Psalm 82:1
“God stands in the congregation of the mighty; He judges among the gods.”
Law and Order was one of the longest running television series of all time airing for 20 years. Every episode began with the words; “In the criminal justice system, the people are represented by two separate yet equally important groups: the police, who investigate crime; and the district attorneys, who prosecute the offenders. These are their stories.” And every episode began the same way; a victim was discovered and their case investigated and the suspects brought to trial. I can recall one episode where the judge was corrupt and stood in the way of the man receiving a fair trial. There is something within us where we expect those who judge to behave fairly.
While we might not always get a fair trial here on earth it is guaranteed that we will get one when we stand before God. Abraham declared, “Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?” God will not be bribed and nothing is hidden from His sight. Our actions will be weighed against His perfect righteousness and no one will escape his careful scrutiny. While we cannot escape this judgment we can prepare in advance for it. God, the perfect judge, sent His own Son to pay the penalty for all sin. Since Christ bore the consequences for our crimes our sins can be forgiven and the charges against us removed. God will never allow a person to be judged twice for the same sin. Since Jesus payed our penalty we are free to receive God’s pardon.
Make no mistake about it, God is a just judge and everyone will one day face Him. But remember if you come to Christ now you will be freed from the judgment to come.
Pastor Jim
Questions for Psalm 82
- How is God contrasted with the judges of men?
- How does God feel about the afflicted and needy?
- Instead of applying this to your own needs, think of how you can minister to the needs of someone else today.
- Now go do it!
Memory is a funny thing. There are certain things that no matter how hard I try, I cannot seem to remember, and other things I can never forget. Names are particularly hard for me. It is not that I don’t care, or don’t want to remember; I just have a mental block. I have tried all the tricks: concentrating when the person introduces themselves, repeating the name back to them, using it in the conversation, and even relating their name to something else. Still, if some time has passed, and I encounter them again, the file that holds their name has been corrupted, and my memory refuses to access it.
If these questions were posed to us on a theology test, we would all answer “No, no, six times no.” We know that He promises:
Things in the kingdom of God run very differently than they do in the kingdoms of men. This is particularly true of exaltation. The word exalted means “to raise in rank or power, to be elevated or lifted above.” What exaltation is, and how to achieve it, are different in God’s Kingdom.
It is funny the things I remember from my youth or childhood. Some events seem as clear to me today as the day they first happened. Other events I have no recollection of whatsoever. I can remember one Saturday morning when I was 13. Myself and a group of the neighborhood boys were at our local beach and the waves were unusually large. We made our way past the breaking waves and into the lineup. Not long afterwards the horizon began to fill with the largest waves my young eyes had ever seen. We paddled as fast as we could in hopes of getting past them, but for myself and a few others, our efforts were in vain. Wave after wave came crashing upon my head until I began to despair of life. Just then I began to pray. Keep in mind I was not a believer, I had never been to church, read a bible or even really considered the idea of eternal matters. Nonetheless, in that moment I began to pray and to pray hard. I can still hear the words of that prayer echoing in my memory, I prayed “God if you hep me I will never cuss again.” Soon enough the waves subsided, I made my way back out and immediately forgot the promises I had just made to a God I did not give a second thought toward.
This psalm is the personal testimony of a man who almost fell away from the Lord. When he speaks of slipping, he is not talking about a little slip, but rather about throwing in the towel, and giving up on following the Lord.
We have four boys who are separated by only five years. When they were little, we, like so many others families, spent a lot of our time visiting amusement parks. As the older ones grew, they were attracted to the bigger rides, and their younger brother wanted to do whatever they did. The problem was, many of the rides had a standard. If you were not a certain height, you could not ride. At times, this created quite a controversy. We tried everything to make him just a little taller, we spiked his hair, we bought shoes called “Heelies”, that had a wheel in the back, and provided a couple extra inches to his height. However, time and time again, when we reached the entrance, he was excluded. He simply did not measure up.