BibleProject - Two Psalms That Sum Up the Hebrew Bible
Episode Date: March 9, 2026Psalms 1 & 2 E3 — So far in this short series, we’ve looked individually at Psalm 1 and Psalm 2. Now we’ll look at them side by side. The art of meditating on Scripture involves appreciating eve...ry single paragraph, poem, and story, but then also considering what comes before and after, because the biblical authors put everything in this order for a reason! Looking at Psalms 1 and 2 next to each other we find many overlapping words and ideas, so reading both together is crucial for understanding each one individually. In this episode, Jon and Tim explore all the connections, not only between Psalms 1 and 2, but also between these psalms and many other places in the Hebrew Bible. FULL SHOW NOTES For chapter-by-chapter summaries, biblical words, referenced Scriptures, and reflection questions, check out the full show notes for this episode. CHAPTERS Setup for Reading Psalm 1 and 2 Together (0:00-9:05) Connections in the First and Second Stanzas (9:05-30:36) Connections in the Third Stanza (30:36-41:15) Psalm 1 and 2 in the Hebrew Bible (41:15-1:02:29) REFERENCED RESOURCES Psalms Overview video and poster Check out Tim’s extensive collection of recommended books here. SHOW MUSIC “Sparks” by ØDYSSEE & Lazlow “Green Tea” by Toonorth “Bloom” by Sweeps & luv pug BibleProject theme song by TENTS SHOW CREDITS Production of today’s episode is by Lindsey Ponder, producer, and Cooper Peltz, managing producer. Tyler Bailey is our supervising engineer, who also edited today’s episode and provided the sound design and mix. JB Witty writes the show notes. Our host and creative director is Jon Collins, and our lead scholar is Tim Mackie. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Bible Project podcast. Today we're going to do something unique. We're going to spend a whole hour comparing two biblical passages together. Two weeks ago we read Psalm 1. Last week we read Psalm 2. Today, we're going to read Psalm 1 and Psalm 2 as if these two poems become something more when we read them in light of each other. And reading texts in light of each other is a part of what we mean by meditating on the Bible.
The art of learning how to meditate on scripture means learning how to appreciate every individual little paragraph unto itself.
Then also backing up and saying, it was put alongside the thing before it and the thing after it on purpose.
We'll focus on repeated words and repeated ideas shared by both poems.
For example, Psalm 1 talks of a man placed by God as a tree by a stream.
Psalm 2 talks about a king placed by God on a throne.
This tree doesn't plant itself.
This king doesn't install himself as the ruler of the world.
Both are done by God.
Both poems are reflections on the good life.
In Psalm 1, the good life is meditating on Yahweh's instruction and being known by Yahweh.
In Psalm 2, the good life is taking refuge in Yahweh's anointed king
and giving him your full allegiance, what the poem calls kissing them.
son. Both poems are saying the same thing in two different ways. The way to avoid a life that leads
to nothingness or lostness is both to be known by Yahweh and to kiss the sun. Half a dozen paragraphs
in the gospel of John are leaping to my mind. If you've seen me, you've seen the father. If you know
me, you know the father. If you kiss the sun, Yahweh knows you. And this is just the beginning.
Psalm 1 and 2 sit at a strategic place in the shape of the Hebrew Bible,
and they carry key language that's shared with the Torah and prophets.
And so in this way, Psalm 1 and 2 become a key to understanding the whole of the Hebrew Bible.
Let Psalm 1 and 2 really take up space in your mind,
and you'll find all the parts of the Bible coming alive.
Thanks for joining us. Here we go.
Hey, Tim.
Hey, John, hello.
Hello.
Hi.
We are talking about psalms.
We've been going through Psalms.
We went through Psalm 1, and then we went through Psalm 2.
Those are both things that we did.
And then you said, hey, John, did you know?
Psalm 1 and 2 worked together.
Yeah.
It's like a little couplet.
And also, as a little two-part poem, they introduce you to...
Yeah, the Psalm scroll as a whole.
Mm-hmm.
and they also hyperlinked to the entire Bible.
Yep.
They lay along one of the major divisions
of the three parts of the Hebrew Bible.
Yeah.
And each one of those expanding context
informs how we think about the meaning
of Psalms 1 and 2.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So Psalm 1 is all about
what's the good life?
Yeah, that's right.
Right?
Yep.
Yeah.
And then Psalm 2 is all about like,
man, what are we going to do
with these raging nations?
Raging nations, spreading violence,
on the land, what's God doing about it.
Okay. Those are the two big ideas.
Somehow those two ideas work together and there's chemistry between them.
And then that chemistry between them somehow introduces us not only to the collection
of Psalms, but also to how it fits in the world of the whole Bible.
That's right.
Okay.
Yeah, the art of learning how to meditate on Scripture.
And again, that phrase comes from Psalm 1, means learning how to appreciate every individual
little paragraph or poem or story unto itself.
But then also backing up and saying,
it was put alongside the thing before it
and the thing after it on purpose.
And then meditating on the thing you're looking at
in relationship to what came before
or what came after is a part of understanding its meaning.
You know, think of like any time
if you get on Google Earth or something
or your little phone device map
and you like zoom in to see your apartment
or your house or something like that.
It's your school or whatever.
Yeah.
And then the moment you zoom out and you see the location of that building you're looking at,
like with a, you know, in its neighborhood.
In its neighborhood.
You're like, whoa, see how it like fits in?
Yeah.
And you notice new things.
Zoom out even more.
It's that.
Okay.
Learning the art of that process of meditating close up and then at the level's going out
is an important skill to develop and learning how to read biblical literature.
So we're going to do that for Psalms 1 and 2.
Great.
Should you just dive in?
Yes, you do it?
All right, sweet.
So first thing to just notice, when you're reading through the Psalms,
the book of Psalms has been organized as a patchwork of, you know, hundreds of individual poems,
150 individual poems.
But they've been organized into little bundles.
Little groupings?
Groupings.
So learning how Psalms are grouped together, what are they?
the techniques, and it's different.
For Psalms 1 and 2, it's great,
because Psalm 1 and 2 are set apart
by a number of features that link them together.
You're saying Psalm 1 and 2 is a grouping?
Yeah, it's the first little bundle of poems.
It's just two.
What sets them apart?
Well, we're going to see there's a bunch of unique, repeated words
between these two poems,
that when you look forward into Psalm 3 or 4,
you're like, oh, it's different.
Those words stopped occurring.
So that's one thing.
Usually it's repeated words.
We'll look at that in a moment.
Another thing that's unique, if you look to Psalm 1 and Psalm 2,
there's no actual, like, little heading.
Like a Psalm of David.
Exactly.
Let's look at Psalm 3, and you get the first appearance of one of these headings.
A Psalm of David when he fled from the presence of Absalom, his son.
Okay.
That's a good example.
It's not really the title of the poem.
No, that's right.
It's not a title.
It doesn't function.
but it is giving you a little clue.
Dear reader, read this poem in relationship
to this other story found in the prophets,
the former prophets.
Psalm 4.
For the music director with stringed instruments,
a Psalm of David.
Psalm 5, for the music director with flutes.
Hmm, this one needs flutes.
A Psalm of David.
Psalm 6.
For a music director, yeah, with stringed instruments on the shimini.
Shiminate is the word eight.
I think what it means is on an eight-stringed instrument.
Oh.
With stringed instruments, specifically on the eight-string.
Okay.
A Psalm of David.
These are written for specific instruments.
Yeah.
No, these are little notes from the Levite choirs that performed these songs in the temple.
Yeah.
So a number of these songs comes from David, but then it had a afterlife in the history of the temple liturgy.
And then it had another afterlife in the history of the temple liturgy. And then it had another afterlife in
the psalm scroll that was shaped in the collection here exactly so here's the point is you can go through
all the psalms that follow and all accept a very few exceptions that prove the rule the majority of the poems
in all the psalms that follow have these little headings the ones that don't have it are the first two
so it's another little feature that makes them stand apart set psalm one and two apart is that they don't
have these little headings that's one feature so there's a lot of words between
between, that they share.
Mm-hmm.
And that's what we're going to look at right now.
And then also they don't have superscript.
Exactly.
And all the ones that follow 10-2.
You got it.
You got it.
Okay.
So we read through slowly and as a whole, you know, Psalms 1 and 2.
What I want to do is do a reading where we're going to read them alongside each other.
Oh, okay.
Both forward and backward.
Okay.
Or forward and backward and then as a chasm.
Okay.
And this is how this literature is meant to be.
read. So what we'll do is we'll read the kind of the first stanza or paragraph, Psalm 1.
Then we'll look at the first couple stanzas of Psalm 2. And I'm showing you them in parallel columns.
We're just literally going to read through them next to each other and notice things.
Psalm 1, how good is life for the man who doesn't walk by the counsel of the wicked?
in the path of sinners he does not stand
in the seat of mockers he does not sit
rather
in the instruction of Yahweh
is his delight
and on his instruction
he meditates day and night
that's the good life
that's the good life right a bunch of things
that the good life person does not do
and then
what they do
based on their delight
and they meditate
and our summary was
the good life is not a man who walks in a way that ultimately puts him in a place that's just
where he gets counsel and input, right, that leads him down a wrong path.
That gets him stuck in a way of thinking of the world that just constantly failing at morally at life
to the point where you just become a cynical mockered guy.
Well, this is all ridiculous and I'm above it all.
that's the tragedy
but the good life
in contrast is the one who
understands that there is
wisdom that comes from Yahweh
and that that wisdom or
instruction is something you can
both meditate on and delight in
yeah you got it
so let's ponder that
in a relationship to the first
main part of Psalm 2
versus 1 through 3 which was
about the rebel nations
and then verses 4 through 6
which is God's response to the rebel nations.
So that went,
why do the nations rage
and the peoples meditate on emptiness?
There's meditation.
Ding, ding, ding.
So meditate.
It's the same Hebrew word, haga.
If you look in the Psalms that follow for haga,
it doesn't appear.
It's just unique, Psalms one and two.
Two ways to meditate.
And whenever you see a repeated word,
I'm trying to like open up the hood of the car of reading biblical literature, so speak.
What do you do when you notice a repeated word?
What should you do?
Compare and contrast.
Usually, yeah, compare and contrast.
So let's contrast Psalm 2 verse 1 and then Psalm 1 verse 2.
1 verse 2 is meditating on the instruction of Yahweh.
Yeah.
Delighting in it.
That's right.
those things become an object of delight,
and then you just find yourself,
remember, haga, meditate,
means to say out loud, to murmur,
repeat quietly to yourself
as a way to focus your attention on it.
Yeah, and later in the poem,
there's a connection to this being known by Yahweh,
which is an intimate word of relational connection.
You got it, yeah.
So that's what the good life person meditates on,
what's beautiful and good and true
that Yahweh wants to instruct them.
what is it that the nations are meditating on?
The emptiness.
Empty, yeah, nothingness.
That's funny.
That's how we're meant to meditate.
Empty your mind.
In the modern contemporary meaning.
This doesn't mean that.
This doesn't mean like find some inner zen.
You're meditating on destroying other nations.
Yeah.
And then it's saying that is an actual futile, empty conquest.
Yeah.
So conquering your enemies, dominating and defeating them,
and then benefiting.
from their stuff that you've taken.
Yeah.
They're trying to win at life in a different way.
Yeah, that's right.
They're trying to take and destroy.
Yeah, let's keep reading verse two.
This is interesting.
The verse two said,
the kings of the land take their stand
and the rulers take counsel together.
Counsel. Ding, ding, ding, counsel.
Counsel.
Okay, that's interesting
because the good life person of Psalm 1
doesn't walk by the counsel of the wicked.
Different Hebrew words.
Oh, okay.
In Psalm 1, it's ETSA.
In Psalm 2, it's a verb, noz-du,
but they have the same.
To nos-du means that you get a group of people together
for collective, like, information and guidance.
Like, I don't know what you know.
You don't know what I know.
Let's get together.
Yeah, a little brainstorm session.
Yep, that's right.
So these are synonyms.
They're synonyms, yeah.
And it works this way, too.
It doesn't have to be the exact word.
Absolutely.
Absolutely. As a clue for you, the reader, to say, I need to compare and contrast these things.
Very often, biblical authors will give you one or two, like, low-hanging fruit, as it were, by exact repeated words.
But then they've loaded the bundled sections you're looking at with other ways that link the ideas together.
So this word counsel is a good one.
So who is it that is offering counsel in Psalm 1?
It's the wicked and the sinners and the mockers, right?
It's sort of like those are the bad guys
of the opening of Psalm 1.
Who are the bad guys of the opening
of Psalm 2? And you can kind of
of see the relationship there, the nations,
the peoples, the kings, the rulers.
Both groups end up
perishing in the way by the end of the
poem. That's right. The poems.
Both groups,
their behavior sets them on the trajectory
away from life and goodness
and away from God. And notice
how it's real individual
terms. There's the good life
person, individual, and then the wicked one and the sinner and the mocker. In Psalm 2, it's
corporate nations and people and kings and the rulers. But both are on negative paths that are
destructive to others and away from life. Psalm 1 focuses on the individual. Psalm 2 focuses on
the corporate nature of people rebellion. The Psalm 1 individual, though, does find counsel from people
who are leading them astray.
Yeah.
And this idea of a group of people conspiring together
is a connection point two.
The rulers of Psalm 2 are taking counsel together.
They take their stand.
That's a key word, too.
Yat's Vu.
And that's a symbol of their rebellion
against Yahweh and his anointed one.
Ah, and you read that back into Psalm 1
where that person just started standing in the path,
and you're just like, why did he stand?
In the path of sinners.
Yeah.
Did he just kind of, is he tired?
Did he just need a break?
Why did he stop walking and stand?
And now when you think of Psalm 2, it's like, well, standing is saying like, okay, I'm now in rebellion against Yahweh.
Yeah, so in Psalm 1, standing in the path of sinners shows your alignment with them.
And in Psalm 2, Rebel Kings taking their stand together is showing their alignment with each other.
The Good Life person doesn't join that alliance.
The last connection is the opposite of standing, but it's sitting.
So in Psalm 1, the good life person doesn't sit in the seat of mockers.
The seat of mockers, the throne of those who think they're above it all.
I think they're above it all.
Who's really above it all?
Psalm 2, verse 4, the one sitting in the skies.
Yeah, and God.
He mocks.
Yes, he is mocking.
This is the same word?
Different word. Different word. Different word. But synonyms. Yeah. It's Leitz in Psalm 1 and it's La Ag in Psalm 2.
Yeah. So they're both sitting in a seat of mockery. God is sitting in a seat of mockers. And I guess you could say he's the only one who really is outside at all to have an accurate
take on what is mockable or not. And what's mockable are violent kings who think that they are God.
on the land. Yeah. Yeah, because in Psalm 1, we created this world of the person who's like,
you think I need to take care of the poor? You think I need to love my neighbor? I can just do what I want.
And then the king, the warrior king is just taking that to 11 and just being like, I'm kind of just,
he's the Lamek character. So that's that type of mockery, which is then contrasted with
the way that Yahweh mocks, which is like, you don't get it.
You don't get it.
Yeah.
Okay.
So, let's just pause.
All we've done is read the first paragraph of Psalm 1, first stanza,
and the first stanza of Psalm 2.
And we've noticed the identical words of meditating and of sitting,
and then of synonyms that is different Hebrew words,
but that have similar meaning of counsel, standing, and mocking.
That's a lot, man.
There's a lot packed in there.
So this is very typical of how biblical authors do it.
Give you a few identical words.
Then that tips you off like,
ooh, I should just kind of read through both of these slowly
and meditate on their relationship to each other.
That was rich, man.
Well, that was some good insights right there.
And that's how this works.
Okay.
Let's keep gone.
Keep gone.
Okay.
The middle stanza of Psalm 1,
which is verses 3 and 4,
reads like this.
He, that is the good life person,
will become like a tree planted by streams of water,
which gives its fruit and its time.
Its leaf does not wither.
Everything he will do, he makes successful.
Not so, the wicked.
Rather, he's like chaff that the wind drives away.
Okay.
That's the middle of Psalm 2.
Yeah, the one who delights in Yahweh's instruction.
The image here is someone who,
has been planted.
They don't decide where they're going to stand in the Yahweh.
Oh, right.
Plants them.
And plants them near a source of just perpetual life.
What you kind of imagine being Yahweh's wisdom?
And because of that is fruitful, bears fruit, which is like when a tree bears fruit, it's
for the benefit of others.
So it's like benefiting others.
Yeah, right.
And does it in this way that's just full of life, doesn't wither.
and then we meditate on everything he will do he makes successful.
If you make this an extreme caricature of someone in full union with Yahweh,
then, yeah, everything is for good.
Yeah, that's right. Yeah.
And then the wicked are the opposite.
They're like, on a wheat stalk, there's that, I guess it was the leafy part that then dries up.
And when you harvest the grain, it then crumbles away.
and that's chaff.
It crumbles and then just the wind will blow it away.
You don't worry about it.
It just kind of just goes away.
Lifeless, it's died, and it's just transitory, temporary.
It just blows away.
Okay?
So that's the middle of Psalm 1.
Let's look at the middle as aware of Psalm 2, which is verses 7 through 9.
And I'll just read or alert.
There's no identical repeated Hebrew words shared with the middle of Psalm 1.
at shared ideas. But the first
stands already told me like, hey, dear reader,
there's a lot of payoff
when you compare these two poems.
So even if I don't find
repeated identical
Hebrew words, I might find
repeated synonyms or ideas.
So let's read it.
So the middle of Psalm 2 was
when the king, in first
person, spoke up to us and said,
hey, dear reader, let me tell you the
decree that Yahweh made.
He said to me,
you are my son
today I have birthed you
ask of me
I'll give the nations as your
inheritance the ends of the land
as your possession
whoa
wow this this king's
getting installed as the divine
son and he's getting
well the whole world
ruling the world yeah is his inheritance
you will break them
that them refers back to the
violent rebel nations and kings
from the first part of the poem
you'll break them with a rod of iron
like the vessel of a potter
you will shatter them
okay yeah I don't see
much of a connection
yeah so this is so great
trees or chaff
streams of water
yeah so let's go back
what is the first lines
Psalm 1
good life person is like a tree
planted by streams of water
and you remember the thing
that we noticed that
if it's planted by
a stream of water, it's been planted by someone.
So God planted it by the stream of water.
In a similar way, the middle of Psalm 2,
a king is telling us,
here's what God did for me,
or here's what God appointed me to,
to become the divine son
who is the ruler of everything.
So you're imagining that the enthroman of the sun
is the planting of him?
It's like being planted.
All I'm saying is both are people
who God puts into a situation that they couldn't have done,
a trees don't plant themselves.
And kings don't, well, actually kings do appoint themselves.
But this king doesn't.
This king doesn't.
This tree doesn't plant itself.
This king doesn't install himself as the rule of the world.
Both are done by God.
That's interesting.
Okay.
Also interesting is that the tree, we're told,
as it's planted, offers fruit
and perpetually green leaves.
and what the king does when he's installed
is he's declared the divine son
who's birthed by God, as it were.
So this is a deep cut,
meaning this is a deep hyperlink,
but I'm convinced that this is what's going on
because it happens all over the Hebrew Bible.
Psalm 1, verse 3,
and you're like, hmm, trees
that are planted and come up out of the ground
because of water that offer fruit
and leaves, where's the first time that idea occurs in the Hebrew Bible?
Day three of creation.
It's the bonus of day three.
So God separates day from night, day one.
God separates water from waters, day two.
Day three, God separates the land from the seed.
Bonus, day three, fruit trees are summoned up out of the ground.
And then there's this long paragraph about, now the fruit has the seed.
And the seed of the fruit.
Yeah.
and their fruit trees with all this foliage and they're green.
And it gives its fruit.
And you're like, okay, cool.
Bonus, day three.
Yeah.
We go start into the next triad of creation days.
Day four.
God puts the lights in the sky to separate day from night.
Yep.
Not just matching day one.
Day five, God puts the birds and the fish in the waters above and waters below.
Matching day two.
Matching day two.
Day six, God summons land.
animals to come up out of the ground. Then he appoints humans as the rulers on the land. And then he
says to them, make fruit. Make more of yourselves and make fruit and rule over the land.
That's another little bonus part. Yeah. So the bonus of day six is humans who make fruit.
Okay. Okay. So you're saying day three, you got the land, which is going to be the domain of the humans,
but the land when it's created
gets this little bonus
of the trees
and the fruit of the trees
and you're just met tanned out.
And then you get to day six
where the land is populated with
creatures.
The creatures.
Yeah.
And then particularly the humans.
And bonus, humans.
Yeah.
And then they're called to make fruit.
Make fruit.
So the trees bear fruit.
Pari.
And then the humans are called
to make fruit on day six.
Parah.
Okay.
And what is human fruit?
Burthing and children.
So isn't it interesting that Psalm 1 at its center, the good life person is compared to a tree bearing green leaves and fruit.
And Psalm 2 has as its middle a divine birthing of a divine sun, as it were, the fruit of the fruit of God.
So you might think I'm out to lunch on that one, and that's okay.
The claim you're making is that when these poems were put into,
to this position of first and second.
Yeah.
That the scribes and prophets,
either they noticed this or they even like...
Maybe adjusted the language.
Adjusted the language.
Cement this connection.
To cement this connection.
Yep, that's right.
Because why again?
Because they want you to think about how...
Yeah, Psalm 1 is about how God is bringing life
out of the chaos waters and wilderness
through speaking his word that summons up,
fruitful tree is out of the ground.
Creates fruit when there was no fruit.
Psalm 2 is all about God installing rulers.
And they're called to make fruit and make more of themselves.
And that's a way of reflecting on what God's up to in Psalm 2.
But in Psalm 2, this is a very particular sun.
Mm-hmm.
An image, a singular image of God.
Notice in Genesis 1, humans are called the image of God.
Here in Psalm 2, God is installing a sun.
And son and image are themselves connected ideas in the book of Genesis.
To be a son of God is to be an image of God.
So also, here's another interesting thought connections between the middle of Psalm 1 and 2.
Everything the good life person does in Psalm 1, he makes successful Yatsliah.
You go through and look through the uses of Yatsliah, what it usually means is someone who has had a successful
career that generates abundance for themselves and then for their family and for their neighbors
to share. It's interesting that the middle of Psalm 2 is about the divine son who's given the whole
world as his inheritance. That's for like his career future as it were. So both are images of
success in the abundance that results. And the abundance in Psalm 2 is the king inheriting the abundance
of all creation.
The wealth of the nations.
The wealth of nations.
In Psalm 1, the wicked
that are the opposite
of the fruitful tree are like chaff.
And they just blow away.
Yeah, which is dry.
In the similar way,
any rebel nations
that want to keep spreading violence on the land,
the sun will bring justice
and smash them like a potter,
a potter's vessel.
So dry pottery.
Both are objects that are dry and brittle.
Yeah, it's interesting to compare these two
because chaff, you're just like, yeah, no big deal.
There's no purpose for chaff.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And it just goes away.
Oh, yeah.
Pottery is meant for a purpose.
It's meant for a purpose.
Yeah.
And it's tragic when pottery.
When you drop your pot.
Yeah, that's horrible.
Oh, man, I could write a whole history of my favorite coffee mugs that I've dropped
and broken on the floor.
You know, you get a cool, like, handmade one at some, like, gift shop on vacation.
and you're like, oh, and then six months later, you drop it.
Oh, that's so sad.
It is sad.
Anyway, I get attached to my coffee mugs because I love my first cup of coffee in the morning.
You're also sounding kind of clumsy here.
This happens enough that you could write a history of it.
Well, okay, I'm being a little generous.
I also, I have roommates that dropped stuff.
Your children.
Yeah, and a lot of valuable ceramic goods have been dropped in my house.
But I like this contrast that you're drawing.
It's really cool.
Yeah, and in one sense you could think of the wicked as like, yeah, well, they've come to nothing.
Yeah, yeah.
But in Psalm 2, it's like, hmm, how tragic.
Yeah.
When pottery is...
When a potter...
Yeah, it's made for a purpose.
People come to roles of responsibility and they have the chance so that their leadership can fit in to a beautiful purpose of God in the world.
to share God's, right, wise, generous rule in the land.
And when that gets distorted, it's a real tragedy.
Yeah.
And then the other contrast is the shaft is blown away in the passive, right?
Yeah, the wind just blows it away.
The wind just takes it away.
And Psalm 2.
Yeah, divine sun is going to smash.
Yeah.
That's a significant contrast.
So notice, no repeated words between the middle of Psalm 1 and the middle of Psalm 2.
but you can see meaningful relationships that provide cool meditations.
Let's look at the end of Psalm 1 and 2.
Okay.
The end of Psalm 1 reads like this, verse 5 and 6.
Therefore, the wicked will not stand up in the judgment,
nor sinners in the assembly of the righteous ones.
Because Yahweh knows the path of the righteous,
but the path of the wicked will perish.
So maybe let's just try and something.
summarize that in our own words real quick.
There's gonna be a final day of sorting out.
What really is someone who lived by the wisdom of Yahweh
and created good?
And what are the people creating chaos and failure?
And it's court language.
The word wicked actually comes from the language
of ancient Israel's courts.
To be guilty or in the wrong.
That's interesting.
And to be righteous means you're declared to be in the right.
and then the word judgment is that word justice.
Man, it feels like we could have a better word than the wicked then.
It just means the one in the wrong?
In a courtroom setting, yeah.
Okay.
Yeah, we could go to a number of passages in Exodus or Deuteronomy and the prophets,
and you've got a figure called the judge, the show fate,
and he makes a declaration, and there's the Rasha, the one in the wrong,
and then there's the Tzadik, the one in the right,
the righteous and the wicked.
So the one and the wrong will not stand in the judge.
judgment. You did it wrong.
Yeah. Yeah. Man, you,
your whole life
was a series of decisions
that was set on a trajectory
and led to a result that
just produced a lot of
sadness and hurt
in the world. It's not
what God made humans for.
It's in the wrong. Yeah.
No one's whole life is ever that way.
Sure. Okay. So now we're back
to the fact that someone
is a form of ancient wisdom and
It is creating that character of the person who imagine their whole life.
Okay.
Yeah.
So as a characterization, there's someone who's their whole life has led to chaff.
Yeah.
In that final judgment moment.
There's an ultimate sorting.
Nope.
That's not it.
That's not the way to be human.
It never was.
And so you're on the wrong side versus the right side.
There will be an assembly of people declared right.
Yeah.
Verse six comes along and uses a non-courtroom kind of,
Metaphor.
The path.
To make the same point again.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So there's a way to walk the path of life that's united with the knowledge of God.
Because it's Yahweh's path.
Yahweh knows it because that's how Yahweh walks, as it where.
That's the path of being the tree.
Yeah, yeah.
Which trees don't walk paths, but.
Yeah, right.
So there's one type of path.
The other path is the path of the wicked and that is a,
path that will perish. Yeah, will perish. That is, come to nothing. Come to lostness. Yep.
All right. That's the end of Psalm 1, the end of Psalm 2. And now, O kings, be wise, show discernment.
Be warn, judges of the land. Serve Yahweh with fear, rejoice with trembling. Kiss the sun, lest he
become angry, and you perish in the path. For his anger burns hot in an instant. How good is life,
for those to take refuge in him.
So the path.
There's the perishing in the path.
Yeah.
Like a real clear hyperlinks.
It's a unique phrase.
It's Hebrew or derich in the verb avad.
It's only used right here.
And these few poems next to each other,
you can go onward into the Psalms,
and you're going to have to go a long ways
before these words occur again.
So these are unique phrases.
And so let's draw these two moments
of perishing in the path together in our minds.
Yeah, one is,
a person in Psalm 1.
Yeah, it's a more individualized picture.
Yeah, and this person's standing for the judgment,
and the judgment is the path you walked
is just a path that leads to nothing.
It leads to ruin.
You've reached the end of it.
You've reached the ruin.
Yeah.
And it's not Yahweh's path,
because Yahweh has a path that leads to life and fruit and all that.
And that's the path of the righteous.
Okay.
Hop over to Psalm 2,
and instead of the wicked,
we've got the kings and the judges,
of the land who are in rebellion,
the raging kings, are brought up again.
And unless they kiss the sun, that is honor,
the sun as their authority, they will perish in the path.
So similar phrase, recognizing the divine sun
as your authority and guide.
That's put on parallel to knowing Yahweh.
Yeah, it is.
And Psalm 1, when you're on the path,
Yahweh knows you, knows your path.
There's a unity there.
That's put in parallel of kissing the son.
That's a great, I've never noticed that.
That like half a dozen paragraphs in the Gospel of John are leaping to my mind.
How you relate to me is how you relate to the one who sent me.
Jesus says that like ten times in the Gospel of John.
If you've seen me, you've seen the Father.
If you know me, you know the Father.
If you kiss the son, Yahweh knows you.
Yeah, knows your path.
That's cool.
That's really interesting.
Yeah.
So the way to avoid a life that leads to nothingness or lostness is both to be known by Yahweh and to kiss the sun.
That's how you avoid perishing in the past.
Yeah, there you go.
Now, all of a sudden, though, I come to the last line of Psalm 2, how good is life for those to take refuge in him?
Yeah.
Psalm 1 begins with how good is life.
And Psalm 2 ends with how good is life.
Yes.
It's like, obviously we got to think of these as connected.
So somebody wants me to read Psalm 1 and 2 as a unit,
not just by linking them in forward parallelism.
We just read through Psalms 1 and 2 next to each other, part by part.
And there's a lot of action going on.
A lot of invitations to meditate.
And just in case you missed it, you get this bonus line at the end of verse 12
that matches uniquely the first word of Psalm 1,
as if it's a little bookend.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So the good life of Psalm 1 is meditating on Torah
that leads you to avoid destructive ways of life
that perish in the path
and leads you to Yahweh's instruction
that plants you like a tree.
Psalm 2, the good life is for people
who recognize the sun as their authority.
And then what they find is,
instead of being their like cruel overlord,
what he is is their refuge and protector, the end of Psalm 2.
Yeah.
So Psalm 1 is primarily working in the Eden language and imagery of Genesis kind of 1 through 3.
Okay.
Every human sits before their own tree of knowing good and bad.
You have a decision to make.
Will you trust God's command, right?
The instruction of Yahweh?
The instruction of Yahweh.
and one leads to the tree of life,
the other leads to being blown out into exile
where you return to the dust.
Yeah.
That's kind of Psalm 1.
One leads to not just eating of the tree of life,
becoming a tree of life.
Becoming a tree of life.
It's great.
It's great.
Psalm 2 comes along,
and it's more taking its language and imagery
from the stories of the prophets,
both the former prophets,
specifically the story of David,
who set up Capitol in Jerusalem.
And then God made a promise to David, 2 Samuel 7.
A seed will come from you.
I will be a father to him and he will be my son.
He'll rule forever and ever.
And oppressor nations won't disturb my people anymore.
And I'm going to plant them in Jerusalem.
So it itself has like Eden echoes.
Psalm 2 comes along and works within that story world.
But it's very similar because,
Because God's word to David of a promise of a king forces the rebel kings of the world to give up their violence and reckon with the messianic kings their authority.
Yeah.
That's the hope.
That's the hope.
That's the decision put in front of the kings in Psalm 2.
The decision put in front of the reader in Psalm 1 is,
which path do I want to take?
The path that leads to exile and death?
or the path that leads to becoming a tree of life.
Psalm 1 seems to be written to just the normal person.
Everyone's going to walk the path of life.
Everyone has to make calls between good and bad.
You can do it in a way that's united with the wisdom of Yahweh
and become a tree of life.
Yeah.
In Psalm 1, every reader of the poem gets to be like an Adam and Eve
with your chance at the tree.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Psalm 2 is like, there's this very small crew
of violent warrior kings
just making a mess of the world.
But they think they run the world.
And they think they run the world.
And in the way, it looks like they do.
Yeah.
But actually, they don't.
And they don't.
They don't.
They're accountable to someone greater than them.
Yeah.
And they have their own counsel of wickedness
and they're raging.
And God's kind of had enough with them.
And they need to acknowledge
who's truly in charge,
which is Yahweh,
and this son?
Or they've met the end?
Yeah. Yep. They'll come to nothing.
They'll perish in the past.
So that's Psalm 1 and 2.
Somebody put those two poems next to each other,
knit them together,
so that we would do exactly what we just did.
That's what they're there for.
Now, these are just the first two poems
at the beginning of a whole long biblical book
called The Book of Psalms.
Are you ready to zoom out?
So we...
long ago made a video overview about the book of Psalms.
And what I noted in that overview video, we're looking at the poster.
You could go to the Bauer Project website and look at the poster,
or you could watch the video, whatever,
is that Psalms 1 and 2, Psalm 1, it has the word Torah in it.
Yes, the Torah of Yahweh, the destruction of Yahweh.
Psalm 2 is all about the promise that God made to David.
about a seed, a king that would come from his line.
That's the key idea in the prophets.
That's the key idea in the prophets.
Oh, that's interesting.
Psalm 1 is connected to Torah.
Psalm 2 is connected to the prophets.
And you're taking for granted the understanding of the Hebrew Bible
that it's broken up into three parts.
Torah, prophets, and then the writings.
Yeah, you got it.
Psalms is the beginning of the writings.
And you're saying Psalm 1 and 2 is a...
is a big wink to you saying,
I want you to keep in mind all of the Torah and all the prophets.
All the prophets.
Psalm 1 Torah, Psalm 2 prophets.
You got it.
Yep.
Okay.
That's one thing that's going on.
All right.
Second is basically God's commands that are meant to give wisdom and life as a theme.
It's a major theme throughout the whole rest of the book of Psalms constantly.
And God's promise to David to deal with the violence of the nations.
is going to be a major theme brought up.
Okay.
And they're right next to each other here in Psalms 1 and 2.
There are going to be places where these two things get put right next to each other elsewhere.
And I drew attention to this in the video.
So, for example, the Psalm scroll is divided into five parts.
Yeah.
And the five parts all have the same little conclusion,
the last sentences of Psalm 41, Psalm 72, Psalm 89, Psalm 106,
that say, may the Lord God of Israel be blessed forever, amen, and amen.
That ends each collection of poems.
They're often called the books.
Yeah, book one, book two, book three.
Yeah, and there's five.
Which is kind of like the five books of Torah.
Like five books of Torah.
But it's like a messianic Torah,
because also connected all through Psalms that emphasize God's instruction
are closely connected Psalms meditating on God's promise to David.
For example, in book one, there's this really cool set of poems where Psalm 19 is at the center.
Psalm 19 is all about the word of the Lord, the word and the commands and the statutes of God that give you wisdom, that make you pure, that lead you to life.
You're like, oh, it's just like a restatement of Psalm 1.
And then right after it, Psalm 19 come a collection of poems called 20 to 23 that are all about a king.
who is going to encounter resistance from hostile nations,
and God's going to rescue that king from death
and exalt him as the ruler over the nations.
You're like, oh, it's just like Psalm 2, and it is,
except now it's called Psalms 19 to 23.
And this pattern just repeats itself.
This idea of Torah and Messiah, Torah and prophets,
is just going to get recycled and develops throughout the whole Psalms scroll.
So Psalms 1 and 2 truly are.
like an introduction.
Yeah.
To the main themes of the Psalm Scroll.
Okay.
Meaning, as you travel through the Psalm Scroll, always have those two Psalms on your mind?
Mm-hmm.
Yep.
Yeah.
And you're going to find your mind being brought back to Psalms 1 and to constantly, to inform,
but also the plot about the king is going to develop.
You're going to find out that this king doesn't just come to his rule over the nations easily.
Oh, it fills in the story of the sun.
Yeah, fills in the story of the sun.
Yeah.
And does it fill in the story of the tree?
It fills in the story of the good life person who, because they don't walk in the counsel of the wicked, life actually becomes pretty complicated for them.
Yeah, someone makes it sound pretty simple.
And the simple binary, righteous and wicked, success or failure, all that gets problematized.
and you end up with righteous people doing God's words who suffer and terrible things happen to them
and they cry out to God and it seems like God's never listening.
Yikes.
So these are what we call the lament.
So that's such a wonderful example.
Do you remember how you were kind of resisting the simplicity of Psalm 1?
Yes.
I was resisting the binary nature of Psalm 1.
And then I also was feeling the tension of Psalm 2 of just the...
this like overpowering, just the discomfort of the like warrior god image.
It's great.
So good.
Raining through the sun who's just going to shatter the nations like pottery.
It's great.
And you are not the first one to feel like those statements are by themselves inadequate.
They're important things to say.
They're just the like introductory notes that become melodies that you continue to discover.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, what if that reigning ruler, divine sun king himself allows himself to be trampled by the violent kings and identifies with the poor and the oppressed?
And then through that suffering, that's how he becomes the king of the nations.
Wow.
That's explored in the Psalms.
Yeah, I just summarized Psalms 20 through 23.
Psalm 73, how good is the Lord for those who fear him?
But as for me, the poet of Psalm 73 says,
I looked out and I see the wicked succeeding
and the poor are oppressed and where are you, God?
And that's like, I read Psalm 1 and it didn't work out.
So I'm going to take up this issue with God.
And that's Psalm 73.
So what I loved, and I didn't want to say it earlier,
because this is where...
This is the way you journey through this.
Yeah, every time you have a problem.
with something you're reading in the Bible, you're not alone. And the issue's been raised for you
on purpose. As you keep reading, you realize like, whoa, the biblical authors felt how I'm feeling
too. I was starting to feel that as we talked through Psalm 2. I try to like just tell myself,
I think I'm supposed to be feeling irritated. Yeah, that's good. About some of this. And that's okay.
Yep. Yeah, that's totally okay. Yeah. So maybe just one more zoom out.
At the end here, is that all right?
Okay.
So we've already paid attention to how Psalms 1 and 2
are connected all the way back to Genesis 1 through 3,
the Eden language, how it's connected to God's promise to David
in the middle of the prophets, 2nd Samuel chapter 7.
Also, this phrase meditating on Torah,
God's Torah, day and night that leads to success,
that phrase appears one other time in the Hebrew Bible,
and it's at the beginning of a major section
of the Hebrew Bible called the prophets, the middle section
from Joshua chapter 1.
Joshua is the first scroll of the prophets.
Yes, yeah.
The prophets begin after Deuteronomy,
which is the fifth and final book of the Torah.
And then you get the collection of the prophets.
Joshua judges Samuel and Kings,
and then the writing prophets,
Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and the 12.
Okay.
Yeah.
So Joshua judges Samuel and Kings.
those weren't prophets.
Those are names of books.
Each of those books is telling you
who was the leader of Israel during those periods of the story.
Joshua, then the judges, then Samuel.
And then the kings.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
But it's Israel's history in the land
told from the perspective of Israel's prophets.
Okay.
So they begin the book of the prophets.
Yeah, it's a prophetic retelling of Israel's history.
And these are sometimes referred to as the...
Ah, the former prophets.
prophets.
Okay.
Former prophets are telling you the story of Israel in the land.
Okay.
The latter prophets are then the writing prophets, Isaiah Jeremiah Ezekiel, that are poetic
collections of different prophets who lived during the story told to you by the former
prophets.
Okay.
Together they make up the collection of the prophets.
All right.
The prophets begin.
With Joshua.
With Joshua.
The first line of Joshua is, after Moses died.
Uh-huh.
Yahweh said to Joshua, the son of noon, saying,
Moses is dead.
So get up, lead the people across the Jordan River into the land.
I'm going to give the land to my people.
God says, I'm going to fight for you.
If anybody is hostile picks a fight with you, I'll protect you.
I'll take care of you.
Verse 6, be strong and courageous.
I'm giving the land as an inheritance.
That's interesting.
That's what God promised the divine son.
Psalm 2.
Yeah, the land.
Verse seven, only be strong and courageous to keep diligently the whole Torah that Moses, my servant commanded you.
Don't turn aside from it to the right or to the left so that you may have success for wherever you go.
Success.
This scroll of the Torah will not depart from your mouth.
You will haga, meditate on it day and night.
so that you can keep everything written in it,
then you will have success.
It's the same word as Psalm 1.
Okay.
And prosper.
So, yeah, you read these together,
and clearly Psalm 1 was riffing off of this.
Yeah, the opening of the Psalm scroll
is coordinated with this picture of Joshua.
Which is the beginning of the prophetic scrolls.
That's right.
So Psalm 1 at a way is coordinated with the picture of Joshua,
as Israel's leader, leading them into the promised land,
not taking counsel with the wicked,
trusting only God's instruction that he meditates on.
And it leads to Israel's successful entry into the land
where they settle and make homes and gardens and all that.
Yeah.
So Joshua is like a narrative illustration.
This can go well.
Yeah, somebody who lived the reality of Psalm 1.
So that's a little coordinated connection.
That's interesting.
Okay.
If that's the beginning of the prophets, if I turn to the end of the prophets.
Later prophets.
Yeah, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and then you get the 12, called the minor prophets.
Who's the last of the 12?
Malachi.
Malachi.
Yeah.
And if I turn to the end of the book of Malachi.
Okay.
So what do we get to find?
In Tenot order, the ending of Malachi is right before Psalm 1 and 2.
Psalm 1, yeah.
And what do I find at the end of Malachi?
Malachi 4 verse 1
Look
The day
Is about to come
Day of Judgment
Burning like an oven
Every arrogant and evil doer
Rasha
That's the Rasha
People who does Rasha
Okay so there's another word
The Wicked, the Evil Doer
The one who does evil
Okay
Every arrogant and evil
Duer will become like
Stubble
Stubble
Before fire
Different word than chaff, but same basic idea.
What is a stubble?
Stubble would be like you've cut your grass,
and then the dried grass three days later.
That's stubble.
Yeah, that's the stubble.
Okay.
And the day that is coming will burn them up.
Says Yahweh of hosts,
it, that is the coming day,
will not leave behind for them root or ranch.
So a purifying fire is coming.
The day of Yahweh is coming.
It's like the jubes.
judgment at the end of Psalm 1.
And it's connected to the hot anger of Psalm 2.
Exactly. It borrows the language of heat and fire from Psalm 2, but connects it with the idea
of the final sorting of Psalm 1. So those whose way of life has produced in the world
pain, oppression, and hardship for others, all of that is going to get consumed in the great
purifying day of Yahweh.
but verse 2
for you who fear my name
serve the Lord with fear
that was the end of Psalm 2
right
serve the Lord with fear
for those
the sun and it's not the word
S-O-N
no actually the sun
the light in the sky
the son of
righteousness
will rise
with healing
in its wings
and you will go out
leaping like
fat little calves
This makes me uncomfortable.
You will trample down the wicked.
They will be ashes under the souls of your feet on the day that I'm going to act.
Yeah.
The people who trampled you, the people who, right, you've been under their boots for so many generations.
Remember that biblical literature comes from the underground.
It's going to get inverted and reversed.
So this is a picture of the day of Yahweh coming.
And in a way, it's a very poetic, metaphorical way of describing the end of both Psalm 1 and 2.
And even using some of its language.
Versus 4 through 6.
Remember the Torah of my servant Moses.
You know the one I commanded him of Mount Horab, all the rules and regulations.
That's how all the prophets began when Joshua, remember the Torah of Moses.
Exactly right.
And here we are again, of my servant Moses.
Look, I'm going to send you Elijah, the prophet.
Oh, okay.
He's coming again?
Need to go meditate on his story.
Okay.
Yeah.
Elijah the prophet, before the coming of the great awesome day of Yahweh,
and he's going to turn back the hearts of the fathers to their sons,
the hearts of sons of their fathers so that I don't come and strike the land with a curse.
So there's a lot going on here.
My point is Malachi ends using similar language of Psalms 1 and 2,
and similar ideas of there's a coming,
the day of Yahweh, that will sort out the righteous and the wicked,
and how you respond in the present now to God's Torah,
given through Moses, will foster hope and faithfulness
as you await that future sorting out.
It's very similar to what Psalm 1 and 2 are trying to do.
There's nothing in Malachi about a son or a king, is there?
No, the promise of a king coming from line of David
is not explicitly a part of the conclusion of Malachi.
It is a part elsewhere in the prophets, especially Isaiah,
which is at the beginning of the prophet.
So Isaiah and Malachi is beginning and ending of the latter prophets.
And really into the day of Yahweh and to the promise of the coming King from the line of David,
Malachi ends on the note primarily about the day of Yahweh.
So when we back out on the highest level, Psalm 1 and 2 have been brought together as the introduction to the Psalm scroll, as the introduction to the third major part of the Hebrew Bible writings, and linked together to the beginning and endings of the Torah and of the former prophets and of the latter prophets.
So basic point is, what's the meaning of Psalms 1 and 2?
and it seems like they've been given an intentional layer of meaning at every one of the levels of zoom
somebody sat down and thought and shaped the language of these poems and if you learn how to meditate on these
poems on all those levels individually together zoom out to melamorph every layer seems intentional
like an invitation to meditate any part of the bible is worth sitting and meditating on and really
absorbing. But it seems like there's maybe passages like this that said it seems that are doing so
much work and connecting. Extra loaded. Extra loaded. Yeah, load bearing. Yeah. Like in a building.
It would do you well to spend even extra time really absorbing these ideas and letting them stick
with you as you read the level. Yeah. Psalm 1 and 2 are an invitation to ask two questions perpetually
as I kind of move through these next few days,
and maybe this will hopefully stick with me.
How good is life for the man?
What's the good life?
And then why all the raging?
Right?
Like, I could walk through my city.
Where's the good life?
And I could ask one of those two questions,
are both the same time.
Yeah.
Like, why is there so much pain and suffering
and so much chaos?
Why all the raging?
And meditate on that
and meditate on the hope of the,
Messianic king.
Messianic king.
And then I can also be thinking about like,
as I walk down the street, what is the good life here?
How do I step into the instruction of Yahweh in this moment?
Those two lenses, Psalm 1 and 2,
they really do invite you into a universe of thought.
Yeah, a way of not just seeing the world, but a way of living.
Being in the world.
Yeah, how good is life for someone who lets Psalm 1 and 2
just really take up space in their mind?
and you'll find all the parts of the Bible coming alive in new and interesting ways.
And that's just the Hebrew Bible.
We didn't even talk about how important Psalm 2 is for Jesus and the apostles in the New Testament.
It's one of the most re-quoted and alluded to Psalms in the New Testament.
It's actually second only to Psalm 110.
Okay.
So what we should do then is explore how Psalm 2 gets quoted and used in the New Testament in light of all of these hyperlinks.
It's super cool.
Great.
Let's do that next.
Thanks for listening to Bible Project podcast.
Next week, we're going to look at how Psalm 2 is quoted in the New Testament.
And the first person to quote Psalm 2 is God, calling out from heaven during the baptism of Jesus saying, you are my son.
Jesus' status as the sun is not happening in this moment.
Rather, this moment on the mountain and the baptism then are little flash openings into the true identity of Jesus,
going farther back than any of our brains can imagine, the eternal identity of God.
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