psalm 32 & 51

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Psalm 32 & 51

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Psalm 32 & 51. GUILT is the most invisible, but the heaviest giant of all. People all around us are being slowly crushed and suffocated b y the giant of guilt. It kills slowly with excruciating pain!. David battled two giants in his lifetime. Goliath is the well known - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Psalm 32 & 51

Psalm 32 & 51

Page 2: Psalm 32 & 51

GUILT is the most invisible, but the heaviest giant of all.

People all around us are being slowly crushed and

suffocatedby the giant of guilt.

It kills slowly with excruciating pain!

Page 3: Psalm 32 & 51

David battled two giants in his lifetime.

Goliath is the well known

giant he defeated in a matter of minutes.

Guilt is the lesser-known giant that took David many months to overcome!

Page 4: Psalm 32 & 51

David had it all – every good thing life had to offer.

He ruled the greatest nation in the world

Not only was he God’s anointed,he was also the people’s choice.

Once he was an obscure shepherd boy,

now he was the most important man of the land.

Page 5: Psalm 32 & 51

David had the heart of an artistthe soul of a priest

the mind of a philosopherthe body of a warrior

David had made it to the top.Many have indicated he was

restless and needed a new giant to

conquer.Sadly, this one got the best of

him!

Page 6: Psalm 32 & 51
Page 7: Psalm 32 & 51

Psalm 32 describes the

anguish of body and soul

The Agony of Guilt

that David went through while trying

to conceal his sin.

Page 8: Psalm 32 & 51

When the damage has been done and the guilt sets in – our

first impulse is SILENCE

“When I kept silent, my bones grew old through my groaning all the day long.”

- Psalm 32:3

We feel that we can’t talk to people, even those closest to us. We feel like we can’t talk

to God.

Page 9: Psalm 32 & 51

“If I had not confessed the sin in my heart, the Lord

would not have listened.”- Psalm 66:18

Now a gulf of silence stretched between David & God.

The silence as a result of guilt is deafening

His soul was suffering & his health followed suit.

Page 10: Psalm 32 & 51

No one is more eloquent than David on the dimensions of

SORROW

“Day and night your hand of discipline was heavy on me. My strength evaporated like water in the summer heat.” -

Psalm 32:4

King David was still commanding all of his subjects and mighty

army, but his conscience could not be ruled.

Page 11: Psalm 32 & 51

David was trapped inside his own guilt.

Sorrow overcame him, sapping his life of

all its considerable vitality.

His conscience was filled with disgust,

breaking his communion with God.There were no songs to sing.

The only poetry he could write was the poetry of grief.

HIS LIFE WAS A MESS!

Page 12: Psalm 32 & 51

David suffered so much was there was no one to whom he could

convey his pain; instead he felt isolated because of his SECRECY

For over a year, David lived with an intolerable secret. His sin with

Bathsheba may not have been planned, but his sin against Uriah was premeditated & calculated.

The guilt of what he had done was wearing him down.

Page 13: Psalm 32 & 51

The Accusation of GuiltGod sent a prophet named Nathan to confront David

about his sin.The Lord had revealed to

Nathan what he needed to know about David’s sin.

Nathan tells David a storyof two men – one rich and one

poor

Page 14: Psalm 32 & 51

“David was furious. ‘As surely as the Lord lives,’ he vowed,

‘any man who would do such a thing deserves to die!’”

- 2 Samuel 12:5

Nathan lowers the boom and tells David “You are the man!”

- v 7a

Page 15: Psalm 32 & 51

It’s hard to imagine a moment filled

with more anguish and reliefat the same time.

While David was humiliated and ashamed – finally the

secret he had been carrying for so long was out in the open.

Now was the time for David to admit his guilt and move

toward cleansing.

Page 16: Psalm 32 & 51

The Admission of Guilt

We now move from Psalm 32 to Psalm 51,

a record of David’s response and discover the pattern for defeating

this giant of guilt!

Page 17: Psalm 32 & 51

David accepts FULL responsibility for his SIN

Take a highlighter and go down Psalm 51 and note

each I, me, my, mine.

David did not avoid the factthat he was the one who had sinned and was guilty before God! This is a

lost art in our day!

Page 18: Psalm 32 & 51

David Acknowledges the Sinfulness of Sin

In three verses, David uses 4 different words to describe what he

had doneTransgression, Iniquity, Sin, Evil

When we fail to live by God’s standards –

listen carefully to our language!

When we confess our sinwe are saying the same thing about

it that God says about it!

Page 19: Psalm 32 & 51

“Finally, I confessed all my sins to you    and stopped trying to hide my guilt.

I said to myself, “I will confess my rebellion to the Lord.”

    And you forgave me! All my guilt is gone.”

- Psalm 32:5

There was a day when people were scared of sin, but today, we find people using every word

except “sin” to describe behavior that is offensive to God.

Page 20: Psalm 32 & 51

When it comes to our sin, we mumble instead of confess.

We’ve so insulated ourselves from the concept of sin that our

modern generation thinks nothing of living with all kinds of

unconfessed sins in their lives.

And the church is in danger of adopting this same mentality.

Let’s model David’s pattern of confession – not his

sin!!

Page 21: Psalm 32 & 51

David Addresses His Confession to God

“Against you, and you alone, have I sinned;

I have done what is evil in your sight.”

- Psalm 51:4a

David realizes sin is first and foremost a violation of God’s Holy Standards and that God is the One

before whom confession & repentance is due.

Page 22: Psalm 32 & 51

The Answer to GuiltThere are some steps we must

take…

Page 23: Psalm 32 & 51

Removing the Sin

Check out the phrases David uses to describe this step

“Wash me thoroughly…cleanse me…

purge me…wash me…blot out…”Sin is like a STAIN. The word

“cleanse” refers to the cleansing of a leper. If

someone came into contact with a dead body – they had to be

ceremonially cleansed with hyssop.David is asking for God to be

merciful!!

Page 24: Psalm 32 & 51

Restoring the Joy

In verses 8 & 12 – David prays that God will return to him the “joy of his

salvation”

Note…David is NOT asking for God to restore his salvation…but

the joy of his salvation.There was a time when David danced for sheer joy before the Lord as the ark of the covenant was transported

up to Mount Zion in Jerusalem {2 Samuel 6:14}

Page 25: Psalm 32 & 51

Renewing the FellowshipDavid desires for the chasm between God & himself to be bridged, so there

is once again oneness and unity. “Blessed is the one whose

transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered. Blessed is the man against whom the Lord

counts no iniquity, and in whose spirit there is no

deceit.”- Psalm 32:1-2

Content is the person whose sin is forgiven and who enjoys being in right

relationship with the Lord!

Page 26: Psalm 32 & 51