Psalm Devotional
Where Wrath and Grace Converge
The great theologian R.C. Sproul was once approached by a man who asked him, “Are you saved?” Sproul responded curtly, “Saved from what?” That’s a good question, and the Bible answers it. The Bible reveals that we are ultimately saved from God’s wrath. We must understand God’s wrath in order to comprehend His grace. Psalm 28 helps us to do this, because it juxtaposes God’s wrath with God’s grace.
The first part of Psalm 28 addresses the issue of God’s wrath. The psalm opens with the psalmist in the posture of prayer (vv. 1-2), and verse 4 reveals the substance of his petition. The psalmist prays that God will exercise strict justice against his enemies; he prays that God will “bring back upon them what they deserve” (v. 4). In verse 5, God declares (likely through a priest) that He will grant the psalmist’s request. However, notice the justification for the outpouring of God’s wrath on the psalmist’s enemies. God states the psalmist’s enemies deserve His wrath because they “show no regard for the works of the Lord and what his hands have done.”

