If the blessed man does not take the counsel of the wicked, who are these "wicked" I need to be avoiding?
Good morning.
Welcome to the Politics by Faith podcast brought to you by the Patriot Gold Group and the Public Square app. We're talking about Psalm 1 this week. Blessed is the man who walks not in the counsel of the wicked, nor stands in the way of sinners. Am I the only one that thinks when I hear stands in the way of, I think of like someone like stopping the sinners, like alongside with the sinner, nor sits in the seat of scoffers, but his delight is in the law of the Lord, and on his law he meditates day and night. Yesterday's episode we talked about the word meditate. Today let's talk about the wicked, the counsel of the wicked. Don't take the counsel of the wicked. It makes me think of that line in our, it's like a popular line in culture, there ain't no rest for the wicked. There ain't no... What's that song? There ain't no rest for the wicked. Cage the elephant. There ain't no rest for the wicked. That's a paraphrase from the Bible. Isaiah 57, 21. There is no peace for the wicked, says my God. It's the same idea. What happens to the wicked? Isaiah goes on, the wicked are like the tossing sea, for it cannot be quiet, and its waters toss up mire and dirt. I don't want that. It's just constant turmoil and anxiety. And we need to be reminded that that is the life of the wicked, because prosperity can be so deceitful. I love Psalm 73. I envied the arrogant when I saw the prosperity of the wicked. They have no struggles. Their bodies are healthy and strong. They're free from common human hurdles. They're not plagued by human ills. Therefore, pride is their necklace. They clothe themselves with violence, always free of care. They go on amassing wealth. Surely in vain I've kept my heart pure and washed my hands in innocence. It's amazing. It's like, oh, look, I'm doing all I can here and what has it gotten me? And those wicked people over there, look how prosperous they are. It's a great Psalm 73, read the whole thing. But we need to be reminded that in the face of that deceitful image, the wicked are actually full of turmoil, like a tossing sea, the water stirring up mire and dirt. Psalm 1-4, not so the wicked, they are like chaff that the wind blows away. Charles Spurgeon has a little devotion on this. He says this is the character of the wicked. They're like chaff, intrinsically worthless, dead, unserviceable, without substance, easily carried away. I like that one. Easily carried away. Here also mark the doom of the wicked that the wind blows away. Death will hurry them in its terrible blast into the fire in which they will be utterly consumed." Why do we want to listen to these people? You would never, right? We do all the time. We may not even notice. Actually, we certainly don't. Most of the time we listen to the wicked, we don't notice it. We don't know that they're wicked, or we don't pay attention to the fact that they're wicked, and we don't assess the fact that they're wicked, and we don't care because we like what they have to say. Today, let us be extra aware of whose advice, whose counsel we're following. Because the man who follows that counsel is not blessed. Because the man who follows that counsel is not blessed. The one who delights in the law of the Lord is.