A Good Man Sensitive to Moral Evil
Psalm 97:10-12
You that love the LORD, hate evil: he preserves the souls of his saints; he delivers them out of the hand of the wicked.…


If we would realize the full force of the term "hatred of evil" as it ought to exist in all, as it would exist in a perfectly righteous man, we should do well to consider how sensitive we are to pain, suffering and misfortune. How delicately is the physical frame of man constructed, and how keenly is the slightest derangement in any part of it felt. A little mote in the eye hardly discernible by the eye of another, the swelling of a small gland, the deposit of a small grain of sand — what agonies may these slight causes inflict. That fine filament of nerves of feeling spread like a wonderful network over the whole surface of the body, how exquisitely susceptible it is. A trifling burn, scald, or excision, how does it cause the member affected to be drawn back suddenly and the patient to cry out. Now, there can be no question that if man were in a perfectly moral state, moral evil would affect his mind as sensibly and in as lively a manner — would, in short, be as much an affliction as pain is to his physical frame. He would shrink and snatch himself away as sin came near; the first entrance of it into his imagination would wound and arouse his moral sensibilities, and make him positively unhappy.

(Dean Goulburn.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: Ye that love the LORD, hate evil: he preserveth the souls of his saints; he delivereth them out of the hand of the wicked.

WEB: You who love Yahweh, hate evil. He preserves the souls of his saints. He delivers them out of the hand of the wicked.




The Judgments of God are a Proper Cause of Gladness and Rejoicing to His People
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