Psalm 51 clearly teaches us that we cannot repair the
consequences of being sinners, ourselves.
Psalm 51:1-2: Have
mercy on me, O God, according to your steadfast love; according to your
abundant mercy blot out my transgressions. Wash me thoroughly from my iniquity
and cleanse me from my sin.
Psalm 51 is about the consequences of and the remedy
for our entire sinfulness, rather than merely the individual sins that lie
heavily on our conscience.
We learn the lesson of forgiveness from David’s deep
sorrow after committing both adultery and murder. We are taught that radical
sinfulness can be healed, and our sorrow repaired by radical repentance. And
this forgiveness is the true joy of Lent.
Psalm 51 describes the totality and the radical nature
of our sinfulness.
Verse 3: For I know my
transgressions, and my sin is ever before me.
Sin leaves the sinner liable to judgment and
punishment.
Verse 4: Against you (God), you
alone, have I sinned, and done what is evil in your sight, so that you are
justified in your sentence and blameless when you pass judgment.
The Psalmist understands that our sinfulness is much
more than a matter of crime and punishment. Instead, he teaches us about the
deep-seated and universal nature of our sinfulness that saturates every aspect
of human life. And yet, we can be forgiven by the grace and mercy of God.
Verse 8: Let me hear joy and
gladness; let the bones that you have crushed rejoice.
Sin, he says, deafens the sinner to the experience of
joy and causes physical agony. But our repentance and penitence find its
purpose in being forgiven.
Verse 11: Do not cast me away from
your presence, and do not take your Holy Spirit from me.
Our sinfulness creates the feelings of being cast out
from God's presence, of being rejected and abandoned – even by the Holy Spirit.
Verse 12. Restore to me the joy of
your salvation and sustain in me a willing spirit.
Our sinfulness obstructs the enjoyment of the good
news of God's works of redemption and destroys the willingness
to even attempt to follow God's way, thus spreading its own malignant influence
across all the boundaries of our lives.
God repairs our deep depression about our sin and
restores our joy in the Lord.
The Psalmist concludes that our sinfulness even
prevents the offering of praise and gratefulness and that it perverts these
sacrifices of gratitude to God.
The deadly consequences of being sinners prevent us
from repairing our own lives.
Any idea that we can do something by ourselves to
patch up the results of our evil nature is foolishness. Psalm 51 reminds me
that the purpose of repentance is to beg for God’s gracious help to
restore my joy and thus restores my life - and the lives of those we
impacted with our evil choices.
During
the Lenten Season the critical importance of self-examination leads to great
sorrow about our sins and sinfulness, yet nothing beats the joy of experiencing
the love, mercy ad grace of God’s forgiveness in and through the redeeming work
of our Lord, Jesus, the eternal Son of God.
We need to trust that the sacrifice of our Lord Jesus
Christ on the cross, is sufficient for all sinners. It is our only hope, and
our only redemption. The only true source of our eternal joy.
The
Season of Lent is a blessed time of humble repentance and therefore of
healing and the restoration of our joy. It is about receiving help and
remedy for our natural spiritual status called sinner, and grants us the
assurance, through forgiveness in Christ, that we remain God’s beloved
children.
The
ultimate joy of the Lenten Season is to experience God’s forgiveness anew.
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