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Today we will finish Psalm 101. Remember it is a psalm
written by David who had just recently become King of Israel. The nation was
broken, and he had a tremendous task and challenge before him as he had to deal
with both internal corruption and foreign adversaries. David’s was determined
to lead the nation with integrity and “drain the swamp” in Jerusalem of
its deceitful liars, wicked and evil people that were in the seats of power and
authority.

 

David was determined to follow the instructions of
God’s Word and be a king of “mercy and justice” (v. 1), which is a reflection
of the character of God. David desired to have a “perfect heart” (v. 2). He was
devoted to worship of the only true God. David also was committed to
having eyes of discernment (v. 3), as to what he would and would not be
looking at and for. And finally, David now could make good decisions
about the kind of people that would serve in his administration (vv.  6-8).

 

We have moved from the leader's heart to the leader's eyes,
and now we look at the leader's will. The repeated "I will"
statements in the psalm give evidence of David's determination to serve God and
God's people successfully and be a man of decision. He would not make excuses
and he would not delay making decisions. But some of those decisions would be
difficult to make and perhaps more difficult to implement. He wanted associates
who were not defiled by sin, whose walk was blameless, and who would treat
people with fairness. He knew that no king could build a lasting government on
lies (Psalms 31:5; 43:3; 57:10). Deception is the devil's tool, and Satan goes
to work whenever a lie moves in (2 Cor. 11:1-3).

 

Eastern kings often administered justice in the mornings at
the city gate (2 Samuel 15:1-2; Jer. 21:12), so David promised to listen to
these cases patiently, consider them carefully, and render judgment wisely. He
vowed to God that he would punish offenders according to God's law, silencing
the liars and expelling the evildoers. Jerusalem was known as "the city of
God," (Psalm 46:4; 48:1) "the city of the great King," (Psalm 48:2)
and the city God loved the most (Psalm 87:1-3), and David did not want to blemish
that reputation.

 

Was David successful in maintaining the high standard of
this declaration? No, not completely; but what leader besides Jesus Christ has
ever maintained an unblemished record? David failed in his own family. His sin
with Bathsheba set a bad example for his sons and daughters (2 Sam. 11-12), and
David failed to discipline Amnon and Absalom for their sins (2 Sam. 13-15). He
had problems with his generals Joab and Abishai, and his trusted counselor
Ahithophel betrayed him.

 

Yet David reigned for forty years, during which time he
expanded the borders of the kingdom, defeated Israel's enemies, gathered the
wealth used to build the temple, wrote the psalms, and established the dynasty
that eventually brought Jesus Christ into the world. Like us, he had his
weaknesses and failings, but overall, he sought to honor the Lord and be a good
leader. Jerusalem is known as "the city of David" and Jesus as
"the Son of David." Could any compliment be higher than that?

 

Especially in this day of darkness and despair in the world,
we need to pray for leaders in our homes, in our churches, in our communities,
and in our state and national government, that will be decisive and determined
to make decisions based on truth and not lies. In 1 Timothy 2:1-4, the Apostle
Paul wrote: “Therefore I exhort first of all that supplications, prayers,
intercessions, and giving of thanks be made for all men, for kings and all who
are in authority, that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness
and reverence. For this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Savior, who
desires all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth.”

 

Will you join me in prayer today for the leaders in our
nation and in our world?

 

God bless!