Psalm 1
The Blessed Man
a sermon by Bill
Baldwin - May 26, 2002 (rev. Sept 10, 2004)
(Click here to download audio MP3
version - WARNING: Large File 8mb)
It is natural to read or hear
this Psalm and to think of ourselves. Here, we suppose, is a
description of how God will reward us if we do good and punish us if we
sin. God is offering us a deal. Do right and you will be blessed; sin
and suffer the consequences. Seeking to be blessed, we steel ourselves
for the task ahead. We will not walk in the counsel of the ungodly. We
will not stand in the path of sinners. We will not sit in the seat of
the scornful. Rather we shall meditate upon the Law of God, day and
night. Then God will bless us. Then we shall prosper.
It is natural to look at this Psalm in this way. And it is totally
wrong. It is natural to look at this Psalm in this way. And it is
totally wrong.
If we do not understand this first of Psalms, how then will we
understand all the rest? Let us test our theory. Let us consider Psalm
1 as though it is written to, for, and about us directly. Let us see
what kind of trouble that gets us into. Because, make no mistake…
If this Psalm is about you, you’re in trouble.
"Blessed is the man," the Psalm begins. "Blessed is the man." What
follows, then, must be God’s formula for blessing. How may you or I
become that blessed man? What must we do?
The answer is simple. The answer is profound. And the answer is
all-encompassing. The blessing of God is first made contingent on what
a man does not do, on the counsel he avoids, and the company on which
he turns his back. "Blessed is the man who walks not in the counsel of
the wicked, nor stands in the way of sinners, nor sits in the seat of
scoffers."
Do you wish to be blessed of God? Then do not take advice from those
who are ungodly. Do not call good what they call good, and do not
receive as wisdom what they offer as wisdom. Do not take your place
among sinners, or you will surely become identified with them. Do not
sit in their midst as one who, like them, mocks the ways of God and
scoffs at the idea that God will one day come in judgment. Avoid all
such things, if you wish to be blessed.
"Blessed is the man who walks not in the counsel of the wicked, nor
stands in the way of sinners, nor sits in the seat of scoffers."
You hear as well the momentum in this description. First we speak of
walking, then of standing, then of sitting down. It goes from activity
to inactivity to capitulation or giving up. As we become more tangled
up in sin, we struggle against it less and less. And at last we give up
the battle entirely and take our seat among those who mock the ways of
God and love wickedness. We become indistinguishable from then.
But if we would receive the blessing of God, we cannot be dragged down
by this spiral into apostasy and sin! We must stand firm against it
all. Though the whole world should be sinful, yet we will stand against
them and be righteous! Though all should mock the Lord our God, yet we
will be faithful and true.
If we are unclear about just how faithful we must be, other psalms will
teach us. Psalm 106:3 says, "Blessed are those who keep justice, and he
who does righteousness at all times!" And Psalm 119:1 says, "Blessed
are those whose way is blameless, who walk in the Law of the Lord!"
Are you up to the task? Are you able to be blameless and to do
righteousness at all times. Then by your unceasing vigilance and
manifest perfection you will earn the favor of God and merit heavenly
rewards. Then you will be the blessed man spoken of in this psalm.
Or are you exhausted, overwhelmed, weighed down, and despondent when
you think of how much is required to be acceptable in God’s sight? You
realize that you yourself have taken the advice of the wicked. You
yourself have stood among sinners, indistinguishable from them. You
yourself have taken your seat among those who behave as though this
world is all that matters and judgment day will never come and your
secret sins will never be discovered. Or, to put it more briefly, you
yourself have sat in the seat of the scornful.
If this Psalm is about you, you’re in trouble
What then is to be done? Patience! Let’s make the problem worse before
we make it better. Let us expose still further the trouble we are in.
We have heard what the blessed man must avoid. Now let us hear what he
must do.
"But his delight is in the Law of the Lord, and in his Law he meditates
day and night." It sounds like a simple enough task at first, but
consider!
The Law of which the psalmist speaks is the same Law that God gave on
Mount Sinai in the days of Moses. Around that mountain there was
thunder and lightning, which spoke of the wrath of God against sin. And
God decreed that any man who so much as touched the mountain should be
stoned to death, and even if an animal touched the mountain it should
be killed.
"When all the people witnessed the thunder and lightning, the sound of
the trumpet, and the mountain smoking, they were afraid and trembled
and stood at a distance, and said to Moses, ‘You speak to us, and we
will listen; but do not let God speak to us, or we will die’" (Exodus
20:18,19).
How can we delight in such a terrifying Law? Surely the Law speaks of
great blessing to those who keep it. But it also speaks of the terrible
wrath of God against those who break it. That wrath was symbolized by
thunder and lightning and smoke and the fear of death. And ultimately
the wrath that comes to lawbreakers is the torment of hell itself.
How can we delight in such a terrifying Law? Are we better than the
Israelites who first heard it and trembled with fear? They heard the
Law but they disobeyed it, and so they wandered in the desert 40 years
outside the Promised Land. They died outside the place that was
"watered like the garden of God," the Bible says. They died outside the
place of God’s blessing, the land flowing with milk and honey. They
died outside of the place of God’s presence where God would dwell with
his people for ever. That Promised Land was a picture of heaven itself.
And they disobeyed God and died outside it. Are we better than they?
Do we not read that even Moses himself displeased God and so died
without ever setting foot in the Promised Land? Are we better than
Moses?
But the next generation entered that land. Led by Joshua, they went in
and conquered, delighting in the Law of God. Perhaps we may be like
them. The Lord exhorted Joshua and the people, "This book of the Law
shall not depart out of your mouth. But you shall meditate on it day
and night. Then you will make your way prosperous. Then you will have
good success." It was a marvelous and beautiful offer, quite similar to
the psalm we read today. The children of Israel had a formula for
prosperity—endless delight in and meditation on the Law of God.
But the Bible tells us that they also sinned. They also stopped
delighting in the Law of God. Moses even predicted it at the end of
Deuteronomy. He said to the people, "For I know that after my death you
will surely act corruptly, turning aside from the way that I have
commanded you. In time to come trouble will befall you, because you
will do what is evil in the sight of the LORD, provoking him to anger
through the work of your hands" (Deuteronomy 31:29).
And the people fulfilled Moses’ grim prediction. After the death of
Joshua they turned and served other gods. Are we better than they?
And Joshua himself, before he died, sinned against the Lord by making a
treaty with the Gibeonites. He also failed to delight in the Law of the
Lord and meditate in it day and night. Are we better than he?
So it went, on throughout the ages of the children of Israel. The Law
given on Mount Sinai was a burden and a yoke that neither the first
generation nor their children were able to bear. No one … NO ONE … in
the whole history of Israel in the Old Testament proved able to delight
fully in this terrible, threatening Law and to meditate on its precepts
day and night.
But if that is so, and we are no better than they, then are the
blessings of this psalm forever denied to us? If it is up to us to earn
these blessings through our own good works and delight in the Law, then
we cannot hope to see such blessings at all. Rather, we must have the
grim expectation that the curses of this psalm are about to fall upon
us.
If this Psalm is about you, you’re in trouble
We have not avoided the sins described in this song. Neither have we
been able to delight in God’s Law and take from it any strength for
righteousness. Rather, we have heard God’s Law and it has awakened sin
in us! "What shall we say then?" Paul asks in Romans 7. "Is the law
sin? Certainly not! On the contrary, I would not have known sin except
through the law. For I would not have known covetousness unless the law
had said, ‘You shall not covet.’ But sin, taking opportunity by the
commandment, produced in me all manner of evil desire" (Romans 7:7,8).
Miserable creatures that we are if this psalm is about us! We will not
be like a tree planted by rivers of water. How wonderful that would be!
You understand the picture that is being painted here. In the Mid-East,
in Israel, the trees depend upon the rain which may come or not. If it
comes, they flourish. If God withholds the rain, they wither and die.
But a tree planted by a stream will not wither and die. With a constant
supply of water it will bear fruit and be strong and healthy. In the
same way, the righteous man will prosper before God and will have no
fear.
But if we have sinned against God, how can that verse describe us? We
must rather believe that we will be like the chaff that the wind drives
away. When the farmers of Israel harvested the wheat, they had to
separate the kernel—the good part of the wheat—from the chaff, which
couldn’t be eaten. So they crushed the wheat on large blankets. That
way they got a blanket with a bunch of wheat and chaff mixed
together. How did they separate the two? They grabbed the blankets and
tossed the whole mixture up in the air. The kernels of wheat, which
were heavy, fell back onto the blanket. The chaff, which was light, got
blown away by the wind. The useless chaff was driven away by the wind,
never to be seen again.
That’s what we are like if we don’t walk in God’s ways and meditate on
his Law. We will not be able to stand before God on the day of his
judgment. He will drive us away like so much chaff. Our ways will not
be acceptable before him. Only the righteous will remain in his
presence in that day.
If this Psalm is about you, you’re in trouble
Wretched people that we are! Who will deliver us from this body of
death?
For you who cry out this question, I have good news. This psalm isn’t
about you. It’s about Christ.
This Psalm isn’t about you; it’s about Christ.
Christ is the blessed man. Do you see it? Do you see how perfectly this
psalm describes your Savior and your Lord? Christ is the blessed man.
In Christ we have a man who did not walk in the counsel of the wicked.
Not once. In Christ we have a man who did not stand in the way of
sinners. Not once. In Christ we have a man who did not sit in the seat
of scoffers. Not once.
Instead, the Lord Jesus delighted in the Law of the Lord. The Law did
not terrify him, for he had no sin for the Law to condemn. The Law did
not awaken his sinfulness, for he had no sinfulness for it to awaken.
He alone had clean hands and a pure heart. He alone could ascend the
mountain of God and be in the presence of the Almighty without being
consumed.
Christ Jesus meditated in the Law day and night. And he knew that it
spoke of him. The book of Hebrews tell us the psalmist speaks of Christ
when he says the following, "Then I said, ‘Lo, I come; in the roll of
the book it is written of me; I delight to do your will, O my God; your
Law is within my heart" (Ps 40:7,8). Those are the words of your
Redeemer! "I delight to do your will, O my God; your Law is within my
heart!"
Christ, then, is the one who alone has merited the blessings spoken of
in verse 3. He alone earned the right to be like a tree planted by
streams of water, yielding fruit, without withering leaves. He alone
had a right to prosper.
This Psalm isn’t about you; it’s about Christ.
And yet we read that Jesus was handed over to the chief priests and
scribes. He was judged by sinners, both Jew and Gentile. He was
delivered up to Pontius Pilate who condemned him to death, even though
Pilate himself testified "I find no fault in this man."
Does this sound like the prosperity and blessing that we have heard
about?
Dare we say it? Christ is the cursed man spoken of in this psalm! He
suffered in agony on the cross. He became like so much chaff that the
wind drives away. On the cross he underwent the judgment and the wrath
of God, with thunderings and clouds and thick darkness. And he died. He
died like a wicked man whose way has perished.
This Psalm isn’t about you; it’s about Christ.
We see now that the curses of this psalm speak of Christ, even though
Christ himself did all the things that merit blessing. But then can we
say that the whole psalm applies to Christ? Or must we say that even
though he earned the blessings of this psalm, he received only the
curses instead?
No! Christ is not only the cursed man, he is the blessed man as well.
Christ is for a time the cursed man, but he is the blessed man at last!
Though he suffered the judgment and wrath of God, though he died a
cursed death and was buried… yet he rose again on the third day!
He passed through the judgment of God and was raised to eternal life.
Now he is alive forever; death and judgment are behind him. God has
declared him to be righteous by raising him from the dead. God has
approved his way. God has appointed him as the one who will stand in
the day of judgment, judging all mankind.
Therefore he is like a tree planted by streams of water that brings
forth fruit in season, whose leaf does not wither. Everything he did
has prospered and everything he does will prosper.
Truly and triumphantly does this psalm speak of our Lord Jesus Christ.
But what then does this have to do with you and me? It is time to
unveil the best news of all.
This psalm IS about you, and you’re not in trouble.
Can it be? Didn’t we just finish saying that this psalm isn’t about you
but about Christ? And before that, didn’t we say that if this psalm is
about you, then you’re in trouble? And we proved that statement with
terrifying examples from Scripture. How then do we dare now to say that
this psalm is about you after all, and you are not in trouble?
We dare to make this claim because this psalm is not about you as you
are in yourself. This psalm is not about you, naked and defenseless
before the wrath of God, a sinner justly deserving his wrath. This
psalm is about you who hope in Christ. This psalm is about you who are
in Christ, as Paul often tells us we are. This psalm is about you
because it is about Christ. Christ gives this Psalm freely to you, and
to everyone who trusts in him. For I am speaking to you who trust in
Christ. If you have not yet trusted in him, trust in him now. Do not
face this psalm alone or the curse of God will consume you.
But if you trust in Christ, he has given this psalm to you by becoming
the cursed man in your place. We mentioned how even the curses of this
psalm speak of Christ. Christ himself was like the chaff driven away by
the win. Christ on the cross is like the wicked man suffering under the
judgment of God. But why did he do this? Why did he take on this
suffering character? Why did he bear the wrath of God?
For you he has done this! Christ did not deserve the awful torments of
the cross. Christ did not merit the reward of the wicked. You are the
one who deserved those punishments. But he has taken your sins on
himself. The wrath of God that you had earned has been borne by Christ
in your place. The judgment of God that should have come down on you
has landed on his head. The death you deserved is the death he died.
And now it is done.
Your sins are paid for. You are free. No longer can this psalm terrify
you with warnings of judgment and descriptions of the horrors that
await the wicked. Those terrible verses still speak of you. But they
speak of you in the past tense. In Christ, you have already been like
the chaff that the wind drives away. In Christ you have already been
like the wicked who cannot withstand God’s judgment. In Christ at the
cross, your judgment day has come already. In Christ your foul,
despicable, sinful ways have perished! At the cross, your sins have
been put to death and you have died to sin.
This psalm IS about you, and you’re not in trouble.
Not only do the judgment parts of this psalm belong to you, as those
who have passed through death; the blessing parts of this psalm belong
to you as well, as those who have passed into life eternal.
God made Christ, who knew no sin, to be sin for us, that we might be
made the righteousness of God in him.
Everything that Christ is and everything he has done belongs to you. He
has taken you with him on this journey from death into life. As surely
as your sins were placed on him at the cross, so surely is his
righteousness given to you at his resurrection.
On that day of resurrection, God the Father declared his Son Jesus to
be a righteous man, a man who merited prosperity and blessing and
reward. You are united to him by faith, so that prosperity and blessing
and reward belong to you as well. Those treasures are kept safe in
heaven for you, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God.
"Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness," our Lord
declares in the Sermon on the Mount. "Blessed are those who hunger and
thirst for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied." It is not those
who have righteousness who will be satisfied, but those who lack it and
know they lack it. They hear this first Psalm and they cry out, "But I
have no righteousness to offer God! And, oh how desperately I need it!"
They hunger for the sort of righteousness that God approves. They are
empty of it and need to be filled. They thirst for this righteousness
that is acceptable in God’s sight. They know that without it they shall
wither and die.
To them, Jesus says, "I am the bread of life. He who comes to me shall
never hunger, and he who believes in me shall never thirst" (John
6:35). To them—to us who hunger and thirst for righteousness that
we may be approved by God—Jesus says, "whoever drinks of the water that
I shall give him will never thirst. But the water that I shall give him
will become in him a fountain of water springing up into everlasting
life."
Truly in Christ, the prophecy of Isaiah is abundantly filled, "Ho!
Everyone who thirsts,/ Come to the waters;/ And you who have no money,/
Come, buy and eat./ Yes, come, buy wine and milk/ Without money and
without price."
And so we say with the apostle Paul, I count all things loss "that I
may gain Christ and be found in him, not having a righteousness of my
own, based on the Law, but that which is through faith in Christ, the
righteousness from God that depends on faith" (Php 3:8b,9).
The righteousness of Christ is now your clothing so that you do not
stand naked and ashamed before God. The Lord knows the way of the
righteous and you are righteous in Christ. Therefore God knows your
ways and approves of them. For the ways of Christ belong to you that
you may not appear before God empty-handed.
Now it is those who trust in Christ who will be like that tree. The
prophet Jeremiah said as much as he waited for the day of Christ to
come. Listen to what Jeremiah said: "Blessed is the man who trusts in
the Lord, and whose hope is in the Lord. He is like a tree planted by
water, that sends out is roots by the stream, and does not fear when
heat comes, for its leaves remain green, and is not anxious in the year
of drought, for it does not cease to bear fruit."
Do you hear that. Good news for sinners like us! Good news for people
like us who are unable to do any good thing or merit any blessing. Now
blessing is offered freely to those who trust in Christ, to those who
confess that they can do nothing and rely on Christ to do it all. As we
do this, we ourselves shall be like the tree described in Psalm 1. We
ourselves shall be like Christ our Lord.
This psalm IS about you, and you’re not in trouble.
Believe this, brothers and sisters, even though you suffer in this
present life. Believe this, even though you should experience hardship
or distress or persecution or famine or nakedness or peril or sword.
Believe this blessing is yours in Christ even when – especially when –
you feel as though you are withering and becoming like the chaff that
the wind drives away.
For all such things conform you to the sufferings of Christ, who
suffered before you. Therefore, as surely as you belong to Christ, so
surely will you suffer with him. And as surely as you suffer with him,
so surely will you be glorified with him. For he has already received
the reward of the blessed man. He keeps that reward safe in heaven for
you. And even now in the midst of your sufferings, he gives you a taste
of that reward which you receive by faith. The blessing of God is
therefore yours already and will be revealed in the last day.
This psalm IS about you, and you’re not in trouble.
But shall we say that all these things are true of us, even though we
continue to walk in the counsel of the wicked and stand in the way of
sinners and sit in the way of scoffers? God has prepared something
better for us. He not only gives us the righteousness of Christ as a
gift; he promises to conform us to that righteousness by more and more
turning us from our sins and making us like Jesus.
God the Father will prosper the way of Christ so that Christ continues
to be like a tree that bears fruit. He is the vine, we are the
branches. Let us abide in him and we will bear much fruit, for he will
be the one bearing fruit through us. Cling to Christ; trust in him
alone! Do not look to your own strength or your own merits or your own
abilities in any way. Christ alone is strong. Christ alone is able.
Christ alone is worthy. Entrust yourself wholly to him and you will
walk in his ways.
Come, walk in obedience to Christ. But do not do this because you fear
the threats of this Psalm. Those threats are in the past tense for you.
You have passed through them already in Christ. And do not walk in
obedience because you hope by that obedience to gain the blessings of
this psalm. Christ has already gained the blessings of this psalm on
your behalf. Every single one of them!
Come, walk in obedience because you love Christ and long to be like him.
Come even dare to delight in the Law. The Law has been defanged in
Christ. It is no longer terrifying to you, for it’s terrors have
already been borne on your behalf at the cross. Now the Law speaks of
Christ, of his beautiful righteousness, of his perfect compassion, and
awesome holiness—and all those things belong to you. Come to the Law
and let the Law bring you to Christ who has fulfilled the Law. Let
Christ be your meditation day and night, for in him the righteousness
and wisdom and glory of God are perfectly and finally revealed.
Do not walk in the counsel of the ungodly, for Christ has become for
you wisdom from God and heavenly counsel. Do not stand in the path of
sinners, for Christ is your righteousness and calls you to walk in that
righteousness. And do not sit in the seat of scoffers, for Christ has
taken his seat at the right hand of God in heavenly places. From there
he calls you out of this world to set your minds and hearts on the
things that are above.
And this is no dead revelation which can only summon you to obedience.
Christ is the living revelation of the righteousness and wisdom and
glory of God. He not only calls you to obedience, he empowers you for
it.
These are not empty words, brothers and sisters! We have died to sin
and been made alive to righteousness. Believe it! And therefore turn
your backs on sin. It no longer has any power over you. And therefore
offer yourselves up as servants of righteousness in Christ.
Love one another, for Christ has loved you. Serve one another for
Christ has served you. Be generous with one another, for Christ has
been generous to you. He has put his Spirit in you—a Spirit of love, of
service, and of generosity. He has put the power of obedience in you,
which is this gospel which we now preach. He has brought in a new
creation and you have been made new creatures in Christ, created for
good works. And God himself has prepared those works for you that you
may walk in them.
Here then is the power of your new obedience. I will close by reading
this psalm to you in a way that makes that clear. For the psalmist
looked forward to Christ, and now he has come! The psalmist spoke of
what Christ would do, and now he has done it! Listen to how the psalm
sounds now, to you who hope in Christ:
1 Blessed is the Man
Who did not walk in the counsel of the ungodly,
Nor did he stand in the path of sinners,
Nor did he sit in the seat of the scornful;
2 But his delight was in the law of the LORD,
And in His law he meditated day and night.
3 He is like a tree
Planted by the rivers of water,
That brings forth its fruit in its season,
Whose leaf also does not wither;
And everything he did has prospered.
4 The ungodly are not so,
But are like the chaff which the wind drives away.
5 Therefore the ungodly shall not stand in the
judgment,
Nor sinners in the congregation of the righteous.
6 For the LORD has accepted the
way of Jesus, the righteous man,
But the way of the ungodly shall perish.
Go forth in this strength and sin no more! Amen.
Postscript: I've written a hymn based on
Psalm 1 that brings out some
of the insights in the above sermon. Click here to go to that page.
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