Psalm 101:2 Shall I live blamelessly when you come to me? I will walk home with an unblemished heart." The psalmist correctly distinguishes between his conduct in his home and his civil life. In this Psalm, he describes with precision his own attitude which he acquires by speaking invariably of moral axioms. You see, we are not only in a world full of dangers, but because we have a superficial vision of sin and the destruction of evils. We must speak the working words of God in adequate response to the tremendous dangers that we face steadfastly. The Psalms are carefully written authoritative statements from God's holistic perspective. This is why sacred words are extreme and offensive to us. We put on our mental hoods. direct carefully that man as a sinner is not merely performing acts of sin. But the wicked man is born with a moral blindness to his deplorable condition. The reason we don't consider the danger of this condition is because we are freed from the awareness of our sin, so we assume they have the ability to track our condition. We criticize others based on our personal experience. We naturally assume that our historical experience is like theirs. We remain our own worst enemy because we exercise too much faith in this pagan world. Therefore, God must bridge the gap between his worldview and our worldview by making us aware of the dangers of these grave curses. axioms. God has made his terrible vengeance clear in statements that appeal to us because he has undoubtedly made us like him. God sincerely desires that we reflect on these logical extremes so that we indirectly experience his presence.
No comments:
Post a Comment