This is the message given in the Sunday night service in the Gettysburg United Methodist church on Sunday, August 15, 2021. The Bible verses used are Psalm 37:1-17.
I talk to a lot of people, as you probably do,
too. And of course, we talk about a lot of things, just like you
do. The drought. School starting. Sports. The road
construction project. All kinds of things.
But a lot of times, the talk turns to things that are going
on in the world. And when the talk turns that way, there seems to be a
common theme. There are a lot of people who, as they look at the world,
believe evil is winning. They see evil ascending, good declining, and
they don’t see that changing anytime soon, if ever.
Maybe you’re one of those people. If so, I’m not
criticizing you. I understand it. There are a lot of things that
seem to be going wrong. I’m not going to go list them, because a lot of
them have political implications and I don’t want to get into that. But
if you pay even the slightest attention to the news, you know there are a lot
of bad things happening. And even granting that “the news” tends to focus
on the bad news, still, there are a lot of things happening in this world that
do not seem to be as they should be. I can understand why some people
believe evil is winning.
But here’s the thing. If it appears that evil is
winning, it’s an illusion. It may look now, for the moment that evil is
winning, but ultimately evil will not win. Evil cannot win. Good
will win because God will win, and God is good. We worship the almighty,
all-powerful God. We worship a God who cannot be defeated, who is greater
and better than anything we can imagine. If it appears that evil is
winning, that’s just because God allows it to appear that way, for whatever
reason God may have. But no matter how things may appear at the moment,
God is winning, and God will win.
That’s the message of our Bible reading from tonight from
Psalm Thirty-seven. It says it over and over again. Don’t worry
about evil winning. It’s not going to. God will take care of
it.
Listen to the number of times that message is given, just
in these few verses. Verses one and two: “Do not fret because of
those who are evil or be envious of those who do wrong; for like the grass they
will soon wither, like green plants they will soon die away.” Verse
seven: “Do not fret when people succeed in their ways, when they carry
out their wicked schemes.” Verse nine: “Those who are evil will be
destroyed”. Verse ten: “A little while, and the wicked will be no
more; though you look for them, they will not be found.” Verses twelve
and thirteen: “The wicked plot against the righteous and gnash their
teeth against them; but the Lord laughs at the wicked, for he knows their day
is coming.” Verses fourteen and fifteen: “The wicked draw the sword
and bend the bow to bring down the poor and needy, to slay those whose ways are
upright, but their swords will pierce their own hearts, and their bows will be
broken.” Verse seventeen: “The power of the wicked will be broken.”
Seven times, in these seventeen verses, we are told that
evil will not win, and the wicked will not succeed. And if we had read
the rest of the psalm we’d have heard that message five more times. I
think God, speaking the author of this psalm, wants us to get the point.
Evil will fade away. Those who are evil will be destroyed. In fact,
they will be obliterated. Their own schemes will bring them down.
So the question is, do you believe that? And the
other question is, if you believe it, do you trust it? That’s not two
ways of asking the same thing. It’s one thing to say yes, I believe evil
will not win. It’s another to say, I trust that evil will not
win.
Trust is really the key.
Trust is what allows us to live our lives without fear, no matter what may be
happening in the world. You see, if we don’t trust that evil will not win, then
we think it’s our job to prevent evil from winning. We think it’s up to
us to fight evil, rather than leaving the battle up to God.
So, am I saying that we should
do nothing? Am I saying that we should just sit back, watch what’s
happening in the world, and not do anything about it?
No, that’s not what I’m
saying. Our psalm tells us that we have a role to play in fighting
evil. How do we fight evil? By trusting God, by following God, and
by doing good.
That message is given quite a
number of times, too, in these few verses. Verse three: “Trust in
the Lord and do good, dwell in the land and enjoy safe pasture.” Verses
five and six: “Commit your way to the Lord; trust in him and he will do
this: He will make your righteous reward shine like the dawn, your
vindication like the noonday sun.” Verse seven: “Be still before
the Lord and wait for him; do not fret when people...carry out their wicked schemes.”
Verse eight: “Refrain from anger and turn from wrath; do not fret--it
leads only to evil.” Verse eleven: “The meek will inherit the land
and enjoy peace and prosperity.” Verses sixteen and seventeen:
“Better the little that the righteous have than the wealth of the wicked...the
Lord upholds the righteous.”
Six times, in those verses,
that same message is given. And it’s made a whole bunch more times in the
rest of the psalm. Our job is not to go out and battle evil. Our
job is not to seek out and destroy the wicked. Our job is to trust in the
Lord. Our job is to do good. Our job is to commit our lives, and
the way we live them, to God. We are not supposed to get angry, we are
not supposed to be indignant, we are not supposed to worry. We are to
follow the ways of the Lord in everything we do and everything we say.
And we are to leave the rest to God, trusting that God will deal with the
wicked and will take care of us.
So, again, the question is, do
you believe that? And again, the other question is, if you believe it, do
you trust it? Because, again, that’s not two ways of asking the same
question. It’s one thing to say we believe that our job is to trust in
the Lord, commit ourselves to God, and do good. It’s another to say, I’m
going to actually do that, I’m going to actually live that way, and I’m not
going to worry about what may happen as a result of that.
Because here’s the thing.
I said it’s not our job to go out and battle evil, and I believe that.
But at the same time, there are times when evil will bring the battle to
us. Because there are times when committing our lives to God, doing good,
following the ways of the Lord in everything we do and say, can get us into
trouble. God is not always popular in our society right now.
Following God is not always popular in our society right now. We may not
feel it as much, living here in Gettysburg, South Dakota, but if you follow the
news at all you’re aware of it. And our little town is not walled off
from society, much as we might like to imagine that it is. Those same
elements that make God unpopular in other parts of the country are going to
make their way here, and in fact already are. We may not feel it now, but
someday we will.
That’s why believing these
things and trusting them are not the same thing. If we believe these
things, but we don’t trust them, we may not be able to withstand the pressure
from society. When following the ways of the Lord gets us into trouble,
we may fold. We may take what appears to be the easy way out. It’s
always tempting to go along with the crowd. It takes courage, and it
takes trust in God, to resist the crowd and continue to follow the ways of the
Lord, and to not worry about what may happen as a result of doing that.
It takes courage to trust that God will take care of us, and that God will
bless us, if we resist the pressure to go along and get along and instead stay
faithful to God.
It’s easy to believe that evil will
win. But it won’t. God is going to win. God always
wins. The almighty, all-powerful God is undefeated. And He always
will be.
So let’s have faith in
God. Let’s trust in God. And let’s believe what the psalm
says. Evil will fade away. It will be destroyed. It will be
obliterated! The wicked’s own schemes will bring them down. All we
need to do is trust in the Lord. Do good. Commit our lives to God,
don’t get angry, and don’t worry. Follow the ways of the Lord. God
will take care of the evil and the wicked. And God will take care of us,
too.
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