“Many are the woes of the wicked. . .”
Maybe so. Maybe
not.
Proportionally, in this world do the wicked suffer more or than the righteous? I’m not sure.
Some forms of suffering the righteous undergo, in fact, aren’t even background
music in the lives of really bad people.
But that’s a topic for another time. Give me a minute or so to brag up my
granddaughter.
When, years ago, my son and his girlfriend came to
a relatively congenial parting of the ways, it was tough on him. My guess is that it was tough on her, too,
but I know it was tough on my granddaughter, who’d come to nearly worship the
ground her uncle’s girlfriend walked upon.
How does one explain a break-up to a four-year-old? Her father told her what she had to
understand was that people changed. That
seemed to help.
The next day, at day-care, she ambled up to her teacher with
the news that her uncle wasn’t going with his girlfriend anymore.
“Oh, really,” the teacher said.
“Well, you know,” Jocelyn said, deadly serious, “people
change.”
Her teacher told Jocey’s mom that she had all she could do not
to laugh.
I don’t know that Jocelyn told her teacher a truth she’d
totally digested, or if her mind was acting like a tape recorder; but if she
understood her father’s explanation, then I’m pleased because at four years old
she’s arrived at the level of wisdom that some (many?) don’t achieve until much
later, if ever.
We’re talking about wisdom here, I suppose, and today’s passage
brings to mind the word wisdom
because I’m not so sure as David is that he’s exactly right about the claim he
so brashly offers us. In my world, the
wicked aren’t always woeful; sometimes, like it or not, they prosper.
We don’t have to look all that far to find an entirely
contradictory appraisal right here in the Psalms—in 73, famously, the plight of
the wicked looks a great deal different:
“They have no struggles; their bodies are healthy and strong. They are free from the burdens common to man;
they are not plagued by human ills.” No
woes there, no not one.
The Bible, it seems, is probably a whole less squeamish
about contradiction than its readers are.
What seems true in one verse seems a whole lot less so just down the
block. How do we make sense of such
things?
Eugene Peterson, in his “Introduction to the Wisdom Books”
in The Message, claims that “the
Psalms are indiscriminate in their subject matter—complaint and thanks, doubt
and anger, outcries of pain and outbursts of joy, quiet reflection and
boisterous worship.” It’s all here in
this book. “If it’s human,” he says, “it
qualifies.”
The richness of this immodest claim is not that it is forever
true. The essential joy of what David
claims about the woes of the wicked is the rich human happiness he feels in
forgiveness. About the specifics, maybe
he’s not to be trusted; after all, he sings a different song later in another
concert.
But about the big picture, he’s on the money—and the big
picture in Psalm 32 is the triumph of forgiveness. About that, there’s very good reason to brag.