Echoes From the Campfire

Nations do not ask the truth. They want only excuses.”

                    –Emerson Hough  (54-40 or Fight!)

       “Hear me, O LORD, hear me, that this people may know that You are the LORD God, and that You have turned their hearts back to You again.”
                    –1 Kings 18:37 (NKJV)
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       Barton Bouchier, the 19th-century theological writer, said, “There are many precious texts of Scripture that we will carry to heaven with us and will form the theme of our song.  But if there is one text that must break forth from every redeemed one as he enters heaven, it is the first verse of this psalm.”  The Psalm is 115.

          1 — Not unto us, O LORD, not unto us, but to Your name give glory, because of Your mercy, because of Your truth.
          2 — Why should the Gentiles say, “So where is their God?”
          3 — But our God is in heaven; He does whatever He pleases.
          4 — Their idols are silver and gold, the work of men’s hands.
          5 — They have mouths, but they do not speak; eyes they have, but they do not see;
          6 — They have ears, but they do not hear; noses they have, but they do not smell;
          7 — They have hands, but they do not handle; feet they have, but they do not walk; nor do they mutter through their throat.
          8 — Those who make them are like them; so is everyone who trusts in them.  (NKJV)

       Psalm 115, is a testimony to the world’s ignorance of God. (Lawson)  The answer is clear; it is the Lord alone who is God.  The Bible from the very beginning does not try to prove God; it simply states, “In the beginning, God…” (Genesis 1:1)  God is, and that settles it.   There is only one God, the true God–He is the God revealed in creation, history and the Bible, and He is sovereign over all.
       In these verses we see a contrast of the one, true God and those devised by the imaginations of man.  It is almost comical what man throughout history has tried to devise as God.  It continues on today, perhaps not as many silver and gold idols, but the main idol today is man himself.  Verse 8 sums that up, the people who devise gods are like them.  They cannot answer the world’s problems, they have no answer to their own problems.  Neither did the gods of the day in which this psalm was written.
       What is your answer when things do not seem to be going your way?  When God does not seem to be answering your prayers and He is allowing you to suffer?  This is what was happening to Israel, others were mocking God.  The answer is clear if we take time to look for it.  Steven Lawson writes, “Life does not revolve around man but around God.”  Fact–Amen, so be it.  We get ourselves in a dilemma when we begin to think or imagine that life should revolve around us.  “The Psalmist turns the argument of his enemies against them saying, in effect, ‘So you want me to serve visible gods?  Well, why don’t you take a closer look?  My God, who is unseen, is alive.  Your gods, which you can see, are dead!'” (George O. Wood)
       Verse 3 shows the definite attribute of the sovereignty of God.  People who are ignorant of Him, or who do not believe in Him abhor this attribute as do even some Christians.  God does whatever He pleases.  He does what He wants with what is His.  His sovereignty is unequaled, unrivaled, and unopposed.  “No so-called god or idol-worshipping nation can oppose Him.” (Lawson)  Whatever man makes, idols whether by his hands or in his mind, is powerless when compared to God.  I recall the challenge of Elijah to the prophets of Baal.  Who is God?  Those gods had no power to act–and as the foolish gods today made by man they are utterly worthless.  Their senses are useless, they cannot even reach out to do anything.  Oh, man, the self-proclaimed god, tries, but in the end he fails.  Those that worship these false gods are just like them–dead.

               “Not I, but Christ be honored, loved, exalted;
               Not I, but Christ be seen, be known, be heard;
               Not I, but Christ, in every look and action;
               Not I, but Christ, in every thought and word.”
                         –A.B. Simpson