Wednesday, November 2, 2022

PSALM 19 “The World Book and the Word Book”

 


The superscript: To the choirmaster. A Psalm of David

Spurgeon writes: “In his earliest days the Psalmist (David), while keeping his father’s flock, had devoted himself to  the study of  God’s two great books –nature and Scripture… he is wisest who reads both the world book and the Word book as two volumes of the same work and feels concerning them – My Father  wrote them both.”[1]

OUTLINE

1.     19: 1-6  General Revelation  – God’s World Book

2.    19:7-11 Special Revelation  –  God’s Word Book

3.    19:12-14 Application  - Revelation brings about conviction  and prayer

 

1.   19: 1-6  General Revelation  – God’s World Book

“The heavens declare the glory of God, and the sky above proclaims his handiwork…”

About three years before I became a Christian at the age of 19, my father and I camped in the desert. As we lay in ours sleeping bags under a stunning Namibian night sky, I was suddenly overcome by the vastness and the grandeur of the Namibian  night sky, and especially and the Milky way which is 100,000 light years in diameter and which consists of more than 100 billion stars. 

Just for context: A light-year is the distance light travels in one Earth year. One light-year is about 9 trillion km. That is a 9 with 12 zeros behind it! Light travels at a speed of 300,000 km per second.  Our Sun is  our  closest star. It is about  150 million miles away. So, the Sun's light takes about 8.3 minutes to reach us. This means that we always see the Sun as it was about 8.3 minutes ago. Being overcome by our night sky, I asked my father, “Is there a God”? His creation was  speaking to me, but I only discovered the  answer  three years  later, when the Word of  God  became clear to me on a Thursday evening on the 22nd June 1978,  when I met  the Creator of the Universe in a University dining room hall.

David as  a shepherd  spent many  nights  under a  clear sky – and what he saw   is what we see  at night and  in the day, from a northern hemisphere perspective. What  he saw is described in the first  six verses  of this  Psalm.

19: 2-3a “Day to day pours out speech, and night to night reveals knowledge….”   Note - 'pours out speech'!  Not mere subtle hints or suggestions. It's a noisy silence! Ironically, this deafening silence above pours out speech like a bubbling spring -  day after day, night after night, and in never-ending succession.

These all proclaim  the revelation of the glory of God. During the day God is proclaimed in the sun, sky, clouds, rain and rainbows, in the majesty of the mountains, the barrenness of  the southern Namibian  desert, the stunning dunes,  the vastness of the southern Atlantic ocean, the beauty of our savannahs, the rich array of  so many animal species. When the day is done, the night takes over with a display of  moon, planets, stars and galaxies. Day and night they consistently proclaim, God is glorious ! Note where the emphasis lies! This is important, because, according to our fallen human nature we easily shift the emphasis from the Creator to the created. Namibians are tempted to worship creation. They say that they feel closest to God when they  are in the bush or in a desert. They are close, yes, for this is our Creator’s  world. But they are not close enough to God. This is the great sin that the apostle Paul addresses in Romans 1.  Nature is not God.  Nature is God's handiwork. Creation doesn't sing its own praise. It proclaims its Creator’s praise. So, when I am overcome by the grandeur of a Namibian night sky, and the knowledge that the Milky Way I see up there  is so massive, and I a tiny creature on a tiny planet  in a tiny solar system – because there are so many, many more solar systems  each with trillions of stars-then  my heart is not drawn  in adoration to that of which I see a little part. My heart is drawn to the God who made  this universe. 

David was surrounded by nations that actually worshipped the sun, moon and stars. The Christian also looks at creation - the sun, moon and stars, but he does not worship them. The Christian does not believe that the universe evolved by pure chance. The Christian does not get guidance from the stars. The Christian worships the  Creator of the  heavens and the earth -  that same God who was David’s God.

19: 4b- 6  Special mention is made of the sun. "He has  set a tent for the sun"  refers  to the sky - the heavens - probably where the sun goes during the night and then appears  resplendent like a bridegroom  leaving  his chamber… running its course with joy…  bursting with energy - and "like a  strong man” the sun runs its course from one end of the  heavens to the other end. The point is that the sun ( which is set there by God) is not a god. It is God's creation and perhaps  the closest supreme illustration of the glory of God,  whose glory we cannot hope to behold and live. (Paul experienced that in Acts 9!). The glory of God infinitely outshines the sun! As nothing escapes the heat of the sun, so the presence of its Creator is felt by all (19:6).

Now, as stunning and  profound as the night  heavens and the days  may be, the revelation of God in Scripture is much  better. We now see  a transition  from the  beholding  God's WORLD and  WORKS to the witness of His WORD. Both spring from the same source; both declare the same truth—God's Glory. But bothare not equal in their power to bring us to God. GENERAL Revelation is not  sufficient  to save us. We need SPECIAL Revelation.

Now before we move on we must note this: When David described Creation in 19:1-6, he used the name that is commonly used of God  as Creator – Elohim (cf. Genesis1). But now  in  19:7-14, when he introduces God’s Word, he uses the covenant name YAHWEH (capitalised in the ESV) seven times.  When God revealed himself  personally to Moses  in the burning bush (Ex. 3:13,14) he says,  my Name is ”I AM THAT I AM” – the self existent  One – YAHWEH. This is the God of the TORAH to which we are  introduced now.

2.  19:7-11 Special Revelation    God’s Word Book

And in 19:7-9   we find  this special revelation - God’s Word – amplified in terms of  six nouns, six adjectives, six verbs. The focus is on the identity (the nouns), the quality (the adjectives), and the function (the verbs) of Scripture.

1.   19:7a  "the law (noun-identity) of the Lord is perfect (adjective- quality), reviving (verb- function)  the soul" (v. 7a). The law is the Torah is the most general term for the law. As a law, it points us in the perfect direction of what is right and away from what is wrong. Its function is to revive/refresh/renew our souls. God’s Word revives us!

2.  19:7b  "the testimony (N)of the Lord is sure (A), making wise (V) the simple" . The written Word is the record of God's testimony to who He is and what He will provide for us in His Messiah-Jesus. This testimony is sure/ dependable/ trustworthy. The Bible gives true wisdom to simple, naïve, gullible people like us. 

3.  19:8a "the precepts (N) of the Lord are right (A), rejoicing (V) the heart" . God's precepts are never wrong. They are true truth and accurate.  God's precepts make us happy and joyful, for they liberate us. God’s  precepts are  God's remedy for a sad, depressed, broken heart. If you are there, then do yourself a favour and read, memorize and meditate over God's precepts. Perspective will return.

4.    19:8b  "the commandment (N) of the Lord is pure,(A) enlightening (V)  the eyes" . That word "pure" may also be rendered "radiant" (NIV). God's commandments are radiant. They bring  light into the darkness of our  human ignorance.  And all of a sudden our eyes see as they have never seen before.  This is specifically the work of the Holy Spirit according to John 14/16. He is given  to illuminate the truth as it is in Jesus.

5.    19:9a  "the fear (N) of the Lord is clean (N), enduring forever (V) " . David has in mind that fear of God that the Bible produces in us. It is clean both in terms of its essence and its impact on our hearts. It endures forever – even into eternity. God's Word does not change with the seasons or with fashions; it  endures forever.

6.    19:9b  "the rules (N) of the Lord are true (A), and righteous (V) altogether" . What God says in his word is never false. It always produces what is right.  The certainty of God's Word is our foundation.

Now if you have all that contained in God’s special revelation, what more do you need? No wonder that  David  writes in  19:10-11  “…more to be desired "than gold, even much fine gold; sweeter also than honey and drippings of the honeycomb. Moreover, by them is your servant warned; in keeping them there is great reward".

While  the general revelation of 19:1-6  cause us  to  be in awe of what we see, we are helped  in 19:7-9   to see the Creator. It is like seeing an exquisite artwork, but then meeting the Artist.  There is a satisfaction and joy in knowing that this world and all that we see has an original source – a personal Creator.   

In 19:11  we are reminded... 

(i)   by way of a warning – to ignore the  Word is  at our peril 

(ii) by way of an encouragement  - to heed the Word   revives the soul, provides wisdom for our walk in this world, joy for  the  heart, enlightenment for the eyes, enduring truth you can count on, and the provision of righteousness.

3.  19:12-14 Application  - Revelation brings about conviction  and prayer

19:12-14 Here we see that  David  was overcome  by  God’s truth in its totality, and when that happens there is always  conviction of sin,  leading to prayer. David prays as he becomes aware  of the fact he sinned both consciously and unconsciously. He prayed that God would protect him from both.  He prayed that he might be possessed of a blameless heart.

So this Psalm ends with these words, “Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in your sight, O LORD, my Rock and my Redeemer” (19:14). A heart filled to the brim with the  revelation of  God’s work,  both in general and in special revelation is  a precious, mind stretching, sin revealing and soul cleansing exercise. 

 

 



[1] Spurgeon : The Treasury of David (Vol 1), p. 269

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