Finding The Right Source
Where do you get advice? Who do you listen to? Where do you receive your counsel? Because itâs not as if thereâs none to be had! Everybody has an idea about the best way to live. Everybody has an opinion on how you should run your life, your family, your finances, and your future. TV programs parade agony aunts, selling all kinds of pet-philosophies on successful relationships. Richard and Judy are always waiting to give you cheerful advice.
Every time you go to the hairdressers, magazines are ready to tell you where to satisfy your needs. Self-help shelves in local bookshops are teeming with books on âThe Road to Successâ and âThe Way of Happiness.â There are spiritual gurus to guide your every move. We may prefer to think we are âour own personâ and we make up our own minds. But our attitudes and actions are constantly shaped by other people. Weâre just not able to go through life unaffected by the âcounselâ of friends. Weâre really not deaf to the opinions of colleagues. Itâs a myth that we always resist the values of the media.
It is such myths that the First Psalm explodes. The Psalmist declares the truth that either our attitudes and actions are molded by God, or they are shaped by the ungodly. Regardless of how offensive this idea may be to our culture, it is âeither/orâ rather than âboth/and.â
In the Bible, there are two perceptions of reality: the supernatural and the natural. There are two conflicting kingdoms: the kingdom of God and the kingdom of Satan. There are two entry points: the wide gate leading to destruction and the narrow gate leading to life. And there are two sources of âcounsel.â One sort leads to happiness: âblessed is the manâŠâ The other sort, by implication, to unhappiness. There is no neutral ground.
[bctt tweet=”…one of the great truths about being human…is that you become like what you worship. – N.T. Wright” quote=”…one of the great truths about being human…is that you become like what you worship. – N.T. Wright”]
Like What You Worship
Why is this? âBecause one of the great truths about being human,â says theologian Tom Wright, is that âyou become like what you worship.â What we fill our heads with fills our heads! Listening to âthe counsel of the wickedâ (walking) leads to identifying with sinners (standing), which results in becoming settled, (or seated) in their company. If something goes wrong at work, and your boss is on the rampage to find the person whoâs responsible for the mistake, to heed the counsel of the ungodly would probably be to lie your way out of the situation. Or to shift responsibility for it. When we compromise to the standards of our peers ,we stand in the way of sinners. And the danger is that it becomes common practice, we become comfortable with it.
[bctt tweet=”Read this. Obey it. And leave the consequences to God.” quote=”Read this. Obey it. And leave the consequences to God.”]
The Bibleââthe law of the Lordââis the most remarkable book in the world. Charles Dickens called it âthe best book that ever was, for it teaches you the best lessons by which any human being can possibly be guided.â Abraham Lincoln said, âAll the good from the saviour of the world is communicated through this book.â As Kings and Queens are crowned in Westminster Abbey, they are presented with a copy of the Bible as âthe most precious thingâ this world affords. The Bible has many writers from poets to farmers, kings to tax-men, prime ministers to fishermen. It contains different types of literature: history and law, poetry and prose and personal letters. But it is all, from Genesis to Revelation, about Jesus. As the spokes of a wheel lead to the hub so the scriptures lead to Jesus. Luther wrote, âAs you go to a cradle to see a baby, so you go to the Bible to see Jesus.â That is why our âdelight is in the law of the Lord.â Or to put it another way:
The New is in the Old concealed
The Old is by the New revealed
The New is in the Old contained
The Old is by the New explained
Delight That Leads To Meditation
If the âlaw of the Lordâ is Godâs gift to us, the most precious thing this world affords, then it is to be delighted in. Bible study doesnât have to be some super-spiritual activity. We donât have to think of it as an unfortunate necessity, a real drag. Instead, being able to read Godâs law can be a joy. Itâs a relief to fill our minds with some good stuff. Itâs His kindness that provides a way out of the chaos of our culture, a means of checking our priorities, a time to re-fix our eyes on Jesus and His agenda for our lives. Dr. Don Williams says in his commentary on the Psalms, âThe fact is, the right attitude, delight, will lead to right action, meditation. If we delight in a person, we want to be with him or her. If we delight in a song, we want to sing it. If we delight in Godâs law, we will want to meditate upon it.â
Significantly, though, âto meditateâ does not involve signing up with the local Yoga group. In the New Age Movement, Eastern forms of meditation stress the need to become detached from the world, to lose oneâs own personality and merge with the Cosmic Mind. But meditation in the bible couldnât be more different. It doesnât aim to empty the mind but to fill it; âI think of You upon my bed, and meditate on You in the watches of the night.â (Psalm 63:6).
It doesnât try to escape from the world, but to help us to engage in it. The bible doesnât take us away from the issues, crises, opportunities and relationships in our lives. On the contrary, it gives us the good counsel to deal with them. Meditation enables us to face the music and dance. And what are the results? There is something about the first Psalm that is delightfully simple as well as profound. David used a tree as a picture of the person who delighted in, meditated upon and went on to live by the Bible. A tree that was FIRM, âplanted by streams of waterâ, its root system widespread and stable, and its water supply constant. The Holy Spirit is often described as streams of living water. The word and the Spirit sustain one another and hold us firm. So that when storms come the tree is not uprooted. The tree of Psalm 1 is FRESH, âits leaf does not wither.â Constant access to the Bible keeps us fresh spiritually and saves us from becoming wilted. Charles Spurgeon enjoyed saying that âAll Godâs trees are evergreens.â And this tree is also FRUITFUL; âit yields its fruit in its season.â
An old soldier once said âwhen I was converted someone put a Bible into my hand and said: âRead this. Obey it. And leave the consequences to God.â