RDean/Daniel Lesson 49
Hope in Crisis; Psalm 130 – Daniel 11:3-4
Today is a tragic day; there
was a tragic court ruling in a federal appeals in San Francisco today which
just demonstrates once again the evil agenda of the liberal left. The federal appeals court in San Francisco
ruled that the Pledge of Allegiance was unconstitutional because of the phrase,
“under God.” Frankly this really reveals
a lack of education on the part of the judge because in his ruling he compared
the term to a more definite term, such as “Jesus” or a more specific named
deity, when in fact the English word “God” is simply a generic term that can
refer to any deity including just some abstract concept of God. Listen to what he said:
“So the profession that we
are a nation” (quote) “‘under God,’ was identical for establishment clause
purposes,” that’s the First Amendment, “to a profession that we are a nation
under Jesus,” see how he quotes “under God” with under a specific deity, “under
Jesus, a nation under Vishnu, a nation Zeus, or a nation under no God, because
none of these professions can be neutral with respect to religion. Judge Alfred T. Goodwin wrote.” Now the problem with that is of course that
would also make the Declaration of Independence unconstitutional because it
recognizes that our inalienable rights come from a Creator. And once you take away an understanding of
the existence of God and the existence of an absolute deity from whom we
receive our rights, from who we receive our life and breath, you end up
basically destroying our freedom.
It’s remarkable that in no
other culture in history has anyone experienced the level of freedoms that we
have in the United States and that is because this nation was founded upon
principles that came from the Scripture, because it was founded within the
construct of Judeo-Christian ethics and Judeo-Christian values. That doesn’t mean it was a Christian nation
but that means that the thinkers thought within that framework and at no other
time in history has there ever been a nation or an empire or a civilization
that has the kind of freedoms that we have.
You can’t get there if you start from any other point other than
Christianity.
Only Christianity has a basis
for giving people the freedom of volition to reject it. You do not have those kinds of freedom in any
Islamic country, you don’t have those kinds of freedoms in Hindu countries or
Buddhist countries; you only have those kinds of freedoms which developed in
the culture of western Europe and the more that culture was influenced by
Biblical truth the more the nation so impacted developed concepts of
freedom. That’s a historical fact, but
the problem is today we have judges, everyone from judges sitting on federal
benches to kindergarteners in elementary school are ignorant of history. And once you are ignorant of history, as
Hegel pointed out, you are doomed to repeat it.
Now a second thing happened
today, somebody sent me an e-mail, which I want to read because it demonstrates
a tremendous level of courage by someone who is living in a situation of
extreme adversity. You’ll also see as I
read through it that it relates to the subject that we’re studying in Daniel
11. The writer is not a believer, the
writer is not a Christian; the writer demonstrates a marked level of courage in
the face of adversity and if an unbeliever can have this level of courage in
the face of adversity then how much more should a believer who understands that
God is in control and that God controls history.
This is from a woman in
Israel. She says:
“I am not the least afraid to
go any place, by bus or to a mall. I
didn’t change or stop doing anything I used to do before this mess began. People tend to forget that twice the
casualties from terror get killed on the roads.
More people still die from heart attacks, cancer and other things; they
just don’t show them on the TV news.
Don’t misunderstand me, there is a war going on and it’s not pleasant,
but let’s face it, we have never been better.
It’s only the TV and media that make people think it’s the end of the
world coming. Only 60 years ago they
were leading Jews to their death like sheep to the slaughter; no country, no
army. Fifty-five years ago seven Arab
countries declared war on the small Jewish state only a few hours old. We were then 650,000 Jews against the rest of
the Arab world, no IDF, no mighty air force, just tough people with nowhere to
go. Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Jordan, Egypt,
Libya, Saudi Arabia attacked all at once.
The country the U.N. gave us was 65% desert; the country started from
scratch. Thirty-five years ago we fought
the three strongest armies in the Middle East and wiped them out in six
days. We fought against different
coalitions of Arab countries with modern armies and masses of Russian Soviet
weapons and still won. We have today a
country, and an army, and a strong air force and a high tech economy exporting
millions; Intel, Microsoft, IBM developed their stuff here. Our doctors win world prizes for medical
developments. We made the desert
flourish selling oranges and vegetables to the world. Israel sent its own satellite into
space. We proudly sit with the U.S.
250,000,000 people, Russia 200,000,000, China 1.1 billion people, the
Europeans, France, England, Germany 350,000,000, as the only countries in the
world to shoot something into space.
Israel is today in the war of nuclear power family with the U.S.,
Russia, China, India, France and England.
We don’t admit but everyone knows it.
[Can’t understand word] only 60 years ago we were left shameful with no
hope to our death. We crawled out of the
burning ashes of Europe; we won our wars here with less than nothing in our
hands. We built an empire out of nothing. Who the heck is Mr. Arafat to make me scared
or terrified; he made me laugh. Passover
was last month; let’s not forget what the story is all about. We overcame Pharaoh, we overcame the Greeks,
the Romans, the Inquisition in Spain, we overcame the [can’t understand word,
sounds like: Parguams] in Russia; we overcame Hitler, the Germans, the holocaust;
we overcame seven other Arab countries at once.
We over came Saddam. Take it easy
folks, we will overcome these too. No
matter what part of human history you try to think of, for us, the Jewish
people, our situation has never been better.
So let’s lift our heads high and remember, any nation or culture that
tried to mess with around with us was destroyed to the ground while we kept
going; Egypt, anyone know where their Empire disappeared to? The Greeks, Alexander of Macedonia, the
Romans; anyone today speak Latin? The
Third Reich, anyone heard any news about it lately. And look at us, the nation from the Bible,
from slavery in Egypt we are still here speaking the same language. Right here, right now, the Arabs don’t know
it yet, but they will learn there is one God.
As long as we keep our identity we are eternal. So far from worrying, crying or being scared,
things are going fine here, they surely can go better but still, don’t fall for
the media junk, they won’t tell you that there are festivals going on, people
keep on living, going out, seeing friends.
Yes, our morale is low, so what?
It’s only because we root for our dead while they enjoy the blood and
this is the same reason why we will win after all. You can forward this e-mail, if you choose,
to the whole of the Jewish community in the United States and the world. They are part of our strength and it might
help some of them to keep their head up high.
Tell them there is nothing to worry about; tell them to think big and
see the whole picture. See you next year
in Jerusalem.”
The only thing missing from
her e-mail is the fact that she doesn’t recognize that the reason there is
still an Israel is because of the promises God made to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob,
in the Old Testament, that God planned and had a purpose for calling out that
particular nation, that special nation and that that history is part of our
study in Daniel 11. In the 6th
century BC God outlined in specificity what his plan for Israel would be in the
Old Testament. Most of the events that
we are studying in Daniel 11 have already come to pass; they came to pass just
as God said they would come to pass in the prophecy of Daniel 11. God is the God who controls history God is
the God who is working out His plans and purposes in human history and those
plans and purposes included a place for Israel because it was through Israel
that God would send the Messiah, the Savior of the World who would die on the
cross for our sins.
Liberals and those who reject
the Bible continuously attack it, and as we studied, this chapter is one of the
most attacked because it clearly shows that God has spoken in time, God has in
detail forecast the future two to three hundred years in advance in incredible details. For us, fulfilled prophecy is a miracle. It’s a miracle because we can’t see or
witness, we can’t know or talk to anybody who saw or witnessed any of Jesus’
miracles. Unfortunately so-called
miracles in contemporary society are just that, they’re so-called miracles,
they’re not documented in the way that the Biblical miracles documented at that
time, neither are they on the same grand scale of miracles. But the miracle that we can see, that we can
still witness, is the miracle of fulfilled prophecy because we can read the
Scripture and see just how precisely God portrayed the future through Daniel
and then we can look at 200 years later in time and see exactly how that
prophecy was fulfilled and that gives and provides evidence for the veracity of
Scripture.
We also saw in our
introduction to this study that it was necessary for the preincarnate Son of
God to give this revelation to Daniel because He was preparing the Jews for
what would happen during the next 400 years, that just as today it would be a
time of anti-Semitism. And anyone who is
anti-Semitic, anyone who has ever blamed the Jews for anything, anyone who has
ever attacked Jews is playing the devil’s game because the devil wants to
destroy Israel because Israel is God’s people, God still has a plan and a
future for Israel and Satan’s strategy is that if he can destroy every Jew from
the face of the earth then he thinks that he can defeat God. And it’s sad to say that there are some
churches and some institutions and some governments that are dead set against
the nation Israel. And that is a subtle
form of anti-Semitism today, it’s not the kind of genocidal anti-Semitism of
Adolph Hitler but it is more subtlety masked in an anti-Israel attitude today. We have studied time and again the atrocities
and the horrors and the lies that the Palestinians put forth. They are not Philistines, they have no
traditional right to the land, and they continuously put forth their vile
propaganda that is nothing but lies. And
continuously the world takes their side instead of the side of Israel.
All of that is a testimony to
the veracity of Scripture. As this woman
points out, time and time again people have sought to destroy Israel and yet
they’re still there, still in the land that God gave them, still speaking the
language that they spoke 4,000 years ago; and if anything is a testimony to the
reality of God and His plan in history, then the very existence of a Jew is a
testimony to that plan. You can’t find
an Assyrian today; you can’t find a Samarian today; you can’t find a Chaldean
today; you can’t find a Mede today; you can’t find a Philistine today, but you
can still find Jews. They still survive
and that is a great testimony to God’s plan.
The purpose in providing a
detailed revelation like this to Israel at that time in history was to give
them hope. I covered that last time and
I want to develop that idea a little more this evening. You can’t survive in a crisis on emotion
alone. That’s why so many people in our
emotion-oriented, self-absorbed, subjective culture are finding it possible to
survive the threat of terrorism; only because they’re on Prozac, Zoloft, only
because they have some sort of medical crutch that enables them to handle a
crisis. What about their parents and
their grandparents who made it through World War II without the crutch of
drugs. It’s primarily because that
generation had a character that was built because of the influence of the Word
of God and the Bible that still impacted that society and it no longer has that
impact today. I’m not talking about
religion, I’m not talking about ritual, I’m talking about the truth of God’s
Word, not these other things.
That’s what God was doing in
Israel, He was giving them content, giving them information so that they would
have real hope, substantive hope, they would have not just some hope, I hope or
wish that things would be okay, not just some optimistic desire but a firm
certainty. After all, that’s what the
word “hope” primarily means in the Scripture, is a confident expectation. The Bible talks about our salvation as a
confident expectation, that is our hope; we look forward to the coming of the
Lord, that’s our blessed hope. We can know
that more surely than you can know that you’re going to make it home this evening. You can know that more surely than you can
know anything else in life because God has spoken in His Word.
Today I sat down and I
started thinking about hope and I did a search of various passages and I came
across Psalm 130 and this provides a fantastic background for the kind of
thinking that is engendered and that God wanted to engender in Israel at this
time. We’re not told who wrote it, there
is not superscription in Psalm 130 as to the particular historical
circumstances surrounding it. It could
have taken place at any time in Israel’s history but the implication is that it
is related to a time of adversity, a time of difficulty, a time when the nation
was faced with divine judgment and they were calling upon God for His
forgiveness and it ends with a focus on God’s hope, the hope that God provides
the believer based primarily on salvation.
In the superscript it says,
“A Son fog Ascents,” that means that this became adopted into the ritual
practice of the tabernacle or the temple in the Old Testament; the choir as
they ascended the steps into the temple would sing this particular Psalm. It begins, Psalm 130:1, “Out of the depths I
have cried to Thee, O LORD,” now if you notice on the overhead, the term in
your Bible “LORD” is in all capital letters; that means that it is a rendering
of the sacred Tetragrammaton, the sacred four letters of the Hebrew alphabet for
the designation of the personal name of God.
You see, the Bible talks about a personal God, a God who has a personal
name, it is Yahweh. This is not the
generic God of the pledge of allegiance; it’s not the generic creator of the
Declaration of Independence, but this is Yahweh who entered into a personal
covenant with the nation Israel on Mount Sinai.
It is the same God who entered
into a personal covenant with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob; you see, it’s not
enough to believe in God, to believe in some sort of abstract idea of a deity,
some abstract concept of a Creator. The
God of the Bible is the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. The God of the Bible is the God who sent His
Son, the eternal Second Person of the Trinity, One with God the Father in
essence yet distinct in personality, sent His Son to the earth to die on the
cross as the payment for sin, as the substitute for sin. So we don’t just believe in a generic God,
just some concept of an abstract deity because that deity has revealed Himself
to us. So the God of the Bible is a
personal God. He’s an infinite God but
He’s also a personal God and as a personal God He communicates directly to
mankind. He can have a relationship with
mankind, and as a personal God He has communicated to man information about
Himself and how to have a relationship with Him. He is a God of compassion, a God who is
intimately concerned with the heartaches and difficulties of our life.
This passage begins, it is
what is called a lament Psalm in the Old Testament; a lament Psalm is a plea or
a cry for help or assistance when there is some crisis or adversity in
life. People face many different crises
in life. Some face crises of health;
others face crises of finances and money.
Others are going through difficult times in their marriage. Others face difficulty in romance and in
their social life. Perhaps it’s in your
career; some folks are facing crises right now in terms of weather and weather
related disaster such as the folks in Arizona and Colorado who are dealing with
the tremendous fires that are burning through those states. Often when we face any of these we also have
another crisis that goes along with them and that’s the crisis of
disappointment; we’re disappointed in life, the way life has turned out, the
disappointment from broken dreams and shattered hopes and unfulfilled
expectations. And here the Psalmist
expresses that common feeling that many of us sometimes face when we go through
a crisis.
I want you to notice that the
Scripture never minimizes those emotions; it never disparages them, there is no
castigation of the writer of the Psalms for feeling like he is down in the dumps
or down in the depths as he expresses it.
The Bible, God always meets us where we are, not where we ought to
be. While the Bible never glorifies
human emotion, neither does it ignore the emotions that humans feel, because
emotions are unavoidable. It’s not that
the emotions that are wrong, it’s what you do with them that are wrong. It’s how you let them affect the decision
making process that’s wrong. When we
feel down in the dumps, when we feel overwhelmed and we feel discouraged and
depressed, when we let that depression dictate the decisions we make, that’s
when it becomes sin. When we look at the
depression, the discouragement, the emotions say I am not going to dictate my
life, I’m going to make decisions based on the truth of the God’s Word, that’s
when God is glorified. And we see the
process in these lament Psalms as the psalmist starts with who he is in terms
of his discouragement, being overwhelmed in whatever adversity he faced, and we
see how he moves through the situation as he focuses on the absolute truth of
God’s Word.
He begins, “Out of the depths
I have cried to Thee, O Yahweh.” “Out of
the depths” is a figure of speech used to describe the overwhelming nature of
adversity. We might use an English idiom
like down in the dumps or under the pile, overwhelmed by life, overwhelmed by
disaster, disappointment, but its in the midst of this disappointment that the
Psalmist is able to turn to the only real solution and that’s God, the God of
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, the God who is the Father of the Lord Jesus
Christ. He faces the reality of his
adversity and he turns to God and he cries out in his strength, his passion in
what he is saying here, he says, Psalm 130:2, “Lord, hear my voice!” You get a sense from this because of the qal
imperative that is used here, it’s an imperative of request, that he is in
desperate straits, he feels like he’s lost all hope because probably he has
been pursuing every path he could think of to find meaning and happiness in
life. We know that because that happens
so frequently in the Old Testament with Israel, they were always trying to find
meaning through the fertility worship of the various fertility cults or like
most Americans trying to find meaning in life through success, through building
a business, through relationship, through various details of life and when it
all fails and comes crashing down, there’s nothing in life, perhaps, that’s
more miserable, that makes your soul ache more than facing those crises.
And so he turns to God and he
cries out, “Lord, hear my voice!” It’s
an imperative of request and here it’s addressed, not to Yahweh again, notice
the “Lord” is not upper case, it’s lower case, he is crying out Adonai. Adonai is the Hebrew word that is more like
our generic word “lord” which is a polite form of address. It’s almost as if he’s saying “sir.” He has already addressed God as Yahweh so we
know that he is a believer in right relationship to God and here, by using the
word Adonai he is expressing his adoration of God and his respect for God. Furthermore, the Jews rarely ever pronounced
the name Yahweh out of respect for God.
Usually they…in fact in the Bible when they read the Scripture they have
the pointing, the vowel points underneath the four consonants are the vowel
points from the word Adonai to remind the reader that as they read out loud
that instead of reading the name of God, Yahweh, they would see that in the
text and instead they would substitute Adonai.
Sometimes if they were talking about God in the third person they would
just use the name, Shem.
So he says, “Lord, hear my
voice!” He’s crying, he says I plead
with God, “Let Thine ears be attentive,” he repeats that phrase in synonymous
parallelism, “Let thine ears be attentive,” he is using an anthropomorphism here
because God doesn’t actually have ears but he is ascribing to God human bodily
characteristics so that we can understand what he is saying, so that we can
understand something about God. Really
he’s crying out to him to listen to what he has to say, “To the voice of my
supplications.” He says “Let Thine ears
be attentive” and this is the adjective of the Hebrew qashab which means to acquire knowledge, to learn to pay attention,
to focus on something, to concentrate.
It expresses the idea that many people do when they go through crisis,
well Lord, where were you when all of these things happened, were you concerned
about the Middle East or were you focusing on terrorism in the United States
but somehow you forget me and my problem.
Just wake up now and come back and pay attention to me; we feel that way
sometimes. But what we have to do is
deal with those emotions and those feelings with the absolutes of God’s Word.
Psalm 130:3 he expresses a
condition; he’s focusing on the holiness of God. That’s what underlies this passage if you
look at the backdrop here, because he talks about sin. He says, “I Thou, LORD,” once again
addressing Him as Yahweh, “If Thou, LORD, shouldst mark iniquities,” and here
we have the Hebrew word shamar which
means to keep, to observe, or to pay attention to. He says Lord, if You paid attention to our
sins, if you paid attention to our iniquities, and iniquity is the word avon which is the breaking of a
commandment, he says I you paid attention to every time we broke a commandment,
no one could stand up before you, no one would have any hope, no one could come
into your presence, no one could ever have a relationship with you. “LORD, if you paid attention to every sin
that we commit, who could stand?” The
psalmist recognizes the principle of Scripture and that is that “all have
sinned and fall short of the glory of God.”
Every single human being is a sinner, everyone has violated the standard
of God; there is no way that anybody can do anything to please God, to impress
God, to somehow cause God to look at us.
That’s the point of
Scripture, that as sinners we are obnoxious to God. The most pleasing personality, the most
wonderful person, the most altruistic, giving, charitable individual, it is
obnoxious to God. We may think they’re
wonderful, we may elevate them to a high place but the Scripture says that all
of our works of righteousness are as filthy rags. In the eyes of God all of our religious
rituals are filthy rags because God never authorized any religious ritual for
the Church Age outside of the simple Lord’s Table done for the remembrance of
what took place on the cross. You see,
all of our works of righteousness, all of our best is nothing to God. That’s the problem, man is arrogant and we
think that somehow we can do some little something to gain God’s attention and
impress Him with who we are and what we’ve done. But the psalmist says Lord, if You paid
attention to our sins, no one could stand, “who could stand?”
But in contrast he points out
in Psalm 130:4, “But there is forgiveness,” he said if you paid attention no
one could stand but in contrast there is forgiveness, “with Thee, That Thou
mayest be feared.” We have to look at a
couple of words here to understand the concept that he’s talking about. Forgiveness is crucial because this is a
concept that is clearly understood in modern culture; people think that you can
forgive somebody without any payment of any kind of consequence. That’s not what Scripture teaches. Scripture teaches God is able to forgive us
because the penalty was paid. He doesn’t
just forgive us out of the goodness of His heart, because he’s just a kind and
benevolent God He looks at you and says well, I know you really didn’t mean it
and I know you had better intentions and I know you were sincere so I’m not
going to hold it against you. That’s not
the way forgiveness is used in the Bible.
In fact the word for
“forgiveness” both in the Old Testament and New Testament has to do with the
payment of a price, the forgiveness of a debt.
Both words, Old Testament and New Testament, are words that come out of
economics, that come out of finances. If
I loan you money and you owe me a debt, and then at the end of a year I say I’m
going to end the debt, I’m going to cancel the debt, I’m going to forgive the
debt, that means that when I tear that paper up then I can’t come back ever
again and say you owe me $5,000. That’s
what forgiveness means; it is based on something in Scripture and that’s what
we’re going to discover in the passages we look at this evening. “There is forgiveness with Thee, that Thou
mayest be feared.” There is forgiveness,
we’re not stuck with our sins, God has a perfect plan so that He can remove
those sins.
Let me say one more thing
about verse 4, there is forgiveness; the word here in the Hebrew is the word celiychah, now this is a unique word in this passage because this
word is only used with God as the subject; man cannot offer this kind of
forgiveness, only God can. It’s a
forgiveness that is unique to God and the reason God can forgive sins is
because the sins were paid for by Jesus Christ on the cross. See, we can’t forgive the debt. If I loan you the $5,000 you can’t do anything
to abolish that debt; it has to be paid off.
But what the Scripture says is you can’t pay that debt off, we’ll see
that in just a minute. You can’t pay the
debt off and I’m the only one who can cancel it. And yet what happens in most religious systems
that have developed in human history is the people are trying to pay the debt
off themselves and people can’t do that; mankind can’t do anything to pay the
debt of sin. Only God can forgive sins
and the interesting thing here is that if you go to the New Testament and look
at passages like Hebrews 9 it talks about the fact that in the Old Testament
even the forgiveness offered by the priests and the Levites was
ineffective.
Only God can forgive sins, no
priest ever could forgive sins. Not even
the Levitical priesthood authorized by God in the Bible could forgive
sins. What they did was only a picture,
only a temporary provision, only a foreshadowing of what can only happen
through Jesus Christ. You see, the Bible
teaches that there is only one God and only one Mediator between God and man,
there’s no authorization for a priesthood because a priesthood is ineffective;
only one God and one mediator between God and man and that’s the Man, the
perfect Man, Jesus Christ. Scripture
teaches with relation to forgiveness that no matter what you have done, no
matter how bad it is, now matter how awful it is, no matter how discouraging it
might be, no matter what you have done God is greater than you are. God is greater than anything you and I can
do; God is greater than any sin we can commit and God is the only One who can
solve the problem. And the point of
using a verb like this here in verse 4 is to drive home the point that this is
the basis for respect for God, for fear of the Lord is because of all that He
has done for us. We’re undeserving,
we’re obnoxious to God, He did it all.
All we can do is simply accept it as a gift.
The psalmist goes on to say
in Psalm 13:5, “I wait for the LORD, my soul does wait.” Now there are several different words in
Hebrew for the concept of “hope” and in fact if you look at a King James translation
or the New King James Version you’ll discover that instead of the word “wait”
like we have here in the New American Standard you’ll have the word
“hope.” This first word that’s used in
the first two lines is from the word qavah
which means to wait, to look for, to hope.
“I wait for the LORD,” and it indicates that aspect that hope is
something future, something that we have to wait for, something that we have to
look forward to, it is something to anticipate.
We wait for the Lord for deliverance, we anticipate it, we know it will
come. Waiting involves the very essence
of a person’s being, your soul, what it takes to wait, to be patient, to wait
for the Lord’s timing. Isaiah 40:31 says
that “Those who wait upon the LORD shall mount up with wings as eagles, they
shall run and not grow weary, they shall walk and not faint.”
Waiting, therefore, depends
upon how much you know about God and His Word and how much doctrine is in your
soul. You can’t wait for the Lord if you
don’t know how the Lord works, if you don’t know anything about God, if you
don’t know anything about doctrine. It’s
interesting, if you know anything about Church history and the history of
Christianity, especially in this country, one of the things that is tragic
today as opposed to years ago is that very few Christians could recite from
memory 20 verses, and yet that is something that was emphasized years ago in
Sunday Schools and Prep School and churches, churches would have contests for
people to memorize Scripture, because you see, when we get into crises of life
what matters is the doctrine in our soul and the Scriptures that we know, that
we can recall those promises to our mind and that needs to be something that is
a priority in all of our lives is to take the time to learn, to memorize
Scripture so that we can use it. The
psalmist said “Thy Word have I hid in my heart, that I might not sin against
Thee.” And yet very few Christians are
doing anything about hiding God’s Word into the mentality of their soul.
The psalmist can wait on the
Lord because he knows what He says and what the Lord has revealed and that’s
the next clause, “And in His Word do I hope.”
It is in what God has revealed in the doctrine of His Word, the promises
that God has revealed that we have hope and here it’s a different word, it is yachal, which means to wait, to hope, to
have a confident expectation, a certainty of what will take place, something
more certain than anything else in life.
Remember faith is…Scripture says “we walk by faith, and not by
sight.” When the Word of God is more
real to you than what you see, what you feel, what you experience, that’s when you’re
learning what faith is all about. Faith
is not faith in faith, it’s not just believing something because you want to
believe it, there’s always an object for faith and if that object for faith
isn’t something that is specifically stated in the Word of God it is a false
object of faith and you’re just propping yourself up on quicksand. Waiting involves knowing God’s Word, knowing
His promises and knowing that what God has promised will be realized and
fulfilled eventually. In the meantime,
the believer endures; he hangs in there because of the integrity and
uprightness of his own soul developed from the Word of God that has power in
transforming the individual believer’s own character.
So the psalmist then can go
on to say in Psalm 130:6, “My soul waits for the Lord,” notice he’s no longer
self-absorbed. See, this is the biggest
problem with people today, they’re focused on their problems, poor me, this has
happened, that’s happening, this person rejects me, that person doesn’t do what
I want him to do, I don’t have a job, my health isn’t what it could be, why is
it that everybody else seems healthy and I’m struggling with a health
problem. Instead of focusing on our
problems and being self-absorbed notice how he shifted. He starts off crying out of the depths, he’s
focused on the circumstances and not the solution but he quickly turns to the
solution and he says “My soul waits for the Lord;” and then there’s a
comparison here, “more than the watchmen for the mourning; indeed, more than
the watchmen for the morning.” We miss
the import of that not living in a culture where you live in a walled village
and you had to have watchmen out to protect the city against any kind of
bandits or any kind of problems but the night watchman would look forward in
anticipation to the coming of morning so they could finally go to sleep.
Psalm 130:7, “O Israel, hope
in the LORD,” see this is the cry that relates it to our passage in Daniel 11,
the hope, the confidence that Israel should have should be in the Lord. That’s why God revealed the history of Daniel
11, so that they would have confidence in the Lord and when things got way out
of control, when Antiochus Epiphanes is bringing his army down through the
heart of Israel and killing Jews everywhere, when he is setting up the
abomination of desolation in the temple, when all of these things are
happening, when the economy falls apart…see, all of these things could happen
here, if we have another terrorist attack it could make the great depression
back in the 20s look like a time of prosperity.
Americans don’t know how to handle crises any more. Everybody is scared to death and you can’t
handle crisis if you’re propped up by drugs; only if you’re propped up by
character and character only comes from the Word of God. And you can only have it if your starting
point is faith alone in Christ alone.
Psalm 130:7 says, “O Israel,
hope in the LORD,” your confident expectation is in the Lord; that’s the only
place you can put it, you can’t put it in morality, you can’t put it in church,
you can’t put it in an organization, you can’t put it in ritual, you can only
put it in the Lord Himself. There’s no
intermediary. Remember the only mediator
is the Lord Jesus Christ. He goes on to
say, “For with the LORD there is lovingkindness,” notice he starts off by
saying Lord, if You paid attention to our sins nobody could stand. Then he says but with the Lord there is
forgiveness; now we understand they dynamic of it, it'’ based on this word
“lovingkindness” which is the Hebrew word chesed. Chesed means grace, it means undeserved
mercy, it means God’s faithful loyal love, that God is faithful and loyal even
when we are unfaithful and disloyal.
With the Lord there is lovingkindness, there is steadfast loyal
love.
“And with Him is abundant
redemption.” You see, redemption comes
from His lovingkindness because redemption is based on grace. Grace means an undeserved gift; it means
unmerited favor, it means you don’t do one single thing to merit it. And see some people talk about meriting the
love of God, meriting the merit of Christ, meriting the salvation. And that’s just playing a word game that
destroys the meaning of grace. I
remember when somebody told me one time, I was going through some difficult
times helping out my folks and my mother was going through some health problems
and this individual said you’re earning a lot of grace. Think about that; that is a destruction of
language. See, grace is something that
is unearned; that’s what the word means, it’s a free gift, you can’t do
anything to earn grace. And yet this
person said we’re earning grace. That’s
ridiculous. You have many people who are
very religious and very moral and that’s they believe you do is you earn the
grace of God. But that destroys the
meaning of grace. Grace is something
that is a free gift that is yours no matter what you do, no matter how bad you
are, not matter how obnoxious you are it’s still yours because it doesn’t
depend on you, it depends on the giver.
That’s the hardest thing for
people to understand, to get past their pride and realize that they can just
accept something and not have to do one single thing for it and it’s still
theirs. That’s the basis, is God’s
lovingkindness, “and with Him is abundant redemption.” The word there in the Hebrew means more than
sufficient more than you can ever imagine.
He has not only done everything necessary to save you, He’s done
more. The word for “redemption” is the
Hebrew word which means to ransom, to rescue, to deliver. The focus on that first word, it means to
ransom, that means to pay a price.
What’s the price? That goes back
to the concept of forgiveness which has to do also with paying a price. In order to have forgiveness a price has to
be paid. When that price was paid for,
we’re told in the Scripture, by Jesus Christ, that He paid a redemption, “not
with corruptible things from our empty manner of life but with His precious
blood.” He died as our substitute. That’s what this verse goes on to say.
The idea of redemption is
further explained in Psalm 59:5. There
the psalmist says: “Why should I fear in days of adversity, when the iniquity
of my foes surround me,” when I’m surrounded by terrorism, when we had the
threat of terrorism, the threat of dirty bombs, the threat of perhaps a nuclear
explosion, the threat of perhaps the assassination of a President or a nuclear
attack on Washington DC or another attack on New York or some other place, when
we are surrounded by our foes, the psalmist says “why should I be afraid in
days of adversity, when the iniquity of my foes surround me. [6] Even those who trust in their wealth,”
see, there are people who think that they’re wealthy enough to survive this;
some people think they’re wealthy enough that they can give enough to the local
church to guarantee a place in heaven, they’re trusting in their wealth,
they’re trusting in something they do.
“Even those who trust in their wealth, in the abundance of their
riches,” they’re talented enough, they’re kind enough, they’ve been given
enough in order to be able to survive the adversity.
But the psalmist says, Psalm
49:7, “No man can by any means redeem his brother,” no human being can by any
means whatsoever, you can’t give enough money to God, you can’t be good enough,
you can’t bargain enough, you can’t engage in enough ritual, you can’t say
enough ritual prayers, you can’t by any means do one thing to redeem yourself
or anybody else. “Or give to God a
ransom for him—” no man could do that.
Why? Because all men are sinners,
it took someone sinless to die as our substitute. That’s why God sent His Son, the eternal
Second Person of the Trinity, to die on the cross as our substitute. “No man cay by any means redeem his brother,
or give to God a ransom for him— [8] For the redemption of his soul is costly
and he should cease trying forever,” that means quit trying to impress God or
trying to get saved, quit trying to impress Him by how much you gave, quit
trying to impress God by ritual, quit trying to impress God by going to church,
quit trying to impress God by how sorry you feel for your sins. None of that impresses God. The redemption of the soul is so costly that
no human being can pay the price or even try to be worthy of the price or to
merit the price. It is a completely free
gift. It is a payment; that price is
paid “so that we can live eternally and not undergo decay,” Psalm 49:9.
Back to Psalm 130:8, the
psalmist applies this to Israel and says, “And he will redeem Israel from all
his iniquities.” See, that’s our future
hope, that we will see future redemption.
Jesus Christ has already fulfilled this promise when He paid the price
for sin at the cross. This is what Peter
says in 1 Peter 1:18-19, “Knowing that you are not redeemed with corruptible
things, such as silver and gold from your aimless manner of life, received by
tradition from your fathers.” See,
there’s all sorts of religious traditions, that’s what the Bible says. Verse 19, “But with the precious blood, as of
a lamb without blemish and without spot,” Jesus Christ paid the penalty in full
for our salvation, for the salvation of every human being on the planet so that
the price is paid, the gift is given, all we have to do is simply accept it, to
believe that Jesus Christ died for our sins, nothing more, nothing less. That’s the basis for hope.
This is the same thing we got
into at the introduction last time in Romans 5:3-5, where Paul is talking to
the Romans about their Christian life and he says, “And not only this, but we
also exult in our tribulation,” it doesn’t matter how threatened this nation
is, it doesn’t matter how much we might lose, it doesn’t matter how horrible
things might get, if there’s a chemical attack, if there’s a nuclear attack or
whatever it might be, we have courage to stand above that, in fact, we can
exult as believers in our tribulations because we know something, we know that
God is still in control. That’s what
this lady referenced in her letter is that God has always been in control over
Israel’s destiny and nobody’s been able to destroy it. So “we exult in our tribulations because we
know that tribulation brings about perseverance, [5] and perseverance, proven
character, and prove character hope,” that’s the process. [5] “And hope does not disappoint, because
the love of God has been poured out within our hearts through the Holy Spirit
who was given to us.”
Now we looked at this chart
last time, just a brief outline of the process.
We go through adversity, difficulties, hardship, health problems,
financial problems, romantic problems, whatever they may be, that’s adversity,
it’s pressure. We can choose to try to
solve it on our own or we can choose by letting God solve it; to do that you
have to start by being saved. After
you’re in the family of God and you apply the Word of God you stick with it,
you stick with the Word, you stick with applying it, you persevere. This produces evidence of demonstrated
integrity, your integrity, not integrity that comes from just being moral but
integrity that comes from applying the Word of God and this in turn produces
hope. The word there in the Greek is elpis, meaning confident expectation, we
have confidence so that despite how hard things get, how difficult they might
become we still have confidence in God and we can still exult and have maximum
happiness and joy, no matter how tough things get.
Now in the same passage Paul
goes on to say that, Romans 5:6, “while we were still helpless,” while we
couldn’t do one single thing, “at the right time Christ died for the
ungodly.” He didn’t die for the nice
people because there are no nice people.
Remember, Romans 3 says there is none righteous, no not one. So when it says that He died for the ungodly
that means every human being because every one of us is defined as ungodly.
Romans 5:7, “For one will
hardly die for a righteous man,” in fact among men will hardly die for somebody
else, “but perhaps for a good man someone might dare even to die.” Verse 8, “But God demonstrates His own love
toward us, in that while we were yet sinners,” while were still obnoxious and
hostile to Him, “Christ died as a substitute for us.” Hupo
plus the genitive indicates that He died as our substitute, He died in our
place, He paid the penalty in full for each one of us. That’s the basis for hope. We know God’s in control; He’s in control of
history and has worked out the details of history.
Now this is exactly what
Daniel is reminding the Jews about and what he’s going to tell them about in
Daniel 11. Verse 2, “And now I will tell
you the truth. Behold, three more kings
are going to arise in Persia.” He’s going
to give them detail after historical detail of what will take place so that
they can have confidence no matter what might happen around them historically
they can relax knowing that God is still in control, that no matter what
kingdoms rise and what kingdoms fall, they can relax. He says “three more kings are going to arise
in Persia. Then a fourth will gain far
more riches than all of them; as soon as he becomes strong through his riches,
he will arouse the whole empire against the realm of Greece.” Last time we looked at these in detail. The first king that was already present at
that time was Cyrus, so he’s not one of the three. He was succeeded by his son, Cambyses, who
was succeeded by an interloper who is called by historian, Pseudo Smerdis,
Cambyses has secretly had his younger bother assassinated, see we have all
kinds of intrigue back then, just as today.
He had his younger brother assassinated in sort of a religious elite,
the magi, who were the Zoroastrian priests of that era had an imposter come
forward and claim the throne while Cambyses was down fighting in Egypt. Well, Pseudo Smerdis only lasted a couple of
years; Cambyses was assassinated on his way back to regain his throne, Pseudo
Smerdis lasted a year, he was succeeded by Darius Hystaspes, one of the
greatest leaders and organizers of the ancient world.
When we look at all of this,
and all of this chaos going on, we ought to ask the question, what is God expecting
the every day Jew to be doing in the midst of all of this crisis? Let’s go back to Jeremiah 29:7, while they
were out of the land, while they were living in the midst of all this chaos,
this was the principle, they were to “seek the welfare of the city where I have
sent you to live in exile, and pray to the LORD on its behalf; for in its
welfare you will have welfare.” You see,
the Jews were out of the land, some of them came back to the land but they were
still under the domination of these empires, and they were to pray for the
empires, they were to pray for the kings and to pray for its welfare so that
they would have welfare and peace to go about the Lord’s work.
That’s the same principle
stated in 1 Timothy 2:1, Paul says, “First of all, then, I urge that entreaties
and prayers, petitions and thanksgivings be made on behalf of all men, for
kings and all who are in authority,” and that includes stupid historically
illiterate liberal judges who make decisions like stating that the Pledge of Allegiance
is unconstitutional. We are to pray for
these people. Why? “That we may lead a tranquil life in all
godliness and dignity.” We talk a lot
about prayer and how to pray and how to argue in prayer, argue in the sense of
a legal term before the throne of grace and one of the things that keeps coming
back to me that we need to make a part of our prayer life is that this country
has continued to be blessed, to exist, because it sends out missionaries,
because we stick with Israel, because we have for the most part rejected anti-Semitism. We are a bulwark of truth in the world and we
need to pray to God that He would protect us for that reason, so that we can
continue to send out missionaries, support missionaries, continue to support
the missionaries that around the world, and that’s a challenge to local
churches, local churches need to be sending out missionaries. How can a nation send out missionaries if the
local churches don’t have a strong vision for missions? We need to support Israel; the minute we stop
supporting Israel we sign our death warrant.
We need to go to the throne of grace and we need to petition God on the
basis of our history that He continue to protect and preserve this nation so
that we can continue to do those things.
Hopefully God will protect us, unless of course, as I’ve said before, we
are near the end times and Jesus is returning soon and He’s moving things along
in the prophetic timetable.
This is the basis for hope,
this is what Daniel is building into the people of Israel so they can survive
the crises that’s about to hit them historically. We may have the same crises so we to need to
focus on our basis for hope, which is the Word of God, the grace of God and our
complete salvation in Jesus Christ.