Psalm 119:97-104 | #6 God's Word Gives Understanding (Part 2)
The Psalmist’s love for God’s law goes on to be explained as he describes the understanding and wisdom gained from it.
First, consider that those who practice evil do not understand true judgement.
Evil people don’t understand God or His ways.
Secondly, consider how God’s commands help us act wiser than enemies.
2) Meditating on God’s testimonies can give me more understanding than my teachers.
3) Obeying God’s precepts can give me more understanding than the aged.
Status and age do not always equal wisdom.
4) Keeping God’s word is important enough for me to avoid evil ways.
5) Learning from God can teach me commitment to His judgments.
Jan Davis, sixty, a professional parachutist, was BASE jumping when she fell to her death. Her husband, who was filming the jump, and several reporters were stunned when Davis crashed onto the rocks. She was jumping off the thirty-two-hundred-foot granite cliff, El Capitan, in Yosemite National Park, California, when her chute failed to open.
She and the other jumpers knew that BASE jumping was illegal in Yosemite Park. The law was passed because six people and numerous others had been injured in Yosemite due to BASE jumping. The five jumpers, including Davis, were protesting the park’s restrictions by proving the sport is safe. They knew the law, but they deliberately chose to defy it. Davis paid for that disobedience with her life.
In a similar way, many people think they can deliberately violate God’s law. Eventually they learn, sometimes the hard way, that God’s laws exist to protect us.
—Jonathan Mutchler, “Parachutist Perishes,” PreachingToday.com
6) Enjoying God’s words ought to be normal for me.
7) Understanding gained from God’s precepts can make me hate false ways.
The Hibernia oil platform in the North Atlantic is 189 miles southeast of St. John’s, Newfoundland, Canada. The total structure is 246 yards high from ocean floor to the top of the derricks.
Unlike the fated Ocean Ranger, a platform that sank in 1982, killing the eighty-four men aboard, Hibernia’s design incorporates a gravity-based structure (GBS), which anchors it to the seabed. The structure does not move. It is an artificial island. It was built that way because it is in the middle of “iceberg alley,” where an iceberg can be as large as an ocean liner.
Hibernia is built to withstand a one-million-ton iceberg (expected every five hundred years), and to withstand a six-million-ton iceberg (expected once in ten thousand years) with repairable damage. Even so, Hibernia’s designers take no chances. Radio operators plot and monitor all icebergs within twenty-seven miles. Any that come close are “lassoed” and towed away from the platform by powerful supply ships. Smaller ones are diverted by the ship’s high-pressure water cannons or with propeller wash. As rugged and as strong as this platform is, Hibernia will not allow an iceberg even to come close.
One thing seems obvious: the engineers of this oil platform are not guilty of the kind of false security that may have contributed to the sinking of the Titanic. Christians need to take spiritual threats just as seriously.
—J. Richard Love, “Oil Platform Designed to Survive the Worst,” PreachingToday.com