Psalms Book 4 (Psalms 90-106)નમૂનો
The God who avenges
And now we come to holy ground.
If I take a knife and plunge it into someone’s body, I will be arrested for attempted manslaughter.
But suppose a surgeon takes a knife and forces it deep into a person’s body and carefully cuts away cancer so the person can recover and live many more years. In that case, that surgeon is rightly considered a brilliant doctor and is respected, loved, praised, and thanked.
Sometimes, the Lord himself takes such action to save a human being who is dying spiritually.
Psalms 94 and 102 describe this holy, eternal Lord who comes as Judge to intervene in human lives.
Psalm 94 is about the Lord who avenges sin. ‘O God who avenges shine forth. Rise up, Judge of the earth; pay back to the proud what they deserve’, v2. (To avenge is ‘to take action in response to a wrong done to someone out of the desire for justice.’)
Read Psalm 94. It is a long and penetrating cry to the Lord to intervene and establish justice.
Now read Psalm 102, Psalm 94’s chiastic partner-opposite. It is the prayer of someone who has been severely corrected by the Lord. It voices the prayer of an afflicted person pouring out their lament before the Lord, a person who twice states that the Lord has intervened and broken them.
‘… for you have taken me up and thrown me aside’ v10
‘In the course of my life he broke my strength; he cut short my days’ v23
The Lord, the Judge of the earth, does not pretend everything is fine. It’s not. There is desperate wickedness and evil in the world.
Praise the Lord that he is a God who avenges and acts in order to bring men and women back to himself.
About this Plan
The 150 Psalms are arranged in five collections, or ‘books.’ The fourth book of Psalms contains 17 Psalms, Psalms 90-106, arranged in a sequence called a ‘Chiasm,’ a literary structure that Jewish authors occasionally used to present their material. The message of these psalms is presented not only through each individual psalm but also through engaging with the development of ideas and truths through the sequence of the psalms and their ‘partner-opposites’.
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