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Day 2893 Wisdom Nuggets – Psalm 139:1-6 – Daily Wisdom


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Welcome to Day 2893 of Wisdom-Trek. Thank you for joining me. This is Guthrie Chamberlain, Your Guide to Wisdom. Day 2893 – Wisdom Nuggets – Psalm 139:1-6 Daily Wisdom Wisdom-Trek Podcast Script - Day 2893 Welcome to Wisdom-Trek with Gramps! I am Guthrie Chamberlain, and we are on Day 2893 of our Trek. The Purpose of Wisdom-Trek is to create a legacy of wisdom, to seek out discernment and insights, and to boldly grow where few have chosen to grow before.<#0.5#> The title for today’s Wisdom-Trek is: The Sovereign Surveillance of the Soul – Intimacy Beyond Celestial Limits<#0.5#> In our previous expedition along this ancient, sacred trail, we stood on a glorious, sunlit ridge of faith with King David in Psalm One Hundred Thirty-Eight. We witnessed a staggering, holy audacity as David grabbed his harp and chose to sing his praises to Yahweh directly before the face of the false gods. We explored that cosmic courtroom scene through the profound lens of the Ancient Israelite divine-council worldview, realizing that David was boldly declaring the total illegitimacy of the rebel elohim—those fallen, territorial spiritual principalities who held the disinherited nations under their dark, oppressive spell. We rested in the triumphant guarantee that even when we are completely surrounded by troubles, the raw, warrior strength of Yahweh’s right hand will shatter the rage of our adversaries, flawlessly executing His redemptive blueprints for our lives because His covenant love endures forever.<#0.5#> Today, my friends, we take our next deliberate, breathtaking steps forward on our trek, transitioning into what is universally recognized as one of the most intimately profound, and macro-cosmically sweeping pieces of literature ever penned by human hand. We are entering the opening movement of Psalm One Hundred Thirty-Nine, verses one through six, in the New Living Translation. If Psalm One Hundred Thirty-Eight showed us David singing before the celestial council, the opening of Psalm One Hundred Thirty-Nine reveals why the true Creator completely outmatches every single member of that rebellious heavenly assembly. We are shifting our focus from the external, international battlefields of cosmic warfare, and stepping directly into the quiet, absolute, and unmediated sanctuary of our own internal architecture. Let let us step onto this sacred ground, adjust our lenses, and prepare to be completely exposed, and beautifully comforted, by the infinite intelligence of our King.<#0.5#> The first segment is: The Sovereign Scrutiny of the Ultimate Mind<#0.5#> Psalm One Hundred Thirty-Nine: verses one, two, and three.<#0.5#> O Lord, you have examined my heart and know everything about me. You know when I sit down or stand up; you know my thoughts even when I’m far away. You see me when I travel and when I rest at home. You know everything I do.<#0.5#> The psalm opens with a deeply personal, almost terrifyingly transparent confession of divine absolute knowledge. “O Lord, you have examined my heart and know everything about me.”<#0.5#> The Hebrew word used here for “examined,” or “searched,” is chaqar, a technical term that implies a deep, exhaustive, and meticulous excavation. It is the exact same word used in the ancient world for mining operations, where miners would dig deep into the pitch-black shafts of the earth, sifting through the rock to uncover the hidden gems, and secret veins of gold. David looks up at the King of the universe, and he realizes that his internal life has been completely, flawlessly mined. There are no dark corners, no hidden chambers, and no masked motives that have escaped the piercing gaze of the Almighty. Yahweh has bypassed all our carefully constructed public personas, and He knows the raw, unedited truth about everything we are.<#0.5#> To fully appreciate the cosmic warfare, and the radical theological polemic embedded in these three verses, we must contrast this reality with the severe limitations of the divine council’s rebel deities. In the ancient Near Eastern mythologies of Babylon, Canaan, and Egypt, the pagan gods were never viewed as omniscient. They were fundamentally localized, spatial, and limited in their intelligence. To find out what was happening in their empires, or to discover the secret plots of human beings, the false elohim had to actively rely on intricate networks of cosmic spies, spiritual messengers, and the messy, unpredictable data delivered through human divination, or the reading of bird flights.<#0.5#> If a person traveled outside the geographic border of a specific deity's territory, that god became blind and deaf to their movements. The rebel principalities were trapped by space, and blind to the internal motives of the human spirit. They could only judge external behaviors, and guess at the rest.<#0.5#> But David completely shatters that fragmented, pagan worldview in verses two and three: “You know when I sit down or stand up; you know my thoughts even when I’m far away. You see me when I travel and when I rest at home. You know everything I do.”<#0.5#> Notice the beautiful, comprehensive pairings the psalmist uses to describe the totality of human existence. Sitting down and standing up represent the ordinary, routine movements of our daily routines. Traveling and resting at home represent the broad, expansive geography of our life journeys—the public paths of our careers, and the hidden, private sanctuaries of our domestic spaces. Yahweh doesn't need to check a celestial surveillance feed, and He doesn't need to dispatch an angelic messenger to find out where you are, or what you are doing. His presence is immediate, unmediated, and absolute in every single coordinate of time and space.<#0.5#> Even more devastating to the claims of the rebel gods is the phrase, “you know my thoughts even when I’m far away.” The Hebrew text implies that Yahweh perceives our internal processing from a cosmic distance. Before an inkling of a thought is even formulated within the neural pathways of our brains, the Creator has already read it perfectly. He doesn't just see what we do; He understands why we do it. The local boundaries of the disinherited nations mean absolutely nothing to the Most High God. You can travel to the most distant, pagan corners of the planet—completely outside the historical borders of Zion—and you are still intimately, thoroughly known by the Maker of heaven and earth. The spiritual principalities are totally blind inside their own dark territories, but Yahweh’s omniscience is a seamless blanket that covers the entire globe.<#0.5#> The second segment is: The Divine Interception and the Protective Perimeter<#0.5#> Psalm One Hundred Thirty-Nine: verses four and five.<#0.5#> You know what I am going to say even before I say it, Lord. You go ahead of me and follow me. You place your hand of blessing on my head.<#0.5#> The psalmist moves from the silent architecture of his thoughts, to the dynamic, physical reality of his words and paths. “You know what I am going to say even before I say it, Lord. You go ahead of me and follow me. You place your hand of blessing on my head.”<#0.5#> Verse four introduces a staggering, time-bending dimension to God’s absolute awareness. “You know what I am going to say even before I say it, Lord.” Human speech is the primary vehicle through which we attempt to project our will, build our relationships, or execute our hidden strategies. Often, we use our words to manipulate, to deceive, or to construct a protective wall around our vulnerabilities. But before a single syllable can form on David’s tongue, Yahweh has already heard the entire sentence echo through eternity. He intercepts our communication at its very root. He knows our true intent, long before we ever dress it up in the polite language of human conversation. There is no possibility of spinning the data in the courtroom of the Most High King.<#0.5#> This total, intrusive knowledge could easily produce a crushing sense of paranoia, if it were not balanced by the beautiful, protective reality of verse five: “You go ahead of me and follow me. You place your hand of blessing on my head.”<#0.5#> The literal Hebrew text for “go ahead of me and follow me” utilizes an exceptionally powerful, military idiom: tsartani, which means “You have hemmed me in,” or “You have besieged me.” It is the exact vocabulary used when an army surrounds a fortress city, cutting off all exits, and establishing a tight perimeter. <#0.5#> In the context of the divine-council worldview, this is an incredibly comforting piece of spiritual defense. David realizes that he is a heavily contested asset. The rebel spiritual principalities, and their earthly proxies, are constantly seeking to ambush, derail, or destroy the anointed line of the true King. But Yahweh has established a hyper-vigilant, supernatural perimeter around His servant....
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Wisdom-Trek.comBy Harold Guthrie Chamberlain III