Will God Deliver Me From My Enemy?

Psalm 53

.vs. 1 - No God = communism/socialism. Grounded in evolution

vs. 2-3- Everyone at one time or another knows there is a God.
It is our responsibility to teach the next generation
It is their choice to heed and pass it on
Instead they push away and become “filthy”

vs 4 - Sinners have knowledge - They choose not to pay attention to it

vs. 5 - There will be great fear of God one day

vs. 6 - We have to come back to God

Psalm 54: Will God Deliver Me When I’m Trapped by my Enemy

Background info: I Samuel 23: 14-28

vs. 1 - David seeks for god to save him

vs. 2 - We always want to be in a place where God hears our prayers

vs. 3 - God wants to hear our heart

vs. 4 - David is confident of God’s help

vs. 5 - God will cut off my enemies

vs. 6 - Key word is “FREELY”
He came willingly

vs. 7 - He has delivered us: Past, Present, Future
The Lord will take care of “it”.

Is Failure Final? Part 3

Psalms 51: 5-19

Does God give us no way out of failure?

The Lord sent Nathan to David (a gift of God)

vs 1-4 - A bringing about of known sin

vs. 5 - He is a sinner

vs. 6 - He sees his own depravity

vs. 7 - He wants the Lord to clean him and announce him clean

vs. 8 - We can feel the pain that our sin has caused others. Brokenness is a work and act of God

vs. 9-10 - Make something new in me. A New Heart

vs. 11 - Deal with me not like those who reject God

vs. 12 - Restore unto me the JOY of my salvation

vs. 13-16 - David was guilty of Uriah’s blood.
God never measures the sacrifice. He looks at the heart.

vs. 17 - The sacrifice is supposed to produce a broken spirit, and a contrite heart. Now He can use us.

vs. 18-19 - He can work in us now. He can use us. We are more useful when we are broken.

Is Failure Final? Part Two

Psalm 51

The Road to Restoration Continues

Background setting: 2 Samuel 12
vs. 11 - God anounces His punishment through Nathan the prophet
vs 14 - David’s testimony causes the unsaved to blaspheme God
David’s son is born, but dies as punishment.

Sin always leaves a path of destruction.

Psalm 51
1-6 - The acknowledgement process
David says Blot out my transgressions, Wash me, Cleanse me, I acknowledge my sins.

John 3:20 When we sin, we cover the Light. People don’t come to the light because no one wants to deal with their sins and be reproved.

God always forgives when we are repentant.

Is Failure Final?

Psalm 51

The road to restoration from sin.

We study the setting of this chapter after David commits adultery with Bathsheba and then has her husband, Uriah, murdered. 2 Samuel 11 and 12.

Unconfessed sin makes you useless.

After Nathan’s proclamation of David’s sin, David acknowledges that he sinned against God.

What is the Fate of the Wealthy Wicked?

Psalm 49

Chapter Outline
vs. 1-4 - Introduction
vs. 5 - Problem
vs. 6-20 - Answer

Worldly wealth is fleeting.
Proverbs 23:4-5 Riches fly away like eagles
I Samuel 2:7-8 The Lord makes the poor and the rich
Proverbs 10:22 The blessing of the Lord maketh rich, and He adds no sorrow to it

Problem: The oppressor (the wealthy wicked) causes us to fear

Wealth can not secure our eternity vs. 6
I Timothy 6:6-7 godliness with contentment is great gain
We cannot take our belongings with us after death
The love of money is the root of all evil.

Matthew 16:26 For what does it profit if a man gains the whole world, but loses his own soul?

Isaiah 51:6 My salvation will last forever, everything on earth will go away.

What are the Precious Possessions of God?

Psalm 48

Setting: The Angel of the Lord just killed 185,000 men in the Assyrian army, causing a great victory for the Hezekiah.

The Psalm opens with great praise to God, mentioning Mt. Zion.
Where is Mt. Zion? Micah 4:2 & Zechariah 9:9 - Mt. Zion is the same as Jerusalem

vs 3. God is our Refuge.
vs. 4-6 The people that come up against Jerusalem are filled with fear.
vs 7 God is given credit for sinking a ship with the wind that God creates.
Isaiah 66:7, Jeremiah 31:35 - Give God praise for His deliverance.
Give God praise for the sun, moon, and stars. God says the sun and moon would have to stop shining and all the stars would have to be numbered before Israel would stop being a nation.

Israel is God’s possession and so are we.

vs. 8-9 God loves us
vs. 10-13 God promises to keep Israel as a nation
vs. 14 God is our guide, even to death.
Hebrews 2:15 Jesus’ death causes Satan’s death.

How Do I Respond to God Working on my Behalf?

Psalm 47

Chapter Outline
vs. 1 - There is a Struggle
vs. 2-5 - There is a Savior
vs. 6- 8 - There is a Song
vs. 9 - There is a Shield

How to Respond:
vs. 1 and 6 - clap, shout, sing: TO GOD

vs. 3-4 “He shall.” The people know God will give them the victory. The praises to God were before He even did anything.

Isaiah 40:29 - God gives power to the weak, but they that wait on the Lord shall renew their strength.

3 Choices with Difficulties:
Surrender/Resist/Wait on God

Who or What are We Trusting In? Part Two

Psalm 46: 8-11

God will make a way, when there is no way.

The world needs to see people without fear, trusting in God.

2 Corinthians 12:15- Be used up for God, He is our refuge.

vs. 8-11 God is our Ruler
God made the waves to cease
God sent an angel to kill 185,000 Assyrians

Revelation 15:3-4 - Every nation will worship Him.

God can use His word to control things.

God says, Be still and know that I am God.

John 4:7-14 - He gives us everlasting life.

Background of Psalm 46-48

Ahaz was an evil king of Israel
He was the father of King Hezekiah

King Hezekiah opened up the temple and repaired it

Hezekiah knows why they are under affliction, idolatry.

Hezekiah wants revival of the people
He wants people to worship God
He wants people to serve God
He wants people unified under God
He wants people to prepare their hearts

Hezekiah prays for God’s mercy on the people that had clean hearts

God healed many people because their hearts were right

The Israelites willingly destroyed the idols
They had peace, that only God can give.

Who or What are You Trusting In?

Psalm 46

The setting of chapters 46 - 48 take place during the time of King Hezekiah. 2 Chronicles 32

  1. Assyria wants to take over Jerusalem

  2. King Hezekia reroutes the water that comes into the city. In this way, the water can’t be stopped from coming into the city.

    King Hezekiah still knows that he needs to trust in God even though the mountains were crumbling around him. God is his river and refuge.

    The king had his river, but it wasn’t the resource he needed

  3. Jeremiah 32:13 - The people forsook God, even though God is the living water. A resource that has no end

  4. Hezekeiah receives a letter from Assyria. He takes it directly to the Lord. God sends him a message. “I have heard.” God uses evil nations to bring us to Him.

  5. Psalm 46:7 - God is with us. He is our refuge.

How Will This World End, Part Two

Psalm 45: 9-17

This part of the Psalm describes the bride, the church

Even though the author wrote this Psalm, he didn’t understand it fully, because the bride is the church. The church is not introduced or known about until the NT.

No where in this Psalm is there any mention of the bride’s past sins.

vs. 10 - The King asks the bride to break ties and forget the past. The King sees the church as clean without a past

vs. 11 - Jesus sees us as beautiful and belonging to Him
Luke 7: The woman who washed Jesus’ feet realized her debt to Him. Jesus loved the woman and forgave her of her sins.

vs. 12-13 - The bride receives gifts from others and clothes herself with them

vs. 14 - the bride has virgins that follow her

vs. 15 - they will enter in with the King

vs. 16 - the bride can make her childfren princes
2 Kings - King Hezekiah was a good king, but had evil parents. We do not have to be influenced by our past.

vs. 17 - future generations remember the bride
Revelation 5: 10 - the King and the bride will reign forever.

How Will This World End?

Psalm 45

Outline of the chapter:
vs. 1-8: The King and His Kingdom
vs. 9-17: The King and His Beloved

vs. 1 - God tells the author what to write

vs. 2 - God is speaking about God.

vs. 3 - Ready to subdue in battle

vs. 4 - Man wants to conquer by lies and deceit, but God conquers by truth, meekness and righteousness

vs. 5 - He is conquering

vs. 6-8 - Who is the KIng
John 20: 17, Colossians 2:9 - Plurality in singularity
Genesis 49: 10 - Shiloh - name for Jesus. He will come out of Judah
I Chronicles 5:1 - Reuben loses his birthright - given to Joseph’s sons
Isaiah 9:6-8 - Fellowship is priceless. A Jew will be the King
Jeremiah 23 - The Lord is our righteousness
Matthew 1:1, 2:1 - From Judah. From Bethlehem
John 18:37 - He was born to be a King
John 19:19 - The King of the Jews
Revelation 5:6-9 - He’s coming to take the title deed back
Revelation 19:11-16 - Almighty God

How Does Sorrow Affect You? Part Two

Psalm 43

The nation of Israel is ungodly. The writer of this Psalm asks God for deliverance from the unjust.

This chapter could have been written when the Kingdom started to divide.

I Kings 11:26-40 - The story of Jeroboam. The Kingdom is divided

II Chronicles 5:25 - Assyria comes and begins to take the Northern tribes

II Kings 17 - Final deportation of Israelites by Assyria
The reason for the captivity is because of the Israelites’ idolatry.

The Assyrians replaced the Israelites in the land with others from other countries. With them came even more ungodly influence on the sourthern tribes.

Hosea 4: 6 - Hosea is the prophet to the northern tribes before Assyria comes in. Hosea warns them that they will be punished for their sins.

How should sorrow affect us?
Psalm 43

vs 3 - Let God be your joy.

vs. 5 - Hope in Him

He (God) is worthy of our praise, even in our sorrows.

How Does Sorrow Affect You?

Psalm 42: 1-8

vs. 1 - A deer will pant for water after being pursued

vs. 2 - David says his soul thirsteth after God’s water

vs. 3 - His tears are his meat, day and night

vs. 4 - David remembers back to the days when he kept the holy days

vs. 5 - He asks himself, “Why am I cast down?”

vs. 6-7 - David thinks back and remembers God’s provisions and blessings

vs. 8 - God is our power and prayer. His song is within us

How Do Friends Become Enemies?

Psalms 41

Background story to this Psalm:
2 Samuel 11 - Ahithophel was once David’s friend.
2 Samuel 23:11 - Ahithophel is Bathsheba’s grandfather. Bathsheba is the woman that David committed adultery with and had her husband, Uriah, killed.
Psalm 41:9 - David admits that he trusted Ahithophel.
Psalm 55:12 - David says he considered Ahithophel to be a trusted guide and confidant.
2 Samuel 15:10, 31 - Absalom, David’s son, knew that Ahithophel was bitter toward David. Absalom convinces Ahithophel to be on his side, against his father. David was then told that Ahithophel had turned to the other side, against him.
This could be the point where Psalm 41 was written.

Ahithophel had once trusted David, too, as his friend. Ahithophel’s bitterness started with disappointments, and it eventually led to his own death, as he hung himself.

God did not honor Ahithophel’s bitterness and bless him.

What should Ahithophel done with his bitterness? Instead of having Absalom find out about his ill-feelings toward David, Ahithophel should have gone directly to David and discussed it.

How do friends become enemies? Friends become enemies when feelings arent’t dealt wth and discussed between the two people that are involved. Unfortunately, the feelings are discussed with others that are not involved and those feelings grow and fester. And at times, like with David, he didn’t know Ahithophel’s feelings toward him, until he was told that Ahithophel had joined up with Absalom to fight against him.

Psalm 41 can be divided into three sections.

vs. 1-4 - David is depressed and asks God to heal his soul. Not his body, but his soul, his spirit.

vs. 5-9 - David recalls the experiences with enemies that wanted him dead, and also experiences with people that he thought was his friend, like Ahithophel.

vs. 10-12 - David praises God for His mercy, when other people did not show him mercy and love.

How Does God Care For Me?

Psalm 40

vs. 1 - David waits patiently for God to answer his prayers.
God’s timeframe is better than our own.

vs. 11 David wants to be preserved by God’s love and truth.

vs. 12 David can’t look up because of his unnumerable sins

vs. 14 - David knows enemies are after him.

vs. 17 - David says he is so poor and needy, but he knows God thinks of him.

vs. 2 - David says God brought him up out of a horrible pit

Types of Pits
#1 - Pits that dug by ourselves
Proverbs 26:27 - Whoever digs a pit will fall into it
#2 - Pits dug by others
Proverbs 22: 14, 23:27 - Strange women are a pit
#3 - Pits dug by family
Joseph was thrown into a pit, then sold as a slave
#4 - Pits dug by others and filled with mire
Jeremiah 37:20, 38:4 - Jermiah sunk in mire when he was put into a pit

vs. 2 - God places us on a rock

vs 3 - God puts a song in our mouth

vs. 4 - Make the Lord your trust

vs. 5 - David knows God’s many works and that He thinks on him
Psalm 139 = Great are God’s thoughts for me. Peaceful, not evil.

How Does God Care For Me
vs. 6-10 -
God has given us Jesus
God has given us His law
God is filled with loving kindness and truth toward us
God thinks peace and not evil for us.