Monday, July 29, 2019

I will Gladly Accept Counsel and more from Ps. 141:5-10


SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 11/29/2012 8:14:51 AM

 

My Worship Time                                                                  Focus:  Psalm 141 PT-2

 

Bible Reading & Meditation                                Reference:  Psalm 141:5-10

 

            Message of the verses:  “I Will Gladly Accept Counsel” (v5):  “5 Let the righteous smite me in kindness and reprove me; It is oil upon the head; Do not let my head refuse it, For still my prayer is against their wicked deeds.”

           

            First we must know that the “righteous” could be translated as the “Righteous One,” and therefore be speaking of God.  Either way the meaning is the same as Dr. Wiersbe explains, “When we yield to God’s will, the difficulties of life are tools that God uses to bring maturity to our lives.  Often the Lord sends people to speak to us and their words hurt us, but they do not harm us.”  “Do not reprove a scoffer, or he will hate you, Reprove a wise man and he will love you (Pr. 9:8); “10  A rebuke goes deeper into one who has understanding Than a hundred blows into a fool (Pr. 10:17): 25 Strike a scoffer and the naive may become shrewd, But reprove one who has understanding and he will gain knowledge (Pr. 19:25); 10  Do not forsake your own friend or your father’s friend, And do not go to your brother’s house in the day of your calamity; Better is a neighbor who is near than a brother far away (Pr. 27:10.”

            The mention of oil upon the head is speaking of David’s enemies using  bait to trap him by their so called kindness and David would have none of it.

 

            “I Will Let God Judge My Enemies (vv. 6-7):  “6 Their judges are thrown down by the sides of the rock, And they hear my words, for they are pleasant. 7 As when one plows and breaks open the earth, Our bones have been scattered at the mouth of Sheol.”

 

11/29/2012 12:34:23 PM

 

             This is a difficult passage to understand so I will use the “Message” to help us better understand these verses:   “6 Oh, let their leaders be pushed off a high rock cliff; make them face the music. 7 Like a rock pulverized by a maul, let their bones be scattered at the gates of hell.” 

 

Next I want to show what Charles H. Spurgeon has to say about verse six:  “This is a verse of which the meaning seems far to seek. Does it refer to the righteous among the Israelites? We think so. David surely means that when their leaders fell never to rise again, they would then turn to him and take delight in listening to his voice. When their judges are overthrown in stony places, they shall hear my words; for they are sweet. And so they did: the death of Saul made all the best of the nation look to the son of Jesse as the Lord’s anointed; his words became sweet to them. Many of those good men who had spoken severely of David’s quitting his country, and going over to the Philistines, were nevertheless dear to his heart for their fidelity, and to them he returned nothing but good will, loving prayers, and sweet speeches, knowing that by and by they would overlook his faults, and select him to be their leader.  They smote him when he erred, but they recognized his excellences. He, on his part, bore no resentment, but loved them for their honesty. He would pray for them when their land lay bleeding at the feet of their foreign enemies; he would come to their rescue when their former leaders were slain; and his words of courageous hopefulness would be sweet in their ears. This seems to me to be a good sense, consistent with the context. At the same time, other and more labored interpretations have their learned admirers, and to these we will refer in our notes from other authors.”

Ver. 7. Our bones are scattered at the grave’s mouth, &c.] Into which they were not suffered to be put, but lay unburied; or from whence they were dug up, and lay scattered about; which is to be understood of such of David’s friends as fell into the hands of Saul and his men, and were slain: perhaps it may refer to the fourscore and five priests, and the inhabitants of Nob, slain by the order of Saul, #1Sa 22:18,19. Though the phrase may be only proverbial, and be expressive of the danger David and his men were in, and their sense of it, who looked upon themselves like dry bones, hopeless and helpless, and had the sentence of death in themselves, and were as it were at the mouth of the grave, on the brink of ruin.”  (John Gill on verse seven.)

Dr. Wiersbe has this to say about these verses, “When God judged the leaders; their followers will agree that David’s words were correct, especially when they see unburied bones of those leaders bleaching in the sun.”

He states at the beginning of his commentary these words, “These two verses have puzzled translators and expositors, but the general message seems clear.  David continued to pray for his enemies, and he saw a day coming when God would judge them and vindicate his own cause (138:8; 140:12).”

 

“I Will Keep Going by Faith (vv. 8-10):  “8 For my eyes are toward You, O GOD, the Lord; In You I take refuge; do not leave me defenseless. 9 Keep me from the jaws of the trap which they have set for me, And from the snares of those who do iniquity. 10 Let the wicked fall into their own nets, While I pass by safely.”

 

David starts verse eight by saying that His eyes are toward the Lord, which means that he was living a moment by moment dependence upon the Lord.  Sometimes when we are having most everything going our way, and living in our country this seems to be the way we feel much of the time, however David was living in an era where he was being chased by Saul’s men, fearing for his life and living out in the wilderness, things were surely different.  It was about sixteen years ago that both of my children were on short term missionary trips, which made it tough on my wife and myself because we were use to having them around the house and missed both of them greatly.  When they returned, from their trips we learned that our daughter had a very difficult situation which she faced in Peru.  She testified in church that at this time in her life she had learned first handed how to depend on the Lord step by step.  The situation was difficult but her faith increased through going through this difficult situation.  David faced difficulties too, and we see that he too kept going by faith, faith in the Lord his God.

 

Dr. Wiersbe concludes his commentary with these words, “Life goes on and there is work to do, so we must not allow tough situations to paralyze us but to energize us in trusting the Lord.  Life’s trials are not excuses for doing nothing; they are opportunities for claiming God’s promises and experiencing His miraculous power.”

 

Spiritual meaning for my life today:  As I go through life I learn that life is a series of tests, a series of temptations and trials which are given to me so that I can be transformed into the image of my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.  Temptations are from the devil to make us worse off, while trials come from the Lord to make us better.  Paul writes that there is no temptation (or trial) that has taken me that is not common to man, and then he goes on to say that God is faithful in not allowing any trial to overcome us, but He will give us what is needed to overcome these trails and temptations, and then we should praise the Lord for what He has done.

 

My Steps of Faith for Today:  Learn to be content, and learn to be transformed by His Word.

 

Memory verses for the week:  Psalm 130:1-6

 

            1 Out of the debts I cried to You, O LORD.  2 Lord hear my voice!  Let Your ears be attentive to the voice of my supplications.  3 If You, LORD, should mark iniquities, O Lord, who could stand?  4 But there is forgiveness with You, that You may be feared.

            5 I wait for the Lord, my soul does wait, And in His Word do I hope.  6 My soul waits for the Lord more than the watchman for the morning; Indeed more than the watchman for the morning.

 

11/29/2012 1:16:03 PM  

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