Fools Say In Their Hearts
Devotional
Companion to the Psalter
A Devotional Guide to the Psalms
Object:
(This is a slight revision of Psalm 14)
Fools say in their hearts, "There is no God." ...
Have they no knowledge, those evildoers ...
There they shall be in great terror ...
When God restores the fortunes of his people,
Jacob will rejoice....
-- Psalm 53:1a, 4a, 5a, 6b
Theme: Denunciation of godlessness
Outline
1-3 -- Corruption of humankind comes from failure to seek God.
4 -- Illustrates their oppression of God's people.
5-6 -- Terror awaits them, but God brings deliverance for Israel.
Notes
• Liturgy -- Prophetic
• This psalm, a slight revision of Psalm 14, is one of a number of indications that the book of Psalms as we have it is a gathering of several shorter collections, created somewhat like our modern hymnals are formed. (See introductory article on p. 13.)
For Reflection
• Some atheism today is dogmatic and militant. Atheists are not the problem as much as the practical atheism of our culture: indifference. Plato said of the "secularism" of his time that it reflected belief that the gods don't exist; or, if they do, they don't care about human affairs; or, if they care, they can be easily appeased with a little sacrifice. Today, that indifference is often expressed by the sentiment that "it doesn't matter what you believe, as along as you're sincere" (or feel good). That nullifies the entire revelation of God to us in the record of Israel and the coming of Christ -- a popular form of atheism.
Prayer
Eternal God, you do love me and ask that with all my heart I rely on you in all things. It is your earnest desire to be my God, and I must regard you as God or suffer the loss of eternal salvation. My heart shall neither build on nor rely on anything else, whether it be property, honor, wisdom, power, purity, or any other creation. Amen.
-- Herbert Brokering, editor, Luther's Prayers, #83 (Minneapolis: Augsburg Publishing House, 1967)
Fools say in their hearts, "There is no God." ...
Have they no knowledge, those evildoers ...
There they shall be in great terror ...
When God restores the fortunes of his people,
Jacob will rejoice....
-- Psalm 53:1a, 4a, 5a, 6b
Theme: Denunciation of godlessness
Outline
1-3 -- Corruption of humankind comes from failure to seek God.
4 -- Illustrates their oppression of God's people.
5-6 -- Terror awaits them, but God brings deliverance for Israel.
Notes
• Liturgy -- Prophetic
• This psalm, a slight revision of Psalm 14, is one of a number of indications that the book of Psalms as we have it is a gathering of several shorter collections, created somewhat like our modern hymnals are formed. (See introductory article on p. 13.)
For Reflection
• Some atheism today is dogmatic and militant. Atheists are not the problem as much as the practical atheism of our culture: indifference. Plato said of the "secularism" of his time that it reflected belief that the gods don't exist; or, if they do, they don't care about human affairs; or, if they care, they can be easily appeased with a little sacrifice. Today, that indifference is often expressed by the sentiment that "it doesn't matter what you believe, as along as you're sincere" (or feel good). That nullifies the entire revelation of God to us in the record of Israel and the coming of Christ -- a popular form of atheism.
Prayer
Eternal God, you do love me and ask that with all my heart I rely on you in all things. It is your earnest desire to be my God, and I must regard you as God or suffer the loss of eternal salvation. My heart shall neither build on nor rely on anything else, whether it be property, honor, wisdom, power, purity, or any other creation. Amen.
-- Herbert Brokering, editor, Luther's Prayers, #83 (Minneapolis: Augsburg Publishing House, 1967)

