Psalm 9 is pretty awesome. It deals mainly with divine retribution - the pros of serving God versus the cons of not serving Him.
Yet, this kind of Psalm makes me a little nervous. We so easily call for God's judgment to fall and for Him to right the wrongs without considering the fact that He never does a half job. Surely, we should question ourselves on this holiness measure. Am I truly who I profess to be? Otherwise, I will find myself on the other side of that prayer as one of the instigators - soon to be smote.
I think we should be careful with these kinds of prayers because when God does something He does it right and all the way. There is no going back after He has done something - just look at Sodom and Gomorrah!
See, I believe Jesus left us here as His ekklesia. This term doesn't mean church as we have erroneously believed for so long, but refers to a "City Council" first used in Athens in Ancient Greece. It referred to a council made up by the male citizens over the age of eighteen that had almost unlimited power and was the forerunner of a democracy. It wielded its power by the nomination, voting and electing magistrates; directing legislation, formulating strategies and electing officials for war thus directing the war and peace of the city. Once the Roman Empire rose and succeeded the Greeks they adopted this term into Latin.
Once the Romans lay siege to a town or a city they would set up these kinds of councils to rule in their absence with the laws they as the Romans imposed. There was to be feedback to the Romans as well.
In Matthew 16:18 Jesus says to Peter and the rest of the disciples, "And I say also unto thee, That thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it." The original word for church there is actually from the Greek meaning
ekklesia. When Jesus used this term with the disciples I believe He shocked the them by likening them to this oppressive structure that was in place by there captors.
It is beautiful, actually, because when you think about it we as the Body of Christ, have been given the authority to act on Jesus' behalf - to rule in His absence using His laws (the Word of God). He gave us His name to use which can be likened to having the king's signet ring (read the book of Esther). By having the king's signet ring you could make or break any law or decree because it is as though the king himself signed it. For all intents and purposes, the king really did sign it himself. Once it is "signed" who would know whether the ring was on the king's finger at the time or on some other?
So, by having the ring or name of Jesus we have the authority to do what He did and to act as Him in this earth. I don't think we grasp the magnitude of this principle.
Before we go and beg God to set things right we must first accomplish the task we were left here to do: seek and save all that is lost. We must go to the wicked and do what it takes to spare them from
eternal damnation. I'm emphasizing "eternal" because I truly want us to understand that these people still have a chance to change before God's appointed time.
We are their second chance. We have the "get out of jail free" cards to hand out. We are the ekklesia for crying out loud! If we don't help these people to turn around (repent) they will be lost forever (eternal). There is no going back from that.
We can't just be selfish and start hitting the "S.O.S." button because the world is so bad and we can't stand to be tainted by it any longer. It's like sleeping in a cardboard box on the side of the road when you have a house to live in.
The keys are already in our hands. Jesus said that what we declare loosed on earth will be loosed in Heaven and what we bind on earth will be bound in Heaven. That's power you can't buy. Many have tried, but it is not for monetary exchange. The price is faith - faith in Jesus as the Son of God and God Himself.
The fate of Creation itself is in our hands. We must restore things to righteousness using our power and authority before God comes in and wipes out all unrighteousness. If we squander what Jesus gave to us and didn't obey His order to seek and save all that is lost, and to preach the gospel to everyone and everything, will we still be considered righteous? Just some food for thought.