Interesting.
So if we all belong to The Lord we can ask God to kill our enemies?
Also, how does this message reconcile with the message of Jesus who says that we need to show the other cheek to our enemies and pray for our enemies?
i apologize to you for being so unclear, and hope you will forgive me. allow me to try to explain?
these psalms are not just Old Testament prayers. they're quoted by the Lord Jesus, Peter, and Paul, too.
they're not emotional outbursts in a fit of anger against somebody who just cheesed you off. they're measured, thoughtful appeals to God's justice. we know God says vengeance is His, we don't take vengeance. we, as you said, love our enemies and do good to them.
but there's a theological aspect here. do we love and worship God for all of His attributes, or just the ones we like?
is God equally glorious in His wrath and justice against sin as He is in His love and mercy?
the psalmists are praying for God's glory, not their own personal revenge. they're trusting in God's timing and His decisions. praying in humility with an acute awareness of their own sin. judgement and salvation are two sides of the same coin. always. God saves His people by bringing judgement on their enemies. a classic example of this is the parting of the Red Sea for the children of Israel, and then the drowning of the Egyptians.
And when the Lamb opened the fifth seal, I saw under the altar the souls of those who had been slain for the word of God and for the testimony they had upheld. And they cried out in a loud voice, “How long, O Lord, holy and true, until You avenge our blood and judge those who dwell upon the earth?” (Rev 6:9-10)
these are "the spirits of just men made perfect". do you think they're sinning in their appeal?
thanks for listening.