The sermon preached by Todd Nibert on Psalm 10 centers around the problem of evil and God's sovereignty in the face of human suffering. The key arguments revolve around questions of why God seems distant during times of trouble, with an emphasis on the pride and malice of the wicked, contrasting them with the humility of the poor and oppressed. Nibert illustrates the nature of wickedness as rooted in pride and contempt for God, using specific verses such as Psalm 10:1, where the psalmist cries out in despair at God’s perceived absence, and verse 14, which affirms that the Lord sees the plight of the humble. The practical significance is that despite the wickedness evident in the world, believers can find comfort in the sovereignty of God, trusting that He will ultimately judge the wicked and uphold justice for the oppressed and fatherless, which reinforces important Reformed doctrines such as total depravity, God's sovereignty, and assurance of salvation.
“Yes, He could prevent this. Yes, He could cause something to stop or start. He's God. But when I start saying, why do you let this happen? What I'm doing, I'm becoming God's judge.”
“Pride is the most, Lynn tells me I shouldn't use the word stupid when I preach. Well, I'm gonna use it here. Pride is stupid.”
“The poor, those who have nothing. Those who have no righteousness to recommend them to God, those who can't bring anything to God, they're poor; they don't have anything.”
“What a joy it is to know, the Lord, He's gonna do what's right. Just rest in that.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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