Being
involved, as I am, in international evangelism, I spend a great deal of time in
airports, train depots, and bus stations. I see all kind of
people. One of the things I do to pass the time is speculate on the
destination of the people around me. Sometimes I imagine them going
to exotic locations like
I
don’t mind traveling. There are trips we all look forward to going
on – vacations, golf outings, fishing trips, to a ball game and so forth.
There are other trips that we don’t look as forward to but we know we
need to take them nonetheless – like trips to the doctor or dentist.
But I can tell you in all honesty, my favorite trip is when I am coming
back home.
I
recently read about a man who was on this same plane. It was a
story of sexual passion that led to adultery. The wife’s lover
arranged for her husband to be murdered! This was not a story on
Hollywood Insider, but rather from 2 Samuel 11 and 12. The names of
the lovers were David and Bathsheba and the murdered husband was the army
commander, Uriah.[1]
Today
we are going to look to Psalm 51 and hopefully discover, through David’s
penitent journey, our own way back home. Regardless of where you
have been, what you have done, or with whom you have done it, God loves you,
wants to set you free from the bondage of sin, and invite you to Come Back Home.
Notice with me that first of all,
His Appeal to
God
(Psalm 51:
1-2)
By
the time we read these verses, David has come to his senses. He
approaches God in Holiness. He writes, “Be
gracious to me, O God, according to Thy loving kindness …
“(v1). David recognized and appealed to the nature
and character of God. The first step to recovery, of any sort, is a proper
understanding of who God really is. David did not yet refer to him,
as “my God” for that would have been presumptive, because of his own sinfulness
but he appealed to God in Holiness.
The
first verse of this Psalm goes on to show us that he appealed to God in
Honesty when he said, “according to the greatness of Thy
compassion” (v2). Here we see David’s faith coming
through. Although he was captive by sin, he still had the Word of
God in His heart. We appeal to God because he understands that
although he is a sinner, he still belongs to God. This relationship
was not built on performance, but on promise. It was built on a
covenant rather than on circumstances. Aren’t you glad to know
that? God’s love for you is unconditional. If you are
in relationship with God through the blood of Jesus Christ, nothing, no nothing
can ever take His love away from you. Realizing this, David came to
God in holiness, in honest, and then in Humility.
Psalm 51 continues by stating, “blot out my transgressions.
Wash me thoroughly from my iniquity, and cleanse me from my sin.”
(1c-2). There are three distinct words that David used her,
under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. Blot out
implies that I have a record that needs to be cleared. It has with it the idea
of an “accounts payable” debt that could not be paid. It’s like a
credit card debt that keeps getting larger and larger with no hope of
settlement. David says, I need to have my account cleared.
Another illustration is that of a dirty plate, covered with the remains
of a meal that needs to be wiped clean. David is pleading, I need
to be wiped clean; “Blot out, make clear, wipe away my transgressions!”
The psalmist then says, “Wash Me” – I am very dirty and
need to be scrubbed. This is the picture of a person taking a dirty garment and
beating it against a rock, or trampling under foot the dirty garments; over and
over again until they are clean. He concludes this verse by imploring,
“Cleanse me. “ This gets to the very heart of
the matter. It was the word used of a leper, unclean and
unacceptable. “I am no longer fit to come into the presence
of God or the company of believers.” All of this is said by
David to communicate his actual standing before God. Notice that
David is the subject of all this discussion. He writes in the first
person, “Be gracious to me … blot out my
transgressions, wash me thoroughly from myme from my sin.”
Understanding our sinfulness before God is a deeply personal
matter. Notice secondly …
His Admission of Guilt
Beloved, it is
imperative that we get a clear picture of this point in the story.
There is no homecoming unless we are willing to call sin exactly what it
is! David used the right terminology, he did not try
and candy-coat his sinfulness, and neither must we. It is always a
matter of integrity. David had fallen far and needed to come clean
before God and before himself. He uses three distinct words to
describe his guilt. “Blot out my
transgressions” (v3). This is a
word that communicates his willful acts of rebellion. It literally
means a “high-handed” and deliberate rebellion. He is
saying, “I knew what I was doing and did it willfully. I planned it
out! “O God, mark it out!”
“Wash me thoroughly
from my iniquity” (v3). This is a word that
conveys the understanding of perversion. David admits that this is
his very nature. “It’s who I am. I am full of
perversion; not truth but lies.” Here David says, the dye of sin is
immovable. I have laid in it so long it is ingrained in me.
Wash me over and over again. “O God, it’s going to
take a thorough scrubbing to clean this out of me.”
On a
mission trip to
"Come now, and let us reason
together," says the LORD, "Though your sins are as scarlet, they will be as
white as snow; though they are red like crimson, they will be like
wool.
Next
David begs, “cleanse me from my sin” (v3). This is the
archery term that means to miss the mark, to fall short, or to stumble.
The sinful King admits, “I am not what I ought to be. I am dirty and
diseased – like a leper.” The summary of David’s confession is
simple: I owe a
debt; cancel it! I am dirty; continually wash me! I am diseased;
cleanse me! Yes, David used the right
terminology. I am also impressed to note David’s Testimony. It is
a painfully open and vulnerable confession of sin. “Against
Thee, Thee only, I have sinned, and done what is evil in Thy sight, so that Thou
art justified when Thou dost speak, and blameless when Thou dost judge.
(V4). “I am guilty! All of my sinfulness
has been against you O God. I am fully deserving of everything I am
getting.” David does not try and place the blame on anyone
else. One of the biggest mistakes we make in our confession process
is in trying to rationalize our guilt. We blame other people, other
circumstances, and other things. The truth of the matter is that we
are sinners by birth and sinners by choice. Today, whatever you are
struggling with, has at its root your own sinfulness before
God.
Next
this man of God admits that he realizes that God is God! He
is saying to Jehovah, “You are justified in your judgment of me.
I have nothing to say in my defense. You are right God, I am
wrong. Have mercy on me.” This is the whole of David’s
testimony. “You are Just … I am just a sinner!”
Finally in his admission
process, we see David’s Theology. John Phillips
reminds us that
“He
set down for the record the basic fact that sin was his inheritance as a human
being. He was a son of Adam, member of a fallen race.”[2]
David
further elaborates on this by saying, I was blinded by Sin.
This exposed his deep needs. He is admitted that the heart
of man is desperately wicked. We are all, by our very nature,
estranged from God. We are blind to the truth of God.
We act on our impulses and fleshly drives. This is what
David had done. When he was in the arms of Bathsheba, David knew
what he was doing was wrong – no doubt about it. His hormones, not
his head and heart controlled him. The same is true of each one of
us. When we sin against God, it is almost always true that we know
what we are doing is wrong. We are not a sinner because we do
sinful things rather; we do sinful things because we are a sinner.
David
has now come clean with himself and before God. I want you to do
the same thing today. You cannot come back home, until you first
admit your guilt. Have you done this? Remember, we
have a choice to make in regards to our sins. We can try and cover
them, conceal them, or we can confess them. I urge you, by the Word
of God to confess your sins. The Bible says,
If
we say that we have no sin, we are deceiving ourselves, and the truth is not in
us. If we confess our sins, He is faithful and righteous to forgive us our sins
and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. –
I Jn 1:8-9 nasb
In
the next six verses we have a thorough exposé on the ravages and consequences of
sin in the life of a believer. In light of all these things, David
is asking that God’s grace be applied to his sin. Remember the old
Puritan saying, “Grace is to buried sin what water is to fire!
“Make me to hear
joy and gladness, let the bones which Thou hast broken rejoice.”
(V8). He had become deaf because of sin.
David wanted to be able to hear the voice of God again. Only the grace of
God could enable him to hear the joy and gladness of God. Today, are you hearing
clearly the voice of God? If not, it is because of un-confessed,
un-cleansed sin in your life.
“Hide Thy face
from my sins, and blot out all my iniquities.” (V9) Sin has
disgraced David. He could no longer hold his head up and face
people. More importantly he could not face God. He was
ashamed of what he knew God had seen in his life! Only the grace of
God could blot out his iniquities so that he could lift up his head
again!
“Create in me a
clean heart, O God, and renew a steadfast spirit within me.” (V10)
David realized that sin had damaged him beyond repair.
He is crying out here, not to be repaired, but to be regenerated!
God’s grace is the means whereby we are transformed, not
reformed.
“Do not cast me
away from Thy presence, and do not take Thy Holy Spirit from me.”
(V11) David felt devastated! He could imagine
nothing worse than loosing the presence and power of God in his life.
“Restore to me the
joy of Thy salvation, and sustain me with a willing spirit.” (V12)
David understood depression. He was weak and
anemic because of the sin in his life. He needed the grace of God
to restore to him joy that comes only through forgiveness. Karl Menninger, the
famed
Beloved, there is
nothing more powerful than the grace of God. Sin will take you
further than you want to go, keep you longer than you want to stay, and cost you
more than you want to pay. I beg you, today, my application to the
grace of God to overcome, cancel, forgive, restore, renew, and transform you
into all that He wants you to be. The final thing I want us to
notice in this powerful Psalm is …
His Anticipation of Glory
Something wonderful has
happened in David’s spirit. You see this chapter is a chapter of
grace and glory. Weeping may endure for the night, but joy comes in
the morning. There is hope for all who have turned to God in faith
and truth. We can be certain that He is a God of restoration.
He is a God of second chances. He is the one who brings us
back home.
David
says three simple things in theses few verses. Listen again to
verses 13-19 …
--Ps 51:13-19 nasb
First David acknowledges
the glory of preaching. Once forgiven, full of joy, faith, and
forgiveness David would teach others about the wonderful grace of Jesus.
He could say to others, “I know what you are going through, I have been
there myself, and God’s grace is sufficient for you!”
Finally David exclaims that he would once again know the glory of pleasing God.







