True Wealth: Trusting God Over Material Riches

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The psalmist contrasts the fate of those who trust in wealth with those who trust in God. Material wealth cannot redeem a soul or secure eternal life. Redemption is a costly spiritual work accomplished only through God's atoning sacrifice, ultimately fulfilled in Jesus Christ. [00:05:27]

The psalmist noted that the way that values the material over the spiritual and that does not prepare for the world to come is foolish, and it's going to be revealed as foolish. But not only that, there's a second foolish way, and that's to be a descendant of the one who trusted in and boasted in riches. [00:17:36]

The psalmist was confident that he was among the upright and not among those who foolishly trusted in and boasted in riches. Now, the one who trusted in wealth and boasted in riches had no power to ransom or redeem a soul. We saw that in verses seven and eight. [00:21:37]

The psalmist assures us that the upright will be redeemed from the power of the grave and will experience eternal life. This eternal perspective encourages us to prioritize spiritual wealth over material wealth and to trust in God's promises for the future. [00:21:37]

The psalmist begins in verse 5 by making a contrast between himself and those he will mention in the following lines. He says here in verse 5, why should I fear in the days of evil when the iniquity at my heels surrounds me? [00:05:57]

The psalmist here reveals the great limitation of the idolatry of trusting in and boasting in material wealth. This idol is of no help in the spiritual world. Money itself can't rescue a soul because look at verse 8, the redemption of their souls is costly. [00:10:14]

The psalmist notes that we can't take our material wealth with us into the world beyond. They leave, verse 10 says, their wealth to others. The Puritan commentator John Trapp said money is the monarch of this world but not of the next. [00:12:36]

The psalmist paints a ghastly picture: a man is buried like an animal in the grave. I mean, verse 12 says he is like the beasts that perish. So verse 14 takes that thought and says like a sheep they are laid in the grave, death shall feed on them. [00:17:32]

The psalmist was confident that he was among the upright and not among those who foolishly trusted in and boasted in riches. Now, the one who trusted in wealth and boasted in riches had no power to ransom or redeem a soul. [00:21:37]

The psalmist assures us that the upright will be redeemed from the power of the grave and will experience eternal life. This eternal perspective encourages us to prioritize spiritual wealth over material wealth and to trust in God's promises for the future. [00:21:37]

The psalmist notes that we can't take our material wealth with us into the world beyond. They leave, verse 10 says, their wealth to others. The Puritan commentator John Trapp said money is the monarch of this world but not of the next. [00:12:36]

The psalmist paints a ghastly picture: a man is buried like an animal in the grave. I mean, verse 12 says he is like the beasts that perish. So verse 14 takes that thought and says like a sheep they are laid in the grave, death shall feed on them. [00:17:32]

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