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A Sense of God’s Justice
May this be the Lord’s payment to my accusers, to those who speak evil of me.  Psalm 109:20
READ Psalm 109:6-9, 26-29
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The news was horrific. A live-in foreign domestic helper had been so ill-treated by the family she  worked for that she died. The employers were eventually jailed, but I felt it wasn’t enough. They  should have suffered the same horrors they put that poor girl through, I thought, and then put to  death. Then I wondered if my anger had crossed the line. Was I wrong to think such things?
Reading Psalm 109 gave me an insight into our natural sense of justice. David, for one, wrestled  with anger toward those who wronged the poor and needy. “May his days be few . . . . May his  children be fatherless and his wife a widow,” he charged (vv. 8-9).
But King David didn’t take revenge on these men—even though he had the power to. Instead, he turned  to God as the true source of justice and deliverance. “May this be the Lord’s payment to my  accusers, to those who speak evil of me,” he said. “Save me according to your unfailing love” (vv.  20, 26).
I believe God made us with an inherent sense of justice, for it reflects His own character. And we  can express our feelings honestly. But ultimately we’re to leave judgment and punishment to  Him—trusting Him to bring justice in His time and way. The apostle Paul states things clearly: “Do  not take revenge . . . but leave room for God’s wrath” (Romans 12:19).
By Leslie Koh
REFLECT & PRAY
What news or events disturb you? How can you pray for those in need and for victims of injustice?
Dear God, You are the all-seeing, righteous God. May Your justice prevail so that all may come to  fear and worship You.
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