“God is My Strength”
BIBLE READING:
Psalm
72-75
When you
were a new Christian, were you troubled by the feeling that becoming a child of
God ought to make life easier for you because you had become the object of a
heavenly Father's love and care, but instead you found things became worse? You
finally found yourself frustrated and depressed, especially when you saw that
the ungodly around you were often enjoying life to the full. There are many
Christians who struggle with such a problem. It is this very problem that is
brought before us in Psalm 73. The
problem is stated for us in the opening verses. What was bothering the psalmist
was the apparent contradiction between what he had been taught in the
Scriptures--that God was good to the upright and to those who were pure in
heart--and his experience in life. He was envious, he said, of the arrogant and
disturbed by the prosperity of the wicked. That prosperity seemed to him to be
a direct contradiction to what he had been taught about God. He had been told
that if you are upright and pure in heart, that is, you had learned to lay hold
of the righteousness that God provides and were cleansed by His grace, then God
would be good to you, take care of you, and watch over you. Instead, this man was finding his own
situation to be difficult and very discouraging, but the wicked around him, the
ungodly, seemed to prosper, and everything was going well with them. This
bothered him greatly. He could not reconcile this. It troubled him so terribly
that it created a deep resentment and envy in his heart. Ultimately, he found
himself threatened with a complete loss of faith. His feet had almost slipped,
he had almost stumbled, and he had come to the place where he was almost ready
to renounce his faith. Here is one of the great values of the Psalms for us.
These wonderful folk songs of faith reflect our own experience. They are an
enactment of what most of us are going through, have gone through, or will go
through in the walk of faith. There have been many Christians troubled like
this. They have been swayed by the seeming logic of the argument of the infidel
or atheist. They say, how can your God be both a God of love and power? If He's
a God of power, as you Christians say He is and can do all things, then He
cannot be a God of love, or He would do something to correct injustices. New Christians
are often tremendously affected by this argument and become discouraged and
frightened as they face the seeming logic of it. How can God be both a God of
love and power and yet allow His own to suffer so terribly at times while the
unrighteous seem to prosper and everything goes well with them? That was the
problem this man was facing. Lord, help me to trust, despite what I often see
around me, that You are a God of both infinite power and infinite love.
-Davis
Carman
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