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INDEX
PREVIOUS
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COLLECTIONS
Commentaries,
Word Studies, Devotionals, Sermons, Illustrations
Old and New Testament. |
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Psalm 1:4
The
wicked are not
so, but they
are like
chaff
which the
wind
drives
away. (NASB:
Lockman) |
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English Translation of
the Greek (Septuagint):
Not so the ungodly;-- not
so: but rather as the chaff which the wind scatters away from the face
of the earth.
Amplified: Not so the wicked [those disobedient and living without God are not
so]. But they are like the chaff [worthless, dead, without substance]
which the wind drives away.
(Amplified
Bible - Lockman)
KJV: The ungodly are not so: but are like the chaff which the
wind driveth away.
NET: Not so with the wicked! Instead they are like wind-driven
chaff. (NET
Bible)
NJB: How different the wicked, how different! Just like chaff
blown around by the wind (NJB)
Young's Literal: Not so the wicked: But--as chaff
that wind driveth away! |
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THE WICKED ARE NOT SO BUT THEY ARE LIKE THE CHAFF
WHICH THE WIND BLOWS AWAY: (Like chaff - Ps 35:5; Job
21:18; Is 17:13; 29:5; Hosea 13:3, Mt 3:12)
Spurgeon
comments that...
In this verse the contrast of the
ill estate of the wicked is employed to heighten the coloring of that
fair and pleasant picture which precedes it
Note that it
takes two verses to describe the secret of the godly life but
it only takes two words to describe the life of the ungodly -
not so! The English
rendering of the Greek Septuagint is even stronger - Not so, the
ungodly, not so!
Not so - Not what? They are led by the counsel of the wicked, in
the way of sinners, in the seat of scoffers. Not blessed. Not like
trees firmly planted. Not bearing (spiritual) fruit in season. Not
remaining "green" in times of drought. Not prospering in all they do
(speaking primarily of spiritual prospering for the things of this
world will pass away, but only those things done in the saint abiding
in the Vine of Christ Jesus will endure. Cp John 15:5)
What a contrast.
Godliness is gain here and glory hereafter. Purity pays in this world
and paves the way to Paradise in the world to come.
Guzik
adds that...
Everything true about the righteous
man (stable as a tree, continual life and nourishment, fruitful,
alive, and prosperous), is not so regarding the ungodly. It may
often seem like the ungodly have these things, and sometimes it seems
they have them more than the righteous. But it is not so! Any
of these things are fleeting in the life of the ungodly; it can be
said that they don’t really have them at all.
Ray Pritchard writes...
The whole truth about the human
race is found in just two words: “Not so.” Not so the wicked.
They are not like the righteous and therefore have no part in the
promised blessing. Because they do not follow God’s Word, but have
chosen a different path, God’s estimation of them is entirely
different.
Steven Cole
comments that...
The psalmist describes the wicked
in contrast to the righteous. The righteous is like a sturdy
tree--rooted, firm, fruitful. The wicked is like chaff from the
wheat--rootless, weightless, useless. This is not man’s view. From our
viewpoint, many who leave God out of their lives are glamorous,
powerful, exciting people. Rather, this is God’s view, as verse 6
shows. God’s view takes eternity into account and says, “Those who
leave Me out of their lives are like chaff.” They have no sub-stance.
They may be great before men, but before God they will be blown away
like chaff in the final judgment. (Psalm 1 How To Live Happily Ever After
)
Matthew Henry
sums up the entire life and accomplishments of the ungodly man or
woman (the unsaved or unregenerate person)...
Not so the ungodly; they are
not
so; they are led by the counsel of the wicked, in the way of sinners,
to the seat of the scornful; they have no delight in the law of God,
nor ever think of it; they bring forth no fruit but grapes of Sodom;
they cumber (Ed: an archaic word meaning to trouble or harass as
brambles cumber a garden) the ground.
Spurgeon
writes...
And we are hereby to understand
that whatever good thing is said of the righteous is not true in the
case of the ungodly. Oh! how terrible is it to have a double negative
(Not so the ungodly; not so) put upon the promises! and yet this is
just the condition of the ungodly.
Mark the use of the term "ungodly,"
for, as we have seen in the opening of the Psalm, these are the
beginners in evil, and are the least offensive of sinners. Oh! if such
is the sad state of those who quietly continue in their morality, and
neglect their God, what must be the condition of open sinners and
shameless infidels? The first sentence is a negative description of
the ungodly, and the second is the positive picture.
Here is their character—"they
are like chaff," intrinsically worthless, dead, unserviceable,
without substance, and easily carried away.
Here, also, mark their doom,—"the
wind drives away;" death shall hurry them with its terrible blast
into the fire in which they shall be utterly consumed.
Like chaff
- Scripture uses chaff to picture that which is useless,
worthless or evil, including (as in Psalm 1) wicked persons that are
about to be destroyed.
Mt 3:12 "And His winnowing fork
is in His hand, and He will thoroughly clear His threshing floor; and
He will gather His wheat into the barn, but He will burn up the chaff
with unquenchable fire."
Scott Grant notes that...
Chaff, unlike a firmly planted
tree, is separated from its source of life. A tree bears fruit, but
chaff is disconnected from the fruit it surrounded. The destiny of
chaff, unlike the leaves of the firmly planted tree, is to wither. The
psalmist compares impotent activity with fruitful contemplation.
Ray Pritchard writes...
The wicked are ultimately
insubstantial. Chaff refers to the husk or hull that surrounds
a nut or a kernel. It seems quite strong, but once the nut has been
removed, it is light and insubstantial. Take a peanut in the shell and
crack it open. After you eat the peanut, what do you do with the
shell? If you are at a ballgame, you toss the shells on the ground
where they are pulverized into dust. That’s what the wicked are like
in the eyes of the Lord. They look so powerful on earth, but to God
they are like dust that is quickly blown away. And their “wisdom” is
like chaff, changing every day, new theories, new ideas, new beliefs.
Nothing solid, nothing definite. Because the wicked live for
themselves, they don’t know right from wrong or good from bad.
Learn from this that life without God is useless, empty, trivial, and
worthless. Vanity of vanities, all is vanity. If a man lives for a
hundred years and yet does not know God, he is just a piece of useless
chaff! Blown away and forgotten!
Richard
Baxter offers an interesting thought on chaff...
Here, by the way, we may let the
wicked know they have a thanks to give they little think of; that they
may thank the godly for all the good days they live upon the earth,
seeing it is for their sakes and not for their own that they enjoy
them. For as the chaff while it is united and keeps close to the
wheat, enjoys some privileges for the wheat's sake, and is laid up
carefully in the barn; but as soon as it is divided, and parted from
the wheat, it is cast out and scattered by the wind; so the wicked,
whilst the godly are in company and live amongst them, partake for
their sake of some blessedness promised to the godly; but if the godly
forsake them or be taken from them, then either a deluge of water
comes suddenly upon them, as it did upon the old world when Noah left
it; or a deluge of fire, as it did upon Sodom, when Lot left it, and
went out of the city.
Noah
Webster's 1828 dictionary has this note on the definition of
chaff...
1. The husk, or dry calyx of
corn, and grasses. In common language, the word is applied to the
husks when separated from the corn by thrashing, riddling or
winnowing. The word is sometimes used rather improperly to denote
straw cut small for the food of cattle. Martyn. Encyc.
2.
Refuse; worthless matter; especially that which is light, and apt to
be driven by the wind. In scripture, false doctrines, fruitless
designs, hypocrites and ungodly men are compared to chaff. Ps. 1:4.
Jer. 23:28. Is 33:11. Mat. 3:12. (Webster, N. Noah Webster's First
Edition of An American Dictionary of the English language. Reprint of
the 1828 ed)
Which the
wind blows away - Spurgeon writes that chaff is “Intrinsically
worthless, dead, unserviceable, without substance, and easily carried
away.”
Guzik
writes that...
Chaff was light enough that
it could be separated from the grain by throwing a scoopful into the
wind and letting the wind drive away the chaff. This is how
unstable, how lacking in substance, the ungodly are.
Matthew Henry writes...
they are like the chaff which the
wind drives away, the very lightest of the chaff, the dust which the
owner of the floor desires to have driven away, as not capable of
being put to any use. Would you value them? Would you weigh them? They
are like chaff, of no worth at all in God's account, how highly soever
they may value themselves.
Would you know the temper of their
minds? They are light and vain; they have no substance in them, no
solidity; they are easily driven to and fro by every wind and
temptation, and have no stedfastness.
Would you know their end? The wrath
of God will drive them away in their wickedness, as the wind does the
chaff, which is never gathered nor looked after more. The chaff may
be, for a while, among the wheat; but he is coming whose fan is in his
hand and who will thoroughly purge his floor. Those that by their own
sin and folly make themselves as chaff will be found so before the
whirlwind and fire of divine wrath (Ps. 35:5), so unable to stand
before it or to escape it, Isaiah 17:13.
In summary, the psalmist
draws out a dramatic
horticultural contrast between a well watered tree and worthless chaff!
This picture should jog anyone's attention to pay attention to the
wisdom of the psalmist. But of course not all will read and heed
because of their stubborn, rebellious will. When I was in elementary
school I memorized a poem by Robert Frost which greatly disturbed me
(I was not yet a believer at the time), especially his closing
stanza...
THE ROAD
NOT TAKEN
I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I--
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
Frost's secular
poem certainly mirrors the overall theme of Psalm 1 and also brings to
mind Jesus' haunting words on a series of "two's"...
TWO WAYS/GATES
Matthew 7:13 (note)
"Enter
(aorist
imperative = Do
this now! It is urgent!) by the narrow gate; for the gate is wide, and
the way is broad that leads to destruction, and many are those who
enter by it.
14
"For the gate is small, and the way is narrow that leads to life, and
few are those who find it.
TWO TREES/FRUITS
Matthew 7:15 (note)
"Beware
(present
imperative) of
the false prophets, who come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly
are ravenous wolves.
16
"You will know them by their fruits. Grapes are not gathered from
thorn bushes, nor figs from thistles, are they?
17
"Even so, every good tree bears good fruit; but the bad tree bears bad
fruit.
18
"A good tree cannot produce bad fruit, nor can a bad tree produce good
fruit.
19
"Every tree that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into
the fire.
20
"So then, you will know them by their fruits.
TWO DESTINIES/ENDS
Matthew 7:21 (note)
"Not everyone who says to Me, 'Lord, Lord,' will enter the kingdom
of heaven; but he who does (present
tense = not
perfectly but as their general lifestyle) the will of My Father Who is
in heaven.
22
"Many will say to Me on that day, 'Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in
Your name, and in Your name cast out demons, and in Your name perform
many miracles?'
23
"And then I will declare to them, 'I never knew you;
DEPART
(present
imperative) FROM
ME, YOU WHO PRACTICE (present
tense =
habitually, as one's lifestyle, as the general "direction" of their
life) LAWLESSNESS.'
TWO HOUSES/FOUNDATIONS
Matthew 7:24 (note)
"Therefore everyone who hears these words (Sermon on the Mount
- see notes
Matthew 5:1ff)
of Mine, and acts (present
tense = as their
lifestyle - the general "direction" of their life) upon them, may be
compared to a wise man, who built his house upon the rock.
25
And the rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew, and
burst against that house; and yet it did not fall, for it had been
founded upon the rock.
26
And everyone who hears these words of Mine, and does not act (present
tense = the
general "direction" of their life - your behavior does not save us but
is a good indicator of whether one is genuinely saved, cp James 2:14 ;
James 2:15; 2:16; 2:17; 2:18; 2:19; 2:20; 2:21; 2:22; 2:23; 2:24;
2:25; 2:26 - see notes on
Js 2:14 ; 2:15; 2:16; 2:17;
James 2:18;
2:19;2:20;
2:21;
2:22;
2:23;
2:24;
2:25;
2:26)
upon them, will be like a foolish man, who built his house upon the
sand.
27
And the rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew, and
burst against that house; and it fell, and great was its fall."
M R Vincent
writes that...
"The ungodly are not
so." That "not" contains the germs of all moral
disaster. We have set forth under this figure three aspects of the
ungodly character.
I. Its instability. Take a life away from God, and you take
from it unity of impulse. Passion, pride, selfishness, drive it hither
and thither as the winds drive the dismantled ship. Nowhere but in God
does man find a consistent law.
II. Its worthlessness. Chaff! The wind drives it away, and the
husbandman is glad to have it driven away. An ungodly life is a
worthless life, because, whatever it may be, however busy and
bustling, it is not so. It is not used under God's direction and for
God's uses.
III. Its insecurity. The contrast is between the tree, safe in
its enclosure by the watercourses, watched and tended by the gardener,
its fruits safe from the plunderer, and the chaff, loosely lying on
the exposed threshing-floor, where the first blast can drive it no one
cares whither. How safe is the man who abides in God, while he who
puts himself outside of the restraints of Divine law forfeits likewise
its protection. (M. R. Vincent, Gates into the Psalm Country, p. 21) |
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Psalm 1:5
Therefore the
wicked will not
stand in the
judgment,
nor
sinners in the
assembly of the
righteous. (NASB:
Lockman) |
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English Translation of
the Greek (Septuagint):
Therefore the ungodly
shall not rise in judgment, nor sinners in the counsel of the just.
Amplified: Therefore the wicked [those disobedient and living without God]
shall not stand [justified] in the judgment, nor sinners in the
congregation of the righteous [those who are upright and in right
standing with God].
(Amplified
Bible - Lockman)
KJV: Therefore the ungodly shall not stand in the judgment, nor
sinners in the congregation of the righteous.
NET: For this reason the wicked cannot withstand
judgment, nor can sinners join the assembly of the godly.
(NET
Bible)
NJB: the wicked will not stand firm at the Judgement nor
sinners in the gathering of the upright. (NJB)
Young's Literal: Therefore the wicked rise not in
judgment, Nor sinners in the company of the righteous, |
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THEREFORE THE WICKED WILL NOT
STAND IN THE JUDGMENT: (Ps 5:5, 24:3, Lk 21:36, Jude 1:15)
Ps 5:5 The
boastful shall not stand before Thine eyes; Thou dost hate all who do
iniquity.
Ps 9:7-8 But
the LORD abides forever; He has established His throne for judgment, 8
And He will judge the world in righteousness; He will execute judgment
for the peoples with equity.
Ps 76:7 Thou, even Thou, art to be feared; And who may stand in Thy
presence when once Thou art angry? (Answer: Only those hidden
safely in Christ.)
Na 1:6 Who can stand before His indignation? Who can endure the
burning of His anger? His wrath is poured out like fire, And the rocks
are broken up by Him.
Mal 3:18 So you will again distinguish between the righteous and the
wicked, between one who serves God and one who does not serve Him.
Mt 13:49 "So it will be at the end of the age; the angels shall come
forth, and take out the wicked from among the righteous,
Therefore
- He amplifies what he has just stated about their being driven away
by the wind. The wicked like chaff do not the weight to resist God's
"winds of judgment" and thus are blown away and unable to stand in
the judgment.
Note that
will not stand in the judgment does not mean they will be
absent from judgment but that they will not be able to endure the
judgment and will have no adequate defense. When they are brought
before the judgment bar of God, they have no retort to God’s just
condemnation of their ungodliness
Ps 130:3 "If Thou, LORD,
shouldst mark iniquities, O Lord, who could stand?"
Guzik comments that...
Because the ungodly have no
“weight,” they will be found lacking on the day of judgment. As it was
said of King Belshazzar in the book of Daniel, You have been
weighed in the balances, and found wanting (Daniel 5:27).
The wicked will stand before
God at the Great White Throne judgment but they will not have a
"leg to stand on" in terms of God's strict requirement for perfect
righteousness (available only by grace through faith in Christ, our
Righteousness!).
The apostle John records
this sobering, sad event...
And I saw a great white throne
and Him who sat upon it, from whose presence earth and heaven fled
away, and no place was found for them. And I saw the dead, the great
and the small, standing before the throne, and books were
opened; and another book was opened, which is the book of life; and
the dead were judged from the things which were written in the books,
according to their deeds. And the sea gave up the dead which were in
it, and death and Hades gave up the dead which were in them; and they
were judged, every one of them according to their deeds. And death and
Hades were thrown into the lake of fire. This is the second death, the
lake of fire. And if anyone's name was not found written in the book
of life, he was thrown into the lake of fire. (See notes
Revelation 20:11;
12;
13;
14;
15)
Pritchard
notes that...
When the time for judgment
comes, the wicked will not stand because they have no
roots. Everything about them is blow and show, froth and worldly pomp,
bluster and brag, and ego. But there is nothing of lasting value. With
one breath, the Lord will blow all the wicked into hell.
Matthew Henry
writes that the wicked...
shall not stand in the judgment,
that is, they shall be found guilty, shall hang down the head with
shame and confusion, and all their pleas and excuses will be overruled
as frivolous. There is a judgment to come, in which every man's
present character and work, though ever so artfully concealed and
disguised, shall be truly and perfectly discovered, and appear in
their own colours, and accordingly every man's future state will be,
by an irreversible sentence, determined for eternity. The ungodly must
appear in that judgment, to receive according to the things done in
the body. They may hope to come off, nay, to come off with honour, but
their hope will deceive them: They shall not stand in the judgment, so
plain will the evidence be against them and so just and impartial will
the judgment be upon it.
Spurgeon
explains that the wicked...
shall stand there to be
judged, but not to be acquitted. Fear shall lay hold upon them there;
they shall not stand their ground; they shall flee away; they
shall not stand in their own defence; for they shall blush and
be covered with eternal contempt.
NOR SINNERS IN THE ASSEMBLY OF
THE RIGHTEOUS: (Ps 26:9; Mal 3:18; Mt 13:49; 25:32,41,46)
The writer of Hebrews
describes the assembly of the righteous writing that
believers...
have come to Mount Zion and to the
city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to myriads of
angels, to the general assembly and church of the firstborn who are
enrolled in heaven, and to God, the Judge of all, and to the spirits
of the righteous made perfect, (see notes
Hebrews 12:22;
23)
Instead as Paul explains
sinners
will
pay the penalty of eternal destruction away from the presence of the
Lord and from the glory of his power (2 Thessalonians 1:9) Comment:
Here we see the double doom of all sinners - Condemned at the
judgment-bar and separated from the Lord's very presence.
In the new
creation sinners will be excluded from the assembly of the
righteous as John explains noting that
for the cowardly and unbelieving
and abominable and murderers and immoral persons and sorcerers and
idolaters and all liars, their part will be in the lake that burns
with fire and brimstone, which is the second death. (and) nothing
unclean and no one who practices abomination and lying, shall ever
come into it (the holy city, new Jerusalem), but only those whose
names are written in the Lamb's book of life. (see notes
Revelation 21:8.
and
Revelation 21:27) John Trapp
solemnly quipped that...
The Irish air will sooner brook a
toad, or a snake, than heaven a sinner.
Pritchard
notes that...
the righteous will stand because
they are like trees by the stream, with deep roots in the Word of God.
The tree stands, the chaff disappears. That’s why sinners won’t be in
the assembly of the righteous. They won’t be there because the winds
of judgment will already have removed them.
Matthew Henry
writes that sinners will not be in the...
general assembly of the church of
the first-born, a congregation of the righteous, of all the saints,
and none but saints, and saints made perfect, such a congregation of
them as never was in this world, 2Thes 2:1. The wicked shall
not have a place in that congregation. Into the new Jerusalem none
unclean nor unsanctified shall enter; they shall see the righteous
enter into the kingdom, and themselves, to their everlasting vexation,
thrust out, Luke 13:27.
The wicked and profane, in this
world, ridiculed the righteous and their congregation, despised them,
and cared not for their company; justly therefore will they be for
ever separated from them.
Hypocrites in this world, under the
disguise of a plausible profession, may thrust themselves into the
congregation of the righteous and remain undisturbed and undiscovered
there; but Christ cannot be imposed upon, though his ministers may;
the day is coming when He will separate between the sheep and the
goats, the tares and the wheat.
Spurgeon
explains this straightforward passage writing...
Well may the saints long for
heaven, for no evil men shall dwell there, "nor sinners in the
congregation of the righteous." All our congregations upon earth are
mixed. Every Church hath one devil in it. The tares grow in the same
furrows as the wheat. There is no floor which is as yet thoroughly
purged from chaff. Sinners mix with saints, as dross mingles with
gold. God's precious diamonds still lie in the same field with
pebbles. Righteous Lots are this side heaven continually vexed by the
men of Sodom.
Let us rejoice then, that in "the
general assembly and church of the firstborn" (see Hebrews 12:23-note) above, there shall by no
means be admitted a single unrenewed soul. Sinners cannot live in
heaven. They would be out of their element. Sooner could a fish live
upon a tree than the wicked in Paradise. Heaven would be an
intolerable hell to an impenitent man, even if he could be allowed to
enter; but such a privilege shall never be granted to the man who
perseveres in his iniquities. May God grant that we may have a name
and a place in his courts above!
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Psalm 1:6
For the
LORD
knows the
way of the
righteous, but
the
way of the
wicked will
perish.
(NASB:
Lockman) |
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English Translation of
the Greek (Septuagint):
For the Lord knows the way
of the righteous; but the way of the ungodly shall perish.
Amplified: For the Lord knows and is fully acquainted with the way of the
righteous, but the way of the ungodly [those living outside God’s
will] shall perish (end in ruin and come to nought).
(Amplified
Bible - Lockman)
KJV: For the LORD knoweth the way of the righteous: but
the way of the ungodly shall perish.
NET: Certainly the Lord guards the way of the godly, but
the way of the wicked ends in destruction. (NET
Bible)
NJB: For Yahweh watches over the path of the upright, but the
path of the wicked is doomed. (NJB)
Young's Literal: For Jehovah is knowing the
way of the righteous, And the way of the wicked is lost! |
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FOR THE LORD KNOWS THE WAY OF
THE RIGHTEOUS: (Ps 37:18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23,24; 139:1,2;
142:3; Job 23:10; Nahum 1:7, Jn 10:14,27; 2Ti 2:19-note)
For -
Always seek to determine what the writer is explaining when you
encounter a "for" (or "because"). In this context, the psalmist
is helping us understand the distinction between the righteous and the
wicked, elaborating on their respective destinies. In sum the writer
he now gives the reason of this great difference between the righteous
and the wicked, expressed in the foregoing verses.
Knows (yada)
can mean simply to know, learn, perceive, discern, experience,
to know people relationally, to make oneself known, to make to know.
One of the main senses and the one that applies in the present passage
is to know relationally and experientially. And so yada is also used
for for intimacy between a man and a woman as when Adam knew Eve his
wife...
And Adam knew (yada';
LXX
= ginosko) Eve his wife; and she conceived, and bare Cain, and said, I
have gotten a man from the LORD. (Genesis 4:1, KJV)
Yada is
translated by the Greek verb ginosko in the present tense which
speaks of the Lord's continually (experientially) knowing the state of
the righteous.
Jehovah
knew Moses by name and face to face...
And the LORD said to Moses, "I will
also do this thing of which you have spoken; for you have found favor
in My sight, and I have known (yada') you by name." (Ex 33:17).
Since then no prophet has risen in
Israel like Moses, whom the LORD knew (yada';
LXX
= ginosko - knew by experience) face to face, (Deut 34:10).
Jehovah
even knew David’s sitting and
arising...
O LORD, Thou hast searched me and
known (yada';
LXX
= ginosko - know) me. Thou dost know yada';
LXX
= ginosko - know) when I sit down and when I rise up; Thou
dost understand my thought from afar. (Ps 139:1-2)
In sum yada
speaks of God knowing man intimately and in Hebrew is a participle
which represents an action or condition in unbroken continuity. Knows
then pictures God's continuing intimacy with, caring for and watching
over His own.
As Jesus said in
the gospel of John...
Jn 10:14 "I am the good
shepherd; and I know (ginosko - know) My own, and My own know Me... 27 My sheep
hear My voice, and I know (ginosko - know) them, and they follow Me
Paul
echoes the assurance that believers can have that the Lord God knows
them and they are safe in Christ...
Nevertheless, the firm foundation of God stands, having
this seal, "The Lord knows those who are His," and, "Let
everyone who names the name of the Lord abstain from wickedness."
(see note
2 Timothy 2:19)
In Psalm 37
David presents a similar contrast between the fate of the godly
and ungodly but that He knows the godly..
The
LORD knows (Hebrew = yada;
LXX
= ginosko - knows by experience) the days of the blameless; and their inheritance will be
forever. 19 They will not be ashamed in the time of evil; and in the
days of famine they will have abundance. 20 But the wicked will
perish; and the enemies of the LORD will be like the glory of the
pastures, they vanish—like smoke they vanish away. (Psalm 37:18-20)
The prophet
Nahum (in the context of a description of the Judgment of God on
the earth says)
The LORD is good, a stronghold in the day of trouble,
and He knows those who take refuge (chacah = flee for
protection; confide or hope in; put their trust) in Him. (Nahum 1:7)
Job
suffered incredible trials and afflictions and in Job 23 even cried
out...
Oh that I knew where I might find
Him, that I might come to His seat! (Job 23:3)
Nevertheless Job
persevered because he understood the truth in Psalm 1:6 affirming that
even though he could not see God, he knew God could see Him
declaring...
He knows the way I take; When He has tried me,
I shall come forth as gold. (see note
Job 23:10)
Spurgeon
elaborates on the phrase "He knows..." writing that in the
original Hebrew it reads more fully...
"The Lord is knowing the way of the righteous."
(In other words) He is
constantly looking on their way, and though it may be often in mist
and darkness, yet the Lord knows it. If it be in the clouds and
tempest of affliction, He understands it. He numbers the hairs of our
head. He will not suffer any evil to befall us. He knows the way
that I take: when He hath tried me, I shall come forth as gold." (Job
23:10)
Comment: The
Septuagint (LXX)
likewise speaks of
God's continually knowing, translating the Hebrew verb yada
with the Greek verb ginosko in the
present tense
which signifies that
God is continually knowing experientially. He is aware of what is
going on in the life of every one of His children. Ginosko
conveys the basic meaning of taking in knowledge in regard to
something or someone, but it is knowledge that goes beyond the mere
factual. By extension, ginosko frequently was used of a special
relationship between the person who knows (in this case God) and the
object of the knowledge (the righteous). It was often used of the
intimate relationship between husband and wife and between God and His
people.
The way of
the righteous - The way refers to their entire life, and
they had entered into this life journey through Jesus, the Way.
Jesus said to His disciples...
I am the way, the truth, and the
life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me (Jn 14:6)
Guzik comments that...
At least four times in the Book of
Acts Christianity is called the Way. Certainly, it is the way
of the righteous, not the way of the ungodly. Which way are you on?
How did they
become righteous in the Old Testament? Was it by keeping the law? Was
it by carrying out the prescribed sacrifices? No, neither of these
ways leads to the kingdom of heaven. The OT saints entered this way in
the same manner NT now enter, by grace through faith. Those who have believed in the promised Messiah or the
Messiah Who has come, died, was buried and has resurrected and
ascended to the right hand of the Father.
Abraham is the
prototype of an OT saint who was righteous
Genesis 15:6 Then he
believed in the LORD; and He reckoned it to him as righteousness.
BUT THE WAY OF THE WICKED WILL
PERISH: (The way -- Ps 112:10; 146:9; Pr 14:12; 15:9; Mt
7:13-note;
2Pe 2:12-note)
But the way
- The dramatic contrast and finale of those who have shunned, sinned
against, scorned and scoffed at God.
Solomon
writes of the self-deception of the way of the wicked...
There is
a way which seems right to a man, but its end is
the way of death. (Pr 14:12)
Jesus
gives a command to enter the only way which will not perish...
Enter
(The
aorist imperative =
command calling for urgent, immediate and effective action!)
by the narrow gate; for the gate is wide, and the way is broad
that leads to destruction, and many are those who enter by it.
(see note
Matthew 7:13)
Perish (06)
(abad) is a verb meaning to be destroyed, to be lost, to be
reduced to some degree of disorder or to some state of ruin. The
way of the wicked is a state of total disintegration or collapse.
The way of
the wicked and all they have ever accomplished (the sum total of
their life) is like an apple that falls off the apple tree and lies on
the ground in rot and decay thus loosing any chance of ever fulfilling
its full potential as an apple.
The
Septuagint (LXX)
translates abad
in Psalm 1:6 with the Greek verb
apollumi (see notes)
which speaks of destruction but not annihilation.
Apollumi basically has to do with that which is ruined and is no
longer usable for its intended purpose. All men and women are created
in the image of God and have the potential to bring glory to God, but
this is only possible if one is born again ("re-created" as it were in
Christ). Only the redeemed can properly bring glory to their Creator.
Isaiah speaks of this privilege believers have to bring glory to God
writing that...
Everyone who is called by My name,
and whom I have created for My glory, whom I have formed, even whom I
have made." (Isaiah 43:7)
All men are born
in sin in Adam and if they fail to be born again by grace through
faith they remain dead in their trespasses and sins and when they die,
they soul and their way (everything that they have every done
while alive) will perish forever.
Apollumi is the
verb Jesus used to describe those who are thrown into hell (Mt 10:28).
As He makes clear elsewhere, hell is not a place or state of
nothingness or unconscious existence, as is the Hindu Nirvana. It is
the place of everlasting torment, the place of eternal death, where
there will be “weeping and gnashing of teeth” (see Mt 13:42, 50). All
people are created by God for His glory, but when they refuse to come
to Him for salvation they lose their opportunity for redemption and
for becoming what God intends for them to be. They are then fit only
for condemnation and eternal destruction. This truth should motivate
every believer to seek to present the gospel with their life and then
their lips to all around them who are still dead in their trespasses
and sins.
To reiterate,
destruction for an unsaved sinner does not result in annihilation or
extinction. When their life ends on earth, it is not followed by the
loss of being, but of well-being. The Gospel promises everlasting life
for all who believe in Christ's death, burial and resurrection. Dear
reader if you are not saved listen to the Savior's own words...
I said therefore to you, that you
shall die in your sins; for unless you believe that
I am
(I am = a title for God), you shall die in your sins. (John 8:24)
Steven Cole
writes that...
the plain teaching of God’s Word,
which says,
“It is appointed for men to die
once and after this comes judgment” (see note
Hebrews 9:27).
We all must stand before God. If
you take God and eternity out of the picture, all you are is an
accident--the chance product of random chance. Your birth was an
accident, your death will be an accident. All you are is an accident
suspended between two accidents! There’s no happiness in that view.
The Word of God declares that
you are not an accident. You are here as the creation of God, made
in His image, designed to find true happiness in Him and in His Word.
But due to your rebellion, as seen in your running your own life
rather than in submitting to Christ as Lord, you are alienated from
God. He could rightfully judge you, but because of His love and mercy,
He sent Jesus Christ to die in your place on the cross. You must turn
from your rebellion, trust in Him and accept the pardon He offers. If
you will do that and then build your life on God and His Word, you
will live happily ever after, both now and throughout eternity! And
that’s no fairy tale! (Psalm 1 How To Live Happily Ever After
)
Spurgeon
emphasizes that the psalmist is saying that...
Not only shall they perish themselves, but their
way shall perish too. The righteous carves his name upon the
Rock, but
the wicked writes his remembrance in the sand (see Jesus' words in
Matthew 7:24; 25; 26; 27-- see notes -
Mt 7:24;
25;
26;
27). The righteous man
ploughs the furrows of earth, and sows a harvest here, which shall
never be fully reaped till he enters the enjoyments of eternity (see
Mt 6:19-note;
Mt 6:20-note); but
as for the wicked, he ploughs the sea, and though there may seem to be
a shining trail behind his keel, yet the waves shall pass over it, and
the place that knew him shall know him no more for ever.
The very
"way" of the ungodly shall perish. If it exist in remembrance, it
shall be in the remembrance of the bad; for the Lord will cause the
name of the wicked to rot, to become a stench in the nostrils of the
good, and to be only known to the wicked themselves by its putridity.
May the Lord cleanse our hearts and our ways, that we may escape the
doom of the ungodly, and enjoy the blessedness of the righteous!
In short, while
God knows the way of the righteous, in stark contrast He does not
know the way of the wicked as Jesus warns at the conclusion of His
Sermon on the Mount...
Not everyone who says to Me, 'Lord, Lord,' will enter the kingdom
of heaven; but he who does (present
tense = not
perfectly but as their general lifestyle) the will of My Father Who is
in heaven.
"Many will say to Me on that day, 'Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in
Your name, and in Your name cast out demons, and in Your name perform
many miracles?'
"And then I will declare to them, 'I never
(absolutely never) knew (ginosko - the very verb the Lxx uses
of God knowing the way of the righteous!) you;
DEPART
(present
imperative -
command to move away from with emphasis upon separation) from me, you
who practice (present
tense =
habitually, as one's lifestyle, as the general "direction" of their
life) lawlessness.' (See notes
Matthew 7:21
;
22;
23)
As to their
doom, they shall be forgotten in the annals of eternity in the ages to
come, leaving no trace, taking no
root and forever excluded from the other world.
Ray Pritchard
offers a practical, pithy summation of Psalm 1...
Let’s wrap up this study of Psalm 1
with four conclusions that bring the truth home to the 21st-century.
1) Casual flirtation with sinners soon leads to total domination by
evildoers.
We cannot escape the reality of
this truth. If you run with the pigs, you’re going to smell like the
pigs. And pretty soon, you’ll look and act and dress like the pigs.
When that happens, don’t be surprised if others mistake you for a pig.
What seems small to you today may lead to total domination by sin
tomorrow. Be warned. Be alert. Don’t play with fire if you don’t want
to get burned.
2) As long as the world is what
it is, godliness must largely be negative.
At the very least, godliness in a
sinful world will always involve separation from evil. How that works
out in your personal life is an issue between you and the Lord. I
cannot make rules that will fit every situation but we dare not ignore
the overall principle. Godliness involves much more than staying away
from evil influences, but it is not less than that. If we ignore the
negative, we’ll never get to the positive.
3) Many people who seem
successful by worldly standards will be judged total failures by God.
Some of us will live in the shadow
of these “successful” people for many years, and we may be compared
with them in an unfavorable way. There isn’t much we can do about that
except to remind ourselves that the only evaluation that counts is
God’s. If we are faithful to him, everything will come out alright in
the end.
4) The happiest people in the
world are those whose lives are built on the Word of God.
I think we can state that in a more
forceful manner. The only truly happy people in the world are those
who follow the prescription of Psalm 1. Others may be happy in a
temporary or worldly sense, but they do not know the joy and deep
satisfaction that comes from living with God’s approval. That is
reserved for the true children of God.
In light of this psalm, what
does the church need?
The answer is clear. The church needs the Bible.
What should pastors be
preaching? Pastors
should preach the Bible.
And what should elders be
teaching? They should
teach the Bible.
What should church members be
studying? Let them study
the Bible.
When we are doing what God has
commanded, every church will truly be a “Bible church” and every
Christian will be a “Bible Christian.”
This is what we need, this is what
we must have, this is the basis for all that we do and all that we
say. Apart from God’s Word, we have nothing to offer to a hurting
world. There is a blessing waiting for those who build their lives
upon this ancient book. May that blessing be ours so that we, having
been blessed, may be a blessing to others in the year to come. (Psalm 1 Meditate on the Word of
the Lord Day and Night) |
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