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Welcome to Day 2783 of Wisdom-Trek. Thank you for joining me.This is Guthrie Chamberlain, Your Guide to Wisdom.Day 2783 – Wisdom Nuggets – Psalm 108:1-5 – Daily WisdomWisdom-Trek Podcast Script - Day 2783Welcome to Wisdom-Trek with Gramps! I am Guthrie Chamberlain, and we are on Day two thousand seven hundred eighty-three of our Trek. The Purpose of Wisdom-Trek is to create a legacy of wisdom, to seek out discernment and insights, and to boldly grow where few have chosen to grow before. The Title for Today’s Wisdom-Trek is: The Warrior Poet’s Remix – A Song of Cosmic ConfidenceToday, we are lacing up our boots to begin a new adventure in Psalm One Hundred Eight. We will be trekking through the first movement of this anthem, verses one through five, in the New Living Translation. In our previous journey, we stood at the summit of Psalm One Hundred Seven. We listened to the testimonies of the redeemed—the wanderers, the prisoners, the fools, and the sailors—who cried out to God in their trouble and were rescued by His Unfailing Love(Hesed). That psalm ended with a challenge to the "Wise": "Those who are wise will take all this to heart; they will see in our history the faithful love of the Lord."Psalm One Hundred Eightis the response of the wise heart. It is the song of someone who hasobserved God’s history and has decided to move forward with absolute, unshakable confidence. But there is something unique about this psalm that we must understand before we take a single step. Psalm One Hundred Eightis a Remix. If you were to look closely at your Bible, you might notice something familiar. Verses one through five are almost identical to Psalm Fifty-seven, verses seven through eleven. And verses six through thirteen are almost identical to Psalm Sixty, verses five through twelve. King David, the master songwriter, took two of his previous songs—songs written during times of intense crisis and lament—and spliced them together. He cut out the parts about fear and crying for mercy, and he kept the parts about confidence and victory. He fused them to create a new, high-energy anthem for a new generation. This teaches us a profound lesson about wisdom and legacy. Sometimes, to face a new battle, you don't need a new revelation; you need to rearrange the truths you already know. You need to take the lessons learned in the caves of your past (Psalm Fifty-seven) and the battlefields of your history (Psalm Sixty) and combine them into a fresh declaration of faith. So, let us open our hearts to this "Greatest Hits" album of King David and learn how to sing with cosmic confidence. The first segment is: The Fixed Heart: Preparation for the Dawn. Psalm One Hundred Eight: verses one through two. My heart is confident in you, O God;no wonder I can sing your praises with all my heart! Wake up, lyre and harp!I will wake the dawn with my song.The psalm opens with a statement of internal stability: "My heart is confident in you, O God..."The Hebrew word for "confident"is nakon. It means "fixed," "steadfast," "firm," or "prepared." It is the same word used to describe a foundation that cannot be moved. In the original context of Psalm Fifty-seven, David wrote these words while hiding in a cave, running for his life from King Saul. In that context, his confidence was a desperate clinging to God in the dark. But here, in Psalm One Hundred Eight, the context of the cave is removed. The desperate plea for mercy is gone. What remains is the battle-tested steel of a heart that has been through the fire and has come out fixed on God. Because his heart is fixed, his worship is unleashed: "no wonder I can sing your praises with all my heart!"The NLT translates this dynamically, but the literal Hebrew is fascinating. It says, "I will sing and make melody with my Glory"(Kavod). Usually, "Glory" refers to God. But here, David refers to his ownglory. What is the "glory" of a man? Some scholars say it is his soul or his spirit. Others say it is his tongue or his talent. In the Ancient Israelite worldview, a person's "glory" was their weightiness, their significance, their highest faculty. David is saying, "I am not holding anything back. I am putting my highest self, my best skill, and my deepest passion into this song." Worship is not a casual activity for the fixed heart; it is an expenditure of glory. Then, David issues a command to his instruments and to the sun itself: "Wake up, lyre and harp! I will wake the dawn with my song."This is poetic aggression. Usually, the dawn wakes us up. The sun rises, and we drag ourselves out of bed. But David says, "No. My praise is so urgent, my confidence is so high, that I am going to wake up the sun." He is anticipating the victory before the day even begins. He is grabbing his lyreand harpin the dark pre-dawn hours, determined that the first sound the universe hears today will be the sound of his confidence in God. This is the posture of Wisdom. Wisdom doesn't wait to see how the day