Monday, August 10, 2015

God is Judge-I am not



            Psalm 58 is one of those Psalms that make me uncomfortable.  It is full of violent images invoked by the psalmist as punishment from God on the enemy of the psalmist or the community for which the psalmist writes.  When we read these psalms it is important to remember the teachings of Jesus about our enemies.  Jesus tells us to love our enemies.  Matthew 5:43-44 says 43 “You have heard that it was said, You must love your neighbor and hate your enemy. 44 But I say to you, love your enemies and pray for those who harass you.” This is a very different picture than the picture laid out by the psalmist who cries out to God to break the teeth out of the enemies mouth and let the enemy “dissolve like water flowing away.”  It is a very different picture then the picture the psalmist paints of the righteous “soaking their feet in the enemies blood.”
            The psalmist here uses wartime imagery to get the main point across.   I believe it is human nature to desire to see those who cause us pain suffer.  I have said many times that one of the things I love about the Psalms is that they validate my humanity.  I don’t have to feel shame and guilt when in my hurt and brokenness I feel like seeing those who are hurting me suffer.  However, the bigger truth of this psalm and the other psalms like it is that God is the judge.  It is God who is in control of righting wrongs. 
            The overall picture painted here is that yes there is pain and suffering in the world.  We can not escape it.  Yes, it is natural and right to seek Justice.  James Mays writes in a commentary on this psalm that the “notion of vengeance (vs. 10) is a feature of the vision of God as ruler.  The term does not mean vindictive revenge; it refers to an action to do justice and restore order where the regular and responsible institutions of justice have failed.[1]
            In The Wesley Study Bible there are sections throughout the bible entitled “Holiness of Heart and Life.”  These are notes written in sidebars of the Bible by key pastors in the Methodist tradition that help us live out our Wesleyan faith.  Here is what the side bar on the page of this passage states regarding persecution:
By “assurance” John Wesley meant a state of mind and heart, not so much dreamy as durable.  A sense of absolute trust in God does not lift us above the fray but guides us through the fray with confidence that someone holds us by counting our sleepless nights and gathering our tears.  Thus the psalmist is able to weave our palpable fear of persecution with the irrepressible hope of deliverance.  The faithful are not immune to dread; we cannot always know we will be safe.  What we can know is that, come what may, we will be saved.[2]

Know from this Psalm that it is natural to want to see justice brought to that which has wronged you.  Know also from this Psalm that God is the one who is in control.  We are called to love our enemies.  We are called to forgive.  We can not do that on our own.  We can do it when we let God be the ruler over our lives and over our world.  Thanks be to God. 




[1] Mays, James L., “Psalms” in Interpretation A Bible commentary for Teaching and Preaching, (Louisville, John Knox Press, 1994) pg. 212
[2] Green, Joel and Willimon, William, eds. Wesley Study Bible, CEB edition (Common English Bible, Nashville, 2012) pg. 728-sidebar

No comments:

Post a Comment