquities and celebrates their perversions their entire months of our calendar year that are dealt dedicated to celebrating sexual perversion and immorality and Their entire legislative branches of government and committees of government that are designed and intended to do nothing
But give themselves entirely to the promotion of all this iniquity so that the world lauds its own perversions and celebrates its own immorality and prospers itself in all that it does
And since they get everything that they want and they enjoy everything that they're pursuing and since it seems that at least in the short term
They lack nothing Why would they be so angry? What is it that causes them to be so angry?
You know what it is It is because This is the judgment that the light has come into the world and men love darkness rather than light
That's why they hate it They hate the light Jesus said men love darkness rather than light because their deeds were evil and everyone who does evil hates the light and does not come
To the light for fear that his deeds will be manifest That's John 3 19 and 20 scripture calls the righteous the children of light
Ephesians 5 8 It calls us children of the day sons of the day and sons of light in 1st Thessalonians 5 verse 5 and darkness hates the light
Because the light is a constant remember a reminder to those who are in darkness that their judgment is coming and that there's something
Beyond this world that they are not living for that. They are going to be held accountable to And that constant reminder is enough to fill them with rage
The wicked are reminded at least of the eschatological judgment that is to come and so they lash out in hatred in anger with visceral hatred
Gnashing at the righteous with their teeth Look at the weapons of their warfare described in verse 14
The wicked have drawn the sword and bent their bow To cast down the afflicted and the needy and to slay those who are upright in conduct.
That's verse 14 It's military imagery that is used bow and sword. These are the weapons of warfare and destruction violence murderous weapons
Destruction is in their paths The sword it says in verse 14 is drawn they have drawn the sword not just that they have a sword
But like a soldier who has pulled his weapon and unsheathed his sword He is ready and stationed and positioned for battle and not just that but he has bent his bow that word bent
There means to to march out or to tread out and the idea is they've grabbed the bow and they have marched it out
They have bent that bow back They have pulled it back as far as they can and they have put an arrow in that bow and it is aimed not
Randomly in any sense whatsoever. It is aimed at the righteous The sword is drawn because they are ready to shed blood for their cause and to persecute and prosecute
Those who are the righteous. This is the nature of that warfare a a bloody murderous and violent imagery
They stand ready to devour gnashing their teeth Swords -drawn bows bent back
Ready to do their mischief. They have the means and this is the scary part. They have the means to carry out their ends this is what the
Psalmist is describing not just somebody who gnashes their teeth, but has no power in their hands to Commit their atrocities, but one who is filled with anger gnashing his teeth and then he has all of the weapons necessary To wage his warfare against the sons of light
So he has the weapons and they're drawn and they're primed and they're ready to draw blood
This could refer it couldn't describe both verbal assaults as well as physical assaults
There's some who suggest that all this being described here is just the use of the wicked though how the wicked use their tongues
They're like arrows or they're like swords. They pierce they go after they heart harm and they they hurt us and That that's what the wicked do with their violent gnashing of the teeth that this is just the words of their mouth that is intended false accusations ridicule verbal abuse
Slander the Lord did suffer this he was reviled and he reviled not that I reviled not back It's true that the wicked do sometimes lash out at the righteous with their mouths with their words
But I don't think that that's all that the psalmist has in mind because down in verse 32
He describes the works of the wicked Psalm verse 32 Psalm 37 verse 32 the wicked spies upon the righteous and seeks to kill him
So it seems as if the the psalmist David has in mind here not just some sort of verbal assault, but actually physical intention to kill and destroy the righteous
To oppress to jail to persecute to pursue to kill and exploit to rob the righteous
This is what the wicked intend to do Shouldn't surprise us since in John 8 44 Jesus said to the
Pharisees of his day You're of the father of the devil He was a liar from the beginning and a murderer from the beginning and he doesn't stand in the truth because the truth is not in him so if there is an enmity between the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent it should not surprise us that those who
Are of the seed of the serpent his spiritual offspring would themselves wage war and it would be bloody and violent and murderous against the righteous
Those who rage against the righteous serve the interests of the serpent the heart of unbelieving man is full of hatred and violence and this really is what
What hatred is it is a violation of that commandment to not murder thou shalt not murder So the one whose heart is full of violence and hatred is one in whose heart murderous intent dwells
They hate and they gnash with their teeth. They have bent their bows. They have drawn their sword
They are ready and willing and able Now that is a daunting picture.
Is it not? It's a daunting picture. It's one that you will see repeated in the
Psalms in Multitudes of locations in the Psalms if you're familiar with the Psalms you've read through it
You know that even the passage that we read at the beginning of the service today from Psalm 10 Psalm 7 is another
Psalm 22 is another there's this language all the way through the Psalms of the Advantage that the wicked has in their war against the righteous and how the righteous are the
Undefended and the vulnerable ones against whom the wicked wage their violent warfare examples of this in Scripture abound even from the very beginning there will be enmity between your seed and her seed between the seed of the woman in your seed and Between you and the woman there is this enmity that exists and then what do we see in the very next chapter?
Cain kills Abel Why? Abel had a sacrifice that got approved and Cain did not and so Cain slew his brother
Had Abel ever done anything worthy of such treatment at the hands of his brother? no, but there is enmity between the seed of the serpent and the seed of the woman and That enmity existed in the garden and it cost
Abel his life even in Noah's day It says that the hearts of men were full of evil and the intentions that are hot with hearts was evil
Continually and that they were the violence had filled the earth Genesis chapter 6 says That's the hostility
Saul hunts David and tries to kill David the prophets are persecuted the church throughout history has been persecuted
Believers put to death today street preachers are imprisoned in countries all over the planet
Even in the one that is to the north of us not very far away Pro -lifers are jailed and labeled terrorists domestic terrorists
Preachers who preach against immorality and the profaning of marriage or stand against the narrative of this world are targeted sometimes jailed and imprisoned sometimes
Prosecuted by the by an unrighteous government. The true church is persecuted even today all the way around the world
That's the reality of the world in which we live and I'm grateful that the Word of God is honest about this situation and doesn't sugarcoat any of it because there's no sugarcoating going on with any of this and Look at the targets of their prosecution and persecution in verse 14
The goal of the wicked is to cast down the afflicted and the needy and to slay those who are upright in conduct
I love how David describes the the righteous in that verse the afflicted and the needy
These are the objects of the the malice of the wicked the afflicted and the needy and those who are upright in their conduct
Now it is not to say that all of the righteous that all of them are always afflicted and always needy but it is
David's way of describing that the wicked do not target those who can defend themselves or Target those who are deserving of such treatment the wicked do not prosecute and go after their equals
They go after those who are in many ways less in terms of their ability to defend than themselves
These people the afflicted and the needy these are people who because of their poverty or because of their inability physical inability are
Unable to defend themselves against the wicked so they are sitting ducks in front of the wicked The schoolyard bully never goes out and finds the the biggest tallest toughest strongest kid on the playground to bully him
He doesn't do that the bully avoids that person and finds the the little kid who shows up with Looking needy and afflicted and can't defend himself
That's who the bully targets the wicked do the same thing the wicked are not after engaging their equals
The wicked are after engaging the afflicted and the needy to prosecute and go after those who cannot defend themselves they're even they're easy pickings and in this sense humanly speaking
This conflict is a lopsided conflict, isn't it? I mean it seems to suggest that the righteous in this passage have neither bow
Nor sword nor shield nor anything to defend themselves they are
Lying undefended and unarmed and the wicked have all of the advantages on their side
You might say that they have all the levers of power. They have all the levers of influence they have all the positions of strength they have all of the ability to do these things if they want to and The righteous if you happen to be in the path or become the target of the wicked there is almost nothing you could do
You can see how lopsided it feels Those whom the wicked go after are those who are upright in their conduct meaning this is undeserved
The righteous have done nothing to court this they didn't bring this on themselves They didn't do anything or live in such a way as to treat the unbelievers in any kind of way that deserves this
What did Cain do or what did Abel do to Cain to deserve being murdered nothing? What did
Noah do in his day to deserve the taunts and the heckles and the hatred of those around him while he built the ark?
nothing What did David do to Saul to court Saul's violent and murderous rage?
Nothing. He slayed a Philistine rallied the army gave it all back to Saul and then went into Saul's court and played a harp for him and calmed him down and and strengthened his kingdom if anything and Yet Saul aimed all of his weapons of warfare against David so as to kill
David What did Jeremiah ever do to the leaders of his day? He proclaimed faithfully the
Word of God told them Nebuchadnezzar was coming why Nebuchadnezzar was coming gave them an escape route told them what they
Could do to get God's blessing and what did they do to Jeremiah? They threw him in a pit They threw him down in the mire.
They beat him. They prosecuted him. They burned his scrolls What did the righteous ever do to the wicked to be treated that way the answer is nothing?
What did Stephen ever do to deserve being buried beneath a pile of stones? what did Jesus ever do to the people of his day to deserve being hung on a cross in the heat of the day and To endure the taunts and afflictions of the people walking by that day.
What did he ever do to them? He healed their sick. He raised their dead. He gave sight to the blind.
He made the lame walk He taught them the Word of God He responded to them with grace and mercy and compassion
Called them to repentance in short. He did nothing to deserve that what did Peter do to deserve being crucified upside down?
What did Paul do to deserve being? beaten five times and shipwrecked and enduring hunger and taunts and being falsely accused by his brethren and chased from city to city and eventually being
Arrested and spending two years in Caesarea and then shipped off to Rome where he spends two years under house arrest in Rome Only to be released and then hunted and hounded again
Chasen thrown into a prison cell where he has to write to Timothy Hey winter is coming. Send me my books.
Bring me my cloak. Come with me and see me before they take my head off my paraphrase what did
Paul ever do to deserve that the answer is nothing and The story could be told of every martyr and every righteous person who has died at the hands of the wicked throughout all of history
We have done nothing to deserve that the issue of the psalm the issue of the Prosecution of the righteous by the wicked is not an issue of what they have deserved
It is an issue of who we belong to and what we are That's what it boils down to what we stand for who we are who we belong to These are the ones who are upright in their conduct
Peter says in first Peter chapter 4 verses 14 and 15 make sure that none of you suffer as a murderer or a thief or an
Evildoer, but if anyone suffers as a Christian, he is not to be ashamed but to glorify God in that name
So if you're going to become the target of the wicked Make sure that it's not because you have done anything worthy of being a target
And then if you become a target of the wicked then rejoice Bear that name well
In the language of Hebrews bear the reproach of Christ and go outside the gate Because that's where the righteous belong outside the gate and there we bear the reproach of Christ So what are the righteous done to deserve this type of hatred?
Nothing, and yet these are the pernicious plans of the wicked we can expect this in this life
This is what we are called to this is what is described for us Old Testament and New Testament Until the wicked are cut off and the righteous inherit the land
This is going to describe what we should expect in this world those who desire to live godly in Christ Jesus will suffer persecution
Now if you're not under this kind of affliction if you walk out of here today and think you know what For 40 minutes
Jim. I gave it some thought. I can't think of any unbeliever who wants me dead right now Does that mean
I'm not a believer to mean I'm not righteous No, not necessarily There are all kinds of restraints in place right now that keep that from being expressed each and every day against the righteous
But I understand that what is being described here is the very real war that exists between these two kingdoms
And you and I are in the middle of that conflict You are on one side of that or you are on the other side of that So you you might not have to fear for your life as you walk out of here
Take your firearm and shoot your way to your car to get out of here on your way home That's not what the psalmist is describing, but it is suggesting it is telling us that in this world.
This is the conflict This is the hostility that exists You and I believers We can thank
God that he has rescued us from the seat of the serpent
That he has taken us out of that camp That if you are in this conflict and you are on the side of the seat of the woman on the side of Christ You are among God's people.
You're the chosen You're not of this world because you've been chosen out of this world You owe that to nothing but the grace of God if it were not for that grace
We would be rebels in our hearts, but God by his grace has subdued our rebellious hearts
He has subdued our rebellious wills and by his grace. He has adopted his enemies into his family
Adopting us as his sons and he did this not without changing our nature
But instead by his grace and the work of the Holy Spirit. He made to us as believers
Christ precious So that we see in the Sun our salvation our
Deliverance our redemption our eternal joy our eternal glory all of that we see in Christ Not because we have the ability in and of ourselves to see that but because but God By his grace has changed our hearts and opened our eyes to that reality and by an act of his grace and his regenerating work
God has taken sinners and saved them out of their rebellion Subduing their wicked will subduing their
Gnashing teeth and turned them into sons who gladly received that adoption and believe that Christ is precious
That is what God has done to you Christian So we thank God for his rescue of us from the marketplace of sin that he has paid the price
Necessary to redeem us from that iniquity and that he has paid the price and the penalty for our sin that that Wickedness this describes if you are in Jesus Christ this describes what you once were
So meditate upon that and then think I've been rescued from that saved from that.
God has redeemed me from that He has changed me from that So yeah now I moved into the vulnerable camp
I'm in the camp that in this world feels like it is Upside down in this world feels like we are the targets of all the wicked
But the eternal promise is that in the world that is to come God will cut off the wicked and the righteous will inherit the land and we owe that Solely and only to the work of God's grace that he has not winked at our sin
He does not ignore our sin But they sent his son the Lord Jesus Christ to atone for our sin to pay the price for our sin every last one of your iniquities transgressions and Sins was laid upon the
Lord Jesus Christ if you are in him He has taken your sin and he has provided for you his righteousness.
That is the good news of the gospel So you would be in this camp the wicked plotting against the righteous gnashing your teeth at the light hating the light and loving darkness basking in your iniquity
That would describe you if we're not for the sovereign and gracious Mercy of God who loves sinners saves rebels brings them to his table to dine with him.
That is a merciful salvation Thank you for listening to the latest podcast from Kootenai Church If you'd like to learn more about Kootenai Church or to donate to our church ministry
You can do so online by visiting Kootenai church org We hope you enjoyed this podcast and pray you'll join us again next time once again.