(1) Thinking:
Whose poem is this? What kind of poem is it? To whom? What key do you use? Inscription: It's a poem by David. Teach poetry. Give it to the director. Call Mahara.
2. What does the poet say about fools? A fool says in his heart, there is no God. They are all evil and have committed abominable crimes, and no one does good.
3. What is the purpose of God looking down on the world from the sky? What did God see? God looks down on the world from heaven to see if there is anyone who understands and seeks him. Every one of them turned back and became unclean together. No one does good, not one.
4. What does God ask the world? Don't evil people have knowledge? They devour my people like food and do not call on God.
5. What is the fear of the world? What's going on here? Where there is nothing to be afraid of, they are very afraid. Because God scattered the bones of those who camped against you. You put them to shame, because God has rejected them.
6. What about the Israelis? May the salvation of Israel come from Zion, and may God save his captive people. Then Jacob will be glad and Israel will be glad.
(2) Application
Sum up, fool. A gift from a fool. He said in his heart, no god has committed an abominable crime, and no one who does good has deviated from the right path and does not call on the name of God. God will abandon great fear, shame and humiliation.
(3) Extension
Stupid sinner (53 1 ~ 6) is actually a repetition of the fourteenth poem, so the content is exactly the same. The first three verses of this poem are also quoted by Paul to prove the universality of human evil and corruption (see Luo. 3: 10 ~ 12).
Article 53 refers to later foreign countries. God doesn't look down on the world once, but looks down on the world again and again, and the result is the same comment: "No one does good."