Questions About Man

Psalm 8:1-9

Last week we looked at a number of questions concerning God. Is He really there? What is He like? Does He speak to us today? All of those are valid questions to which each of us need to find answers. But Psalm 8:4 poses another very important question: "What is man?"

Is man only a highly developed animal, as Darwin taught, or an underdeveloped child, as Freud believed? Or perhaps man is only an economic factor, as Karl Marx believed? It is interesting that Luke 15 presents all three pictures: the animal-a lost sheep; the economic factor-a lost coin; the spoiled child-the prodigal son!

What man thinks of man may be important, but most important is what God thinks of man. In Psalm 8, David had the courage to declare that man was-a king! God crowned him with glory and honor! But there must be something wrong, because man doesn’t act like a king.

There is something wrong, and Psalm 8 explains what it is. In order to understand man’s place in the universe, and in order to fulfill it, we need to meet the three "kings" who are involved in this psalm.

I. King Adam. cf v6-8; Ge. 1:26-28

II. King Jesus Christ. cf Heb. 2:5-9

III. King David.

All of us face "giants" in our lives: physical problems, difficult people, impossible demands, along with satanic attacks-and we will either conquer them or be conquered by them.

We will be either victors or victims. If we depend on ourselves, we will fail, for our old nature came from King Adam, and he was a failure. But if we depend on Jesus Christ, through the Spirit, we will succeed.

What is man? He is a king! How do we reign in this life as kings?