Psalm 14
    
    Inhabitants of the world are represented as lying in 
    wickedness. But the year of the redeemed is foreshadowed. May we tremble at 
    this sight of sin, and rejoice in the prospect of deliverance! 
    1. "The fool has said in his heart, There is no God. 
    They are corrupt, they have done abominable works, there is no one who does 
    good." 
    The heart is the index of the man. Its language reveals 
    the real character. If we could hear the secret whispers of the graceless 
    heart, the sound would be but one. The godless think there is no being 
    greater than themselves. Their conceit rejects divine supremacy. It scorns 
    to yield to any yoke. Such men exist in fearful numbers. The faithful Word 
    declares it, and moreover adds that they are fools. They pride themselves in 
    higher wisdom; but their real place is maddest among the mad. Their light is 
    utter darkness, their boasted wisdom is extremest folly. Atheism in heart is 
    wickedness on the lip. The spring is impure; what can flow from it but 
    poisonous waters! The tree is dead at core; the branches must be rotten. 
    Their works, the offspring of their thoughts, are streams of abomination. 
    They pollute the earth in which they are enacted. Hateful to God, they 
    injure man. Are there not some bright exceptions? Not one by nature. There 
    is no good but what the Spirit prompts. Where He is absent only evil dwells; 
    and He is far from unregenerate men. 
    2. "The Lord looked down from heaven upon the children 
    of men, to see if there were any who understand, and seek God." 
    We are directed to Jehovah on His heavenly throne. His 
    piercing eye surveys the universe. It reads the secrets of every heart of 
    every man. No thought escapes omniscient view. What is the concern of the 
    all-pervading search? To ascertain whether all thoughts are turned to 
    God—whether His knowledge is the prime pursuit—whether prayer asks for 
    revelation of His will—whether His mind is sought in the clear pages of His 
    Word—whether His works are studied as emblems of His character. Thus to seek 
    God is proof of wisdom. Let no man boast of understanding whose mind rejects 
    this wise employment. God looks for this. What is His verdict? 
    3. "They have all gone aside, they have altogether 
    become filthy; there is no one who does good, no, not one." 
    We read how things were before the Flood. The heart of 
    graceless man is still the same. Every imagination of the thoughts of his 
    heart is only evil continually. They wander far from paths of righteousness 
    and truth; their feet are set in error's broad decline; their garments are 
    sin-soiled. In God's sight their words are filth, and pollution in extreme 
    defilement. Let us bless God that the blood of Jesus can cleanse from all 
    such stains, and make us whiter than the whitest snow. 
    4. "Have all the workers of iniquity no knowledge? who 
    eat up My people as they eat bread, and call not upon the Lord." 
    Jehovah sees this universal evil, and now He speaks. The 
    voice is strong admonition. It traces sin to the true source—ignorance. If 
    truth were sought and seen, and loved and followed, how different would be 
    man's walk! Men work iniquity because their minds are blinded. Evil breaks 
    forth in persecution; but who are the persecuted? "My people," says the 
    Lord. We hear the tender voice, "Saul, Saul, why do you persecute Me?" The 
    issue is the absence of all prayer. They call not upon the Lord. Here four 
    foul marks of unregenerate man are shown—ignorance, iniquity, persecution, 
    prayerlessness. 
    5. "There they are, overwhelmed with dread, for God is 
    present in the company of the righteous."
    
    But to the wicked there is no calm peace. Their minds are 
    ill at ease. Clear tokens show that God is mighty in His people's midst. His 
    presence is their sure defense. God must lose His throne before they can be 
    subdued. Nebuchadnezzar saw this and was astonished. He looked into the 
    flaming furnace and exclaimed, "Look, I see four men loose walking in the 
    midst of the fire, and they have no hurt; and the form of the fourth is like 
    the Son of God." Well may they fear whose weapons are thus directed against 
    God. 
    6. "You have shamed the counsel of the poor, because 
    the Lord is his refuge." 
    The godly make the Lord their refuge. He is the high 
    tower to which they always fly. Beneath the shelter of His wings they seek 
    protection. The persecutors sneer; they ridicule such trust. What! look for 
    help to an unseen arm! Thus Jesus was reproached. But experience shows, in 
    countless instances, that none seek God in vain. 
    7. "Oh that the salvation of Israel were come out of 
    Zion! when the Lord brings back the captivity of His people, Jacob shall 
    rejoice, and Israel shall be glad." 
    This frightful sight brings in a glorious dawn. Israel's 
    long night shall cease. She shall arise and shine. Her light shall come; her 
    tedious years of cruel thraldom shall reach a blessed close; her sons from 
    distant lands shall return; her every promise shall have exact fulfillment. 
    From Jerusalem the blessed tidings of salvation shall go forth. If the 
    casting away of them has been the reconciling of the world, what shall the 
    receiving of them be but life from the dead! Then indeed shall joy and 
    gladness be the portion of Israel's sons. Then shall praise and thanksgiving 
    ring throughout earth's length and breadth. Let us trust, and pray, and 
    hope. Bright days shall come. Hasten it, O Lord, in Your own time!