Glory to God: The Futility of Idolatry

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The singer of this psalm understood that when God did wonderful things, the glory should be given to God. It should not be given to God's people. That's why emphatically in the first line of this psalm it says not unto us and then it repeats it not unto us O Lord, not unto us. [00:03:09]

Even if God's people in some sense participate in a work that God does, they never get the glory. The glory should go unto God and unto His holy name. Not unto us O Lord, not unto us but to Your name give glory. [00:03:49]

The psalmist asked God to deliver His people so that God would be glorified among the nations, and so that the Gentiles would have no reason to think that God had forsaken His people. Again, Lord show Your mercy to us, show Your truth to us so that the Gentiles would know that there is a God. [00:08:59]

The psalmist exposed the folly of idolatry. You see men worship statues of as verse 4 says silver and gold that they themselves have made. Verse 4 says that they worship the work of men's hands, and even though these idols were often fashioned with human body parts, they can't do what their makers can do. [00:11:22]

The psalmist understood that men worship things beneath them or maybe I should say this, when men worship things beneath them, it brings them lower. They begin to lose the strength of their own ability to perceive and interact with the world. You worship a blind idol you will become more blind. [00:17:14]

We become like what we worship. When we worship the true God who reigns in righteousness, the God who is perfectly revealed to us in Jesus Christ, then we become like Him. However, when we worship false and vain idols, even if they are the crude idols or the more sophisticated idols of a more modern age, we become like those idols. [00:18:03]

Knowing the folly of idolatry should renew our trust in the true God. It should compel us to look at Him as our help and our shield and never to anything else. You know in this we have something of Peter's heart when Peter said Lord to whom shall we go, you have the words of eternal life. [00:21:09]

The psalmist drew upon God's past faithfulness and he used it as confidence in God's future blessing. That's why he says look at it again in verse 12, the Lord has been mindful of us, that's the past, and He will bless us again. God has not forgotten us in the past, He will never forget to bless us in the future. [00:26:37]

May the Lord give you increase more and more, you and your children may you be blessed by the Lord who made heaven and earth. Now again, in the world of ancient Israel, many people, both perhaps some of the disobedient in Israel and certainly the pagan nations surrounding them, their attraction to the idols of the nations was for fertility for the prosperity of their fields, their flocks, and their families. [00:29:48]

The psalmist recognized God's authority as creator over both heaven and earth that was in verse 15 but here in verse 16, he acknowledges God's continuing dominion over the heavens. Probably he uses the plural heavens to refer to all three ways that the ancients thought of the heavens. [00:31:32]

The psalmist must have had in mind here the grant that God gave to Adam and all Adam's descendants the grant of dominion over the earth that's found in Genesis chapter 1 verses 26 through 30. You see God gave Adam in the garden of Eden, it's recorded in Genesis chapter 1, dominion over the earth and those things created on the earth. [00:33:49]

The psalmist understands listen, we don't know what happens to people when they leave this world to the next. We know that we can praise the Lord with our voice right now. The dead, we don't know. Now again this connects with something that we have seen many times in the psalms and indeed in many other passages of the Old Testament. [00:36:00]

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