Tuesday 8 May 2018

Psalm 73 ‘Come to terms with a world that seems unfair’

You might remember that I have been telling you the story of Jerry Sittser.  Jerry lost his mother, his wife and his four-year-old daughter when a drunk driver swerved across the road and careered into their minivan.  He writes about it in a brilliant book called, ‘A Grace Disguised.’

Eight months after the accident the alleged driver was charged with manslaughter.  Jerry had to attend the court proceedings as a witness.  He dreaded having to see the accused in court.  In fact he was so anxious about it that it caused him to throw up.  He did not want revenge, but he did want justice.
The defence attorney claimed that no one could actually prove who the driver was, since both the accused and his wife had been thrown from the car in the accident.  The burden of proof lay upon the prosecution.  A witness was brought forward who saw the accused get into the driver’s seat ten minutes before the accident.  Another person testified that the accused had admitted to being the driver after the accident.  However, the defence created suspicion of these two witnesses and so the accused was acquitted.  Jerry was enraged.  No one had been brought to justice for the reckless death of three of his family.
During the next few months a legitimate anger at injustice turned to bitterness.  Jerry fantasised of reading that the accused had died horrendously in an accident or committed a crime that put him behind bars for life.  He even imagined been in an accident, that was the accused fault, and was witnessed by hundreds of people who would testify against him. 
Asaph, the writer of Psalm seventy-three struggled with a similar sense of bitterness.  He wanted the wicked to get what they deserved, but instead they prospered.  Asaph eventually realises that his soul had become hardened against God.  Yet God shows him great grace and gives Asaph a new perspective that enables him to be content in life and assured that justice will be done.
Be glad that we don’t get what we deserve (1-9)
Asaph begins this psalm by admitting that when saw the prosperity of the wicked he almost lost his foothold.  I envied the arrogant.  But such envy, as Tim Keller points out, is rooted in self-righteousness.
Do you really want what you deserve?  What do you deserve as someone who has been an enemy of God?  What do you deserve as someone who did not care that he had sent his Son to die for your guilt?  What do you deserve as a person who has repeatedly let God down?  We deserve nothing!  In fact we deserve less than nothing.  Yet God in his grace is good to all that he has made.  He gives us life and breath and joy in our hearts.  In his grace he shows infinite love towards those who trust in him.
When we suffer we ask, ‘why me?’  When others suffer we don’t ask ‘why not me?’  Do we deserve our health?  Why should someone else struggle with cancer when we don’t?  What did we ever do to live in a part of the world where we have a high life-expectancy and so many luxuries to take for granted?  Most of all look at all the influences in our lives that led us to experience the forgiveness and love of God.  The world might not always seem fair, but we cannot deny that we have been treated far better that we deserve.
Asaph tells us that the wicked don’t see their need for God.  They believe that if there is a heaven, they have earned their place in it.  Their mouths claim heaven (9).  Beware of such pride that is evident so deep within us.  We should ask, ‘who am I that you should be so good to me?’  We were among the boastful wicked.  We foolishly thought we were good enough for God.  We were ignorant of the holiness of God and the wickedness of all people.  But God opened our eyes to the beauty of the cross.  He changed our hearts so that we would love him.  He has given us the pearl of great price!  Thank God, that we have got what we did not deserve and have not got what we did!  As the song says, ‘Count your blessings, name them one by one.’
Be glad that God has given us that greatest of gifts (10-28)
Asaph reveals a fundamental flaw in his spiritual life.  Surely in vain have I kept my heart pure and have washed my hands in innocence (13).  He believes that God owes him.  ‘His obedience was not a way of pleasing God but rather a means of getting God to please him’ (Keller).  Do you remember the accusation that Satan made against Job?  ‘He only serves you because you are good to him!’  Is that true for us?  There is a deep problem in our Christian lives when we say to God, ‘I will serve you if you bless me.’  It shows that like the prodigal son we do not love the father, we simply want the stuff that he can give us.  May God change our hearts so that he becomes our treasure and joy!
Change comes to Asaph’s resentful heart as he turns to worship.  In the presence of God his sight begins to clear and he sees the long-term perspective.  He realises that justice will be done and he becomes glad that God has given him the greatest of all treasures—he has given us himself!
One day those who have become rich by evil will become poor through justice (18).  All the world’s wealth and favour are like a dream (19).  They are short lived, and there is a much more significant reality to be faced.  This world may seem unfair, but we are heading to a great day of justice.  On that day no slippery lawyer will find a loop-hole to let the guilty go free.  On that day no-one will be able to claim that they deserve heaven.  Living in the light of that day enables us to sing, ‘the things of this world grow strangely dim in the light of your glory and grace.’
Asaph also becomes aware of his own wickedness.  He realises that he had become embittered, senseless and ignorant.  I was a brute beast before you (22).  He had already realised that his attitude could hurt those around him.  If I had spoken out like that, I would have betrayed your children (15).  How often we hurt those close to us because our words are full of self-righteousness, self-justification, bitterness and pride?  How we damage those who look up to us when we fail to let the gospel of grace shape the way we speak?
Yet the whole concept of grace now dawns upon him.  Yet I am always with you; you hold me by my right hand (23).  In his amazing mercy, God holds on to his bitter, envious and accusing children.  But he will not let us stay in a state of bitterness.  He leads us into an understanding of grace.  Do you really want what you deserve?  Look at the cross and see Jesus take the punishment of your sin upon his shoulders.  Hear him cry out ‘my God, my God, why have you forsaken me?’  Then realise all the grace that was poured out for you so that you could have him.  God treats us as we do not deserve, even as we demand that others get what they should deserve.
A day is coming when justice will be done.  Thank God that Jesus has satisfied justice for our guilt.  Those who thought that they could earn their way into heaven will be in for a terrible fall.  But not only will the day of judgement sort everything out, in this life those who trust in God are infinitely blessed.  We may be accused of hoping for pie in the sky when you die, but we actually enjoy stake on the plate while we wait.
You see we have the great treasure of friendship with God.  Who have I in heaven but you?  And earth has nothing I desire besides you … as for me, it is good to be near God.  I have made the Sovereign Lord my refuge, I will tell of your deeds.  There is no better thing in life and death than peace with God.  We should never envy those who are spiritually poor, even if they are materially rich!  There may be pain in this life, but put it in the perspective of eternal bliss.
Conclusion
When Jerry Sittser realised that he was descending into bitterness, he decided he needed to change his way of thinking.  While he knew that he had done nothing to deserve the death of three of his loved ones, he also knew that he had done nothing to deserve the blessing they had been to him.  He continues to mourn.  The pain doesn’t simply disappear.  The injustice still hurts.  It is right to grieve.  But there are still many things to be thankful for.  He learned to give thanks for the happy memories.  He learned to be thankful for the many friends who stuck by him in spite of the fact that he really struggled.  He was glad for the friends who cared enough not to give him loads of advice.  He had a new appreciation for his remaining children.  He now makes a point of tucking his children in as they go to bed, and before he goes to bed he sneaks into their rooms and prays a blessing over them (something his wife used to do).  Most of all he is thankful that since the accident he has experienced God with a reality that he had not known before.  He feels less of a burden to prove himself to God and more of a delight in serving him.  While he might not be able to explain why tragedy struck at his door, he has learned to trust more in the God of grace.        

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