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Charles Spurgeon

Spurgeon's Morning and Evening - Jul 28 AM

Psalm 73:22
Charles Spurgeon July, 28 1999 Audio
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So foolish was I and ignorant. I was as a beast before thee. Psalm 73 verse 22. Remember this is the confession of the man after God's own heart and in telling us his inner life he writes so foolish was I and ignorant.

The word foolish here means more than it signifies in ordinary language. David in a former verse of the psalm writes, I was envious of the foolish when I saw the prosperity of the wicked, which shows that the folly he intended had sin in it. He puts himself down as being thus foolish, and adds a word which is to give intensity to it. So foolish was I. How foolish he could not tell. It was a sinful folly, a folly which was not to be excused by frailty, but to be condemned because of its perverseness and willful ignorance, for he had been envious of the present prosperity of the ungodly, forgetful of the dreadful end awaiting all such.

And are we better than David, that we should call ourselves wise? Do we profess that we have attained perfection, or to have been so chastened that the rod has taken all our willfulness out of us? Ah, this were pride indeed! If David was foolish, how foolish should we be in our own esteem if we could but see ourselves.

Look back, believer. Think of your doubting God when he has been so faithful to you. Think of your foolish outcry of, not so, my father, when he crossed his hands in affliction to give you the larger blessing. Think of the many times when you've read his providences in the dark, misinterpreted his dispensations and groaned out, all these things are against me, when they are all working together for your good. Think how often you have chosen sin because of its pleasure when indeed that pleasure was a root of bitterness to you.

Surely if we know our own heart we must plead guilty to the indictment of a sinful folly. And conscious of this foolishness we must make David's consequent resolve our own. Thou shalt guide me with thy counsel.
Charles Spurgeon
About Charles Spurgeon
Charles Haddon Spurgeon (19 June 1834 — 31 January 1892) was an English Particular Baptist preacher. His nickname is the "Prince of Preachers."
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