Tuesday, April 1, 2014

The Need for Confession, the Joy of Forgiveness ~ Psalm 32

“He who conceals his sins does not prosper, but whoever confesses and renounces them finds mercy”
(Proverbs 28:12).

Read Psalm 32 – Pay attention to the "Selahs" and pause there when reading.

      While this passage isn’t directly a prayer from David to God, it shows an “acknowledgement” of the necessity to pray and the promise to “confess” his sins.
·      This is another penitential Psalm, like Psalm 51.
·      Could this Psalm, aka a Psalm of Instruction, be the teaching that David promised in 51:13 (“then I will teach transgressors your ways…”)?

-       Where else do we see this “Blessed” construction? (Psalm 1:1 and Matthew 5:3-10)
o   Synonymous Parallelism - 3 different Hebrew words to describe the whole spectrum of sin (though the NIV says “transgressions” and “sin” in vs. 1 and “sin” in vs. 2.)
§  Transgression – rebellion towards God Himself.
§  Sin – general term designating an offense, falling short of God’s law
§  Iniquity (sin, NIV) - corrupt, twisted in relation to ourselves.
o   Synonymous Parallelism - 3 different Hebrew words for the manner of forgiveness that indicate the completeness of that forgiveness by God.
§  Forgiven – the sin has been “lifted off,” our shoulders. I.E. Rockbridge!
·      “as far as the east is from the west, so far has he removed our transgressions from us” (Psalm 103:12).
§  Covered – i.e. the blood of Christ covers us just as the sprinkled blood covered the mercy seat (covering of the Ark of the Covenant) on the Day of Atonement.
·      “When God covers sin, he graciously blots it out (cf. Psalm 85:2); when man covers his sin, he is sinfully hiding it” (ESV SB, 976).
§  Does not count – a bookkeeping term (Boice, p. 279)

-       What was the problem that we see with David in vs. 3?

-       What were the consequences to his sin and lack of confession/repentance in vs. 4?
o   How is this really a mercy of God? His heavy hand upon him actually draws him back to confess his sin.

-        Where do we find the climax of this passage? Vs. 5. – He uses the same 3 words for sin that he used in vss. 1-2 to show the completeness of his confession.
“Confession is like opening a floodgate of a dam. When there is no confession, the waters pile up behind the dam, creating immense pressures on the wall, but as soon as the floodgate is opened, the waters subside and the pressures diminish” (P. Craigie, Psalms 1-50, WBC, pg. 267, © 2004).

-       Why is the presence of the word “Selah” (“pause and take notice”*) at the end of vs. 4 and at the beginning of vs. 6 important to understanding this passage? *(J.M. Boice, Psalms: Volume 1, Baker, pg. 280, © 1994).

-       What key word in vs. 6 clues us in that this application is for “everyone”? “Therefore” in vs. 6-7 – Boice said this is where David again lives out Psalm 51:13

-       The authorship of the Psalm switches in vs. 8, how? From David to God.
o   Does God’s response promise total deliverance? Yes and No.
§  Yes – “you are my hiding place, you will protect me from trouble” (“Rock of Ages, cleft for me, Let me hide myself in thee” – Boice, pg. 282)
§  No, rather instruction, teaching and counsel “in the way you should go” (vs. 8, c.f. Psalm 1).
§  Certainly God is watching “over you” and his “unfailing love surrounds the man who trusts in him” (vs. 10) b/c He promises to “never leave you nor forsake you” (Deuteronomy 31:6).
§  “Unfailing love” is God’s hesed love!!

-       How can David say in vs. 11 that the sinner should “rejoice” and “be glad” and “sing”?
o   David knows, as Paul explains in Romans 4:6-9, that we have been saved not by works of the law or circumcision but by grace by the One who “forgave the guilt of my sin” (Ps. 32:5).

“Intelligentia prima est ut te noris peccatorem (the beginning of knowledge is to know oneself to be a sinner)”

(St. Augustine; quoted by P. Craigie, Psalms 1-50, WBC, pg. 268, © 2004).

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