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A vehicle for venting on philosophy, religion, and the general state of things. Proprietor: C. W. Powell

Saturday, June 28, 2014

Prayer and Meditation on Psalm 37:4-7

Precious Father in Heaven, I confess that it is beyond the power of the flesh to delight in You, for the natural 
man does not receive the things of the Spirit of God, but delights in the world, the flesh, and the devil.

Because of this, it is necessary that we mortify the old man with His deeds in order that we may walk in the 
Spirit and not fulfil the desires of the flesh.

The desires of the flesh are not our true desires, O Father, but they belong to Adam, our father after the 
flesh, and they are desires that bring death and ruin.

You, O precious Father, know what our true desires are and how precious it is when You quicken us by 
Your Spirit and we come to know them.

You will bring to pass all these precious desires, for You have said, “Blessed are those that hunger and thirst 
after righteousness, for they shall be filled.”

We do commit ourselves to You, O Father, and commit our way unto You, for You know what is best for 
us and will certainly bring it to pass.

We rest in You, O Father, and wait patiently for the time appointed for us to know the full salvation that You 
have given us in Jesus Christ, our Lord. In Him we have true righteousness and judgment, and we will shine 
as lights at noonday in the kingdom of our Father, for thus You have promised.

We will not fret over those who deny You and prosper in their evil ways. They war against themselves when 
they war against You, and cannot succeed in their wicked devices.

We are content to wait, O Father, for evil cannot go beyond the bounds You have appointed for it, for the 
wicked are like the chaff which the wind takes away. They shall vanish like the smoke and melt like wax in 
the fire.

Blessed be Your Name forever and ever, O Lord. And blessed be Your dear Son who has redeemed us 
from all iniquity. Amen and Amen.

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4 Delight thyself also in the LORD; and he shall give thee the desires of thine heart.
5 Commit thy way unto the LORD; trust also in him; and he shall bring it to pass.
6 And he shall bring forth thy righteousness as the light, and thy judgment as the noonday.
7 Rest in the LORD, and wait patiently for him: fret not thyself because of him who prospereth in his way, 
because of the man who bringeth wicked devices to pass.



Thursday, June 26, 2014

Blocking the Streets

Blocking the Streets
First published 2002 in Basket of Figs.

“In transgressing and lying against the Lord, and departing away from our God, speaking oppression and 
revolt, conceiving and uttering from the heart words of falsehood. And judgment is turned away backward, 
and justice standeth afar off: for truth is fallen in the street, and equity cannot enter.” --Isaiah 59:14,15.

The courts did not seem to be in touch. Innocent people were victims of violent crime. Often the courts were 
corrupt and allowed the guilty to go free. Government officials were corrupt and lining their own pockets. 
The courts were filled with empty arguments and lying tongues. Lawlessness was everywhere.

This was Israel in the days of Isaiah, who diagnosed the problem: the carcass of truth blocked the street, so 
equity could not pass.

I. The root meaning of “Equity” is “straightforwardness,” or “integrity.” Another form of the word describes 
the walk of a righteous man (Isaiah 57:2). In Proverbs 8:9 the words of wisdom are “plain” to those with 
understanding. When Israel no longer wanted to hear the truth, they wished the prophets to prophesy smooth 
things of deceit, not “right,” straightforward things (Isaiah 30:10).

The Bible teaches that there is a “plain” way: a simple, right, and honest way for a man to treat his God and 
his neighbor. This simple, right way is written in the hearts of every man, in his very nature, so that he is 
without excuse. The Apostle Paul said that this law is even written on the hearts of those who have never 
heard of the Bible (Romans 2:13-16). In their wickedness, men are able to corrupt this law, and some may 
even succeed in “searing their conscience as with a hot iron” (I Timothy 4:2), but they can never entirely 
erase it, and it will rise up to judge them in the last day. The pure form of this “law of nature” was given in the 
Ten Commandments (Exodus 20), and its summary is true love for God and our neighbor (Matthew 22:37-
40). This law shows that man is a moral being and is accountable to God and to his neighbor for his actions. 
The humanist must deny this law of God.
II. In Christian nations, the legal system reflected this law of equity. In England, equity courts originated in the 
legal system established after 1066 by William of Normandy. They were “courts of conscience,” 
administered by the king’s chancellor, a clergyman. (Smith, Chester H., Smith’s Review of Equity,” West 
Publishing Co., St. Paul, Minn., 1958. p. 9) Until this century, courts of equity were part of the American 
judicial system. Webster defines equity:

“Justice according to nature law of right,” or “a system of law originating in the English chancery and 
comprising a settle and formal body of legal of procedural rules and doctrines that supplement, aid, or 
override common and statue law and are designed to protect rights and enforce duties fixed by substantive 
law.”

A “substantive” right or duty is one that exists for its own sake and rests in natural law. For instance, a man 
has no right to endanger life by shooting a gun at a passing train, even if there is no specific statute forbidding 
it, or a decision in common law to cover that case. He is expected to know that such actions are wrong. 
Such an expectation is becoming rarer and rarer in schools, in public, and in government. Naughty impudent 
children become naughty impudent and brazen men and women.
Reasonable men want their courts to be upright, to dispense honest and fair decisions. Equity courts held a 
man responsible to behave in a right way toward his neighbor’s life, property, and reputation and were an 
attempt toward responsible, fair judicatories. The very existence of these courts testified to rights and law 
that were above the statute and common law, and tended to affect decisions in the other courts. Jefferson’s 
allusion to the “laws of nature,” and of “nature’s God” in the Declaration of Independence is within the scope 
of this Christian heritage.

A number of years ago courts of equity were abolished in America, and combined with the regular system of 
courts. The result is that equity is usually ignored in modern courts. One lawyer told me that judges do not 
want to stick their necks out; they want to base their decisions on statute law or common-law decisions. This 
is understandable in present law theory where there is no recognition of natural law proceeding from the God 
who created us all. Understandable, but irresponsible, and something very precious was lost in our courts 
when courts of equity were abolished. An exception to this was Brown, which ended segregation in public 
schools, the most famous equity decision in the history of America. No remedy could be found in common or 
statute law, so recourse was made to the idea that it was essentially unfair to deny basic rights to any of our 
citizens on the basis of race. One problem in this decision, however, was that it was based on the 
subjectivism of the judges, not on natural law. It was widely supported, and rightly so, because the decision 
met the approval of the consciences of the majority of the American people.

III. Natural law presupposes a Creator, and that’s the rub, in Hamlet’s phrase. Modern man hates God and 
His law. He wants to live in a relativistic world, so that he can justify abortion, sodomy, confiscatory taxation, 
fornication, pornography, and reap the income that comes from them. He sees himself as a victim in an 
impersonal world; not as a responsible man under God.

In spite of this God is the Creator and Judge of the earth. This is the truth that lies in the street and blocks 
equity’s way. The Christians who compromised with atheistic evolution in the public schools did not realize 
that this undermined a court system based on equity and natural law, turning loose a flood of lawlessness, 
criminal government and viciousness. But they did know what the Bible said, so they were without excuse, 
just as we are if we do not work to have the general law of equity, created by God, recognized as the basis 
for our law. This general law recognizes that all men are to live at peace with one another and seek the good 
of all men. This is not an emotion, but objectified in the Ten Commandments.

It was so bad in Israel that God “wondered” that there was no man, no intercessor, to plead Israel’s case 
(Isaiah 59:15-17). It displeased Him that there was no justice. So He took charge Himself. He “put on 
righteousness as a breastplate, and a helmet of salvation upon his head…” vengeance for clothing, …and 
zeal as a cloke” (Isaiah 59:17. When Jesus Christ, the Son of God appeared, He put things to right, and the 
wicked will not escape His righteous and holy government. The wicked do not like nor approve of God’s 
intervention, but they are scattered like the chaff before the wind.

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