Psalm 5
Do you feel guilty about lies you have told in the past?
Do you find yourself re-running over and over and over the moments that you got caught in your lies?
Do the feelings of embarrassment, shame, guilt, and anger at yourself continue to follow you around?
Do you feel like you are being crushed by the lies you are telling now?
Do you feel like it is a full time job with a full schedule of overtime trying to keep the lie going while you meticulously obsess over covering up your tracks to make sure, to the best of your ability, that you aren’t found out and don’t get caught?
Do you feel angry about those around you who seem to be living their best life (better than yours) but are lying to get what they have?
Jason Walker, the Austrailian country music singer and song writer penned this thought in one of his songs:
Everybody lies, lies, lies
It’s the only truth sometimes
Doesn’t matter if it’s out there somewhere
waiting for the world to find
Or buried deep inside
Yeah, everybody lies
Everybody lies
I tend to agree with Walker’s assessment of the human race in these words.
A few years ago, two defendants who appeared in a Montana County District court received unique punishments as part of the sentencing phase of their trial. Their punishment involved wearing signs.
Back in 2017 and 2018, Ryan Morris and Troy Allen Nelson were in violation of their respective probations related to previous criminal offenses. They both lied to the court about having served in the military in order to receive more lenient sentences for their previous criminal behavior.
Judge Pinksi sentenced Morris to ten years for felony burglary, and Nelson five years for felony criminal possession of dangerous drugs, both with years suspended.
The judge ruled that Morris and Nelson would be required to write letters of apology to various veterans’ groups as well as complete 441 hours of community service. This was one hour for each citizen of Montana killed in combat since the Korean war.
Then, during the years of their suspended sentence, they would be required to spend each Memorial Day and Veterans day visiting the Montana Veterans Memorial. While they are at the memorial they would be required to wear a placard that reads, “I am a liar, I am not a veteran. I stole valor. I have dishonored all veterans.”
Judge Pinski said, “I want to make sure that my message is received loud and clear by these two defendants. By lying, you’ve been nothing but disrespectful in your conduct. By lying, you certainly have not respected the Army. By lying, you’ve not respected the veterans. By lying, you’ve not respected the court. And, by lying, you haven’t respected yourselves.”
In our text this morning, King David, the writer of most of the songs found in the book of Psalms, wants to make sure that God’s rules surrounding lying is received loud and clear.
Let’s hear what King David prays in Psalm 5.
Psalm 5 says this:
[1] Give ear to my words, O LORD;
consider my groaning.
[2] Give attention to the sound of my cry,
my King and my God,
for to you do I pray.
[3] O LORD, in the morning you hear my voice;
in the morning I prepare a sacrifice for you and watch.
[4] For you are not a God who delights in wickedness;
evil may not dwell with you.
[5] The boastful shall not stand before your eyes;
you hate all evildoers.
[6]You destroy those who speak lies;
the LORD abhors the bloodthirsty and deceitful man.
[7] But I, through the abundance of your steadfast love,
will enter your house.
I will bow down toward your holy temple
in the fear of you.
[8] Lead me, O LORD, in your righteousness
because of my enemies;
make your way straight before me.
[9] For there is no truth in their mouth;
their inmost self is destruction;
their throat is an open grave;
they flatter with their tongue.
[10] Make them bear their guilt, O God;
let them fall by their own counsels;
because of the abundance of their transgressions cast them out,
for they have rebelled against you.
[11] But let all who take refuge in you rejoice;
let them ever sing for joy,
and spread your protection over them,
that those who love your name may exult in you.
[12] For you bless the righteous, O LORD;
you cover him with favor as with a shield. (ESV)
One of God’s major commandments, found in the list of His Ten Commandments has to do with truth telling and denying the temptation to lie in order to make yourself look better or feel better.
In the Ninth Commandment, God tells you this:
[16] “You shall not bear false witness against your neighbor. (Exodus 20:16, ESV)
This commandment to “fear and love God so that we do not misrepresent, betray, lie about, nor slander our neighbor, but defend him, speak well of him, and say the kindest things we can about all he does,” obviously extends truth telling in all areas of our lives.
If we have been honest thus far, we have established that we are all liars to some degree.
And, if you are listening to me now and you respond, “I am not a liar!,” the ironic thing is that you are lying to yourself, to me, and to God with that statement.
By lying, you’ve not respected God.
So, if we are all liars, what does lying get us?
What is the end or the fate for liars?
This morning’s text has much to say about that.
Here is what King David says in Psalm 5 about those who lie.
First, King David says that God does not delight in you.
Second, King David says that you will not be able to stand before God.
Third, King David says that you will not be able to live with God.
Fourth, in one of the strongest statements, that I find it hard to say out loud, King David says that God hates you.
Fifth, if knowing that God hates you, the liar, isn’t enough, King David says that you who have lied or are lying or who will lie in the future, will be destroyed by God.
And, finally, King David says that God will not even look at you if you have lied or are lying or lie in the future.
When we hear how God thinks and feels about liars and how God treats liars, it is terrifying, but it is also heartbreaking.
When he came face-to-face with God, who is holy, the prophet Isaiah was driven to examine himself. In that examination, the prophet Isaiah realized that he had used his mouth in unGodly ways, including lying.
Here is what Isiah said as he stood before God’s throne:
“Woe is me! For I am lost; for I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips; for my eyes have seen the King, the LORD of hosts!” (Isaiah 6.5)
Isaiah was both terrified and heartbroken when he realized that the things that came out of his mouth affected his relationship with God.
He was terrified because he realized that his misuse of his mouth made him guilty before God and therefore God had every right to punish him with all of the power in the Universe.
He was also heartbroken because his misuse of his mouth separated him from God, who chose to create him and love him. His God couldn’t even look at him because of the garbage and filth and lies that poured so easily out of his mouth.
He realized what James, the brother of Jesus, would vocalize and write down thousands of years later.
James puts it this way:
How great a forest is set ablaze by such a small fire! [6] And the tongue is a fire, a world of unrighteousness. The tongue is set among our members, staining the whole body, setting on fire the entire course of life, and set on fire by hell. [7] For every kind of beast and bird, of reptile and sea creature, can be tamed and has been tamed by mankind, [8] but no human being can tame the tongue. It is a restless evil, full of deadly poison. [9] With it we bless our Lord and Father, and with it we curse people who are made in the likeness of God. [10] From the same mouth come blessing and cursing. My brothers, these things ought not to be so. (James 3.5-10, ESV)
For each of us listening this morning to what God has to say about liars and lying, we should be saying the same thing as Isaiah:
“Woe is me! For I am lost; for I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips;
However, there is good news for you this morning.
In fact, there is great news waiting for you as you confess misusing your mouth as Isiah did.
As you confess that sin, you will be assured or reassured of God’s grace, which acts quickly to forgive us, just as Isaiah was.
Isiah tells us that after his confession of using his mouth for evil purposes, including lying, this happened:
“Then one of [God’s angels] flew to me, having in his hand a burning coal that he had taken with tongs from the altar. And he touched my mouth and said: “Behold, this has touched your lips; your guilt is taken away, and your sin atoned for.” (Isaiah 6.6-7)
When you confess your sin of misusing your mouth to both boast and lie, you have the good news that we hear at the beginning of every Sunday morning service:
[9] If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. (1 John 1.9)
When we confess our sin to God, our Father in Heaven, our fears are calmed and our broken hearts are mended.
Through the life, death, and Jesus Christ, God forgives our boasting and lying.
Therefore, the good news for you is that Jesus cancels your lies.
His death on the cross took the guilt of your boasting and lying away.
On the cross Jesus took your sin, which includes boasting and lying, and gave you his perfection, his holiness, his righteousness, in truth telling.
In what has become my favorite Bible verse, Jesus says this in John 14.6:
[6] Jesus said to him, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me. (ESV)
This week as you make your way throughout the days that God gives you, speak the words that King David spoke which remind you that your past, present, and future sins that involve the misuse of your words and mouth are forgiven.
Say, with King David:
[6]You destroy those who speak lies;
the LORD abhors the bloodthirsty and deceitful man.
[7] But I, through the abundance of your steadfast love,
will enter your house.
This is the Word of God for you today.
This is the Grace of God for you today.
Amen.
Reverend Fred Scragg V.
July 7, 2024
Pastoral Responsive Prayer:
Lord God Almighty,
As we gaze upon your holiness, we are left devastated by our sinfulness. We are lost in the uncleanness of our lips. Unimaginably selfish, utterly prideful, and crushingly unloving words have been spoken freely from these lips. At the same time, we often use our lips to say good things only so that we will be praised by others or so that you will accept us based on our righteousness. We constantly fail to use our lips to say loving or truthful things because we would rather save ourselves the trouble of loving you and others. We live among others who also have unclean lips: we have been mocked, offended, and hated through the lips of others. We confess that we have often responded to these sins with spiteful anger.
Show us our Savior! The prophet cried, “Woe is me!” as his unclean lips were exposed in light of your holiness. We come boldly to you because the woe that we deserve has been entirely poured out on your Son, Jesus Christ. The sacrifice appointed to redeem our shameful lips was none other than the gruesome death of one whose lips were perfectly clean. Jesus’ lips spoke love to children, quieted storms, declared forgiveness to sinners, and remained silent before his accusers. When Jesus was angry, his lips remained pure, as his anger was expressed in ways that continued to fulfill your commandment to love you and others before himself. The very lips that spoke, “Father forgive them,” that we might be saved, cried out in agony, “Father, why have you forsaken me?” so that we would not be forsaken. We are left in awe at this unfathomable act of love.
Thank you, Father, that the cross stands empty now. Jesus is risen, and you have made us alive in him. Help us, Lord, to speak in light of this gospel news. May we use our lips to speak the same grace and love that have been so richly lavished upon us. When we fail, Lord, help us to remember the words of forgiveness that have been so powerfully guaranteed by the blood of Jesus. Help us to wait patiently for the day when our faith will be sight, the day our lips will finally and purely sing, “Hallelujah, what a Savior!”
In Jesus’ name, amen.