Psalm 139:1-24 · Psalm 139
God, Elvis, and O.J. Simpson
Psalm 139
Sermon
by James Merritt
Loading...

Without question, two of the most fascinating and famous (and at least in one case, infamous) figures of the 20th Century are Elvis Presley and O. J. Simpson. Until a couple of years ago no one would have said that O. J. Simpson had, or ever would achieve, the stature of Elvis Presley.

But all of that was changed Friday, June 17, 1994, when an entire nation was transfixed by a television scene that was more real than any fantasy.

Two men were in a white bronco, traveling, it seemed, in slow motion down a California freeway. The man in front was Al Cowlings; the man in the back was O. J. Simpson. Crowds were standing by the side of the road, gazing from overpasses; some shouting "Run, O. J., run." Others holding up signs saying, "Go, O.J. go."

In the backseat of that bronco was O. J. Simpson. In one hand he had a picture of his family; in the other hand he had a gun. Those of you who watched it, and most of you did, know that it was a scene more bizarre than a horror movie, filled with more suspense than a murder mystery; and toward the end had the excitement of a rowdy Western.

This nation was watching a man on the run. When the police were asked later why they gave O. J. Simpson such leeway before they brought him in, one policeman said, "We never thought he would run." Yet, when you study the life of O. J. Simpson you come to understand his entire life has been built around running.

Simpson came from a broken home. His father ran out on his family, and left a single mother to raise O. J. He was raised in a tough San Francisco neighborhood, ran around with street gangs; yet from all indications had a godly single mother who tried her best to raise him right.

As a boy, O. J. developed rickets. It is a skeletal disease caused mainly from a lack of Vitamin D in diet, and softens and often bends the bones. He became bowlegged, but in a way it was one of the best things that ever happened to O. J. Simpson.

He began to run to build up his legs. The more he ran the faster he ran. He went to Galileo High School and started playing football. Galileo High School had a losing program; nobody came to see them play until a young bowlegged kid named O. J. Simpson began to run. As O. J. Simpson began to run, they began to win. He had moves no one had ever seen in a running back. His ability to fake and cut and slant was complimented by blinding speed. O. J. Simpson could run the 100 yard dash in 9.3 seconds. It was at this high school that he met Al Cowlings.

But O. J. was destined to run some more. This was not his last run. He earned a full scholarship to the University of Southern California. He became an All American. I can still remember his senior year as I watched him on television playing UCLA to determine who would go to the Rose Bowl. In the fading moments of that game, with UCLA ahead, O. J. Simpson ran 64 yards for the winning touchdown.

John McKay, his head coach, was criticized because he gave O. J. the ball so much. It was not unusual for O. J. Simpson to run the ball 35 and 40 times a game. I remember one time a reporter criticized him for giving O. J. the ball so much, and John McKay replied, "Let's get two things straight: Number one: O. J. doesn't belong to a union, and number two: the ball is not that heavy."

His senior year he won the Heisman Trophy as the best football player in America. He was drafted in the first round by the Buffalo Bills. He was there to do some of his greatest running because he became the first player to rush for 2,000 yards in one season, and the only player to do it in fourteen games. After his pro career O. J. ran right into the Pro-football Hall of Fame. But O. J. still wasn't through running.

He went on to do a few movies, worked as a sports broadcaster for NBC. But his real claim to fame after football was being the spokesman for the Hertz Rent a Car Corporation. Many of us still remember that Hertz commercial where O. J. Simpson is running through the airport. He leaps over luggage and chairs with a single bound. I can still remember one commercial where a little old lady is screaming at him, "Go, O. J. go." He became known as "The Superstar of Rent a Car."

O. J., up until his arrest, and subsequent trial, had been running with the big dogs. He was worth an estimated $10 million; he lived in a multi-million dollar mansion; his last year's income was almost $1 million. In some ways O. J. was running faster and farther than he had ever run before. But all was not well.

He ran away from his first marriage; broke up with his first wife, Juanita. During that time one of his children drowned in his backyard swimming pool. He met an 18 year old cheerleader and homecoming queen, named Nicole Brown. She was immediately smitten with this athletic superstar. She moved in with him; they lived together for a few years and then married just before their first child was born. It seemed as if they were the picture-perfect all American couple.

But we now know of the abuse, both verbal and physical, that was a part of this marriage; police calls, at least nine of them; multiple affairs. As you now know, domestic abuse in America has become an epidemic. Every fifteen seconds in America there is an incident of domestic violence. We know now that O. J. Simpson was a bubbling caldron of rage that he kept hidden from the public.

Then on June 12, 1994 a gruesome crime scene was uncovered where Nicole Brown had her throat slit. Ron Goldman died of multiple chest wounds, and then came O. J.'s most famous run. But it still was not his last run. Now O. J. Simpson is trying to run away from a public, for whom the majority thinks he is guilty, even though he was declared innocent. He is trying to run away from the reality of what has really happened in his life, and to his family. But it is still not his last run.

Regardless of what you think of O. J. Simpson, he symbolizes the plight of billions of people who are on the run; running from God, running from truth, running from reality. Ever since the Garden of Eden every person on earth, at least for a time, has been on the run.

But what about Elvis? The big question with O. J. Simpson is, "Is he guilty?" The big question of Elvis Presley is, "Is he alive?" Next month I'm going to Memphis to speak for my good friend, Rick Stanley. He's going to give me a private tour of Graceland, the home of Elvis Pressley. It is really no longer a home; it is more like a shrine where thousands and thousands of fans come week in and week out to view the famous mansion of this singer.

Many of his fans and others believe that he is still alive. This past October 7, 1995, a group of fans gathered together at Graceland, expecting and anticipating the return of Elvis Presley. Why October 7, 1995? Because Elvis Presley died August 16, 1977. If you add those two dates together they add up to 2001. At the beginning of every concert he would play the theme from the movie, "2001: A Space Odyssey." They fully expected Elvis to show up because they don't believe he died.

One man, in fact, recently said, "I know Elvis is alive. He sat beside me not long ago on a UFO."

Well, I'm here to tell you what God's word says about the O. J. Simpsons and the Elvis Presleys of this world. The Bible guarantees two things: 1) Elvis is alive; and 2) O. J. Simpson has one last run to make. In that last run he will get a fair trial. How do I know these two things are true? Because of what I know about God, and what we learn about God in this tremendous Psalm.

I. God Is Omniscient

Now everybody has an opinion as to whether or not O. J. Simpson is guilty. The fact is, I may think he is guilty, you may think he's innocent. But there are only four beings in the universe that know the truth: O. J., Nicole, Ron Goldman, and God. God is all-knowing, God is all-seeing, God is all-hearing.

"O Lord, You have searched me and known me." (v.1) The word searched literally means "to pierce through." God can see right through you. That is not hyperbole, that is fact. Let me tell you what God knows about you.

a. God Knows Your Every Movement

"You know my sitting down and my rising up." (v.2a) When you get up in the morning, or you lie down at night; when you walk into your house, or you walk out of your house; whether you get into a car, or get on an airplane, God knows it. He sees your every movement.

b. God Knows Your Every Motive

"You understand my thought afar off." (v.2b) God can read your mind, and he can do it without a crystal ball. At least twice in the gospels we read of the Lord Jesus, that "He knew their thoughts." God not only hears what you say, and sees what you do, He knows what you think.

c. God Knows Your Every Moment

"You comprehend my path and my lying down, and are acquainted with all my ways. For there is not a word on my tongue, but behold, O Lord, You know it altogether." (vv.3-4) God knows your walk, every single step you make; God knows your talk, every single statement you make. When you leave your house he knows whether you walk to work, take your car, or ride the bus. God saw that murder. He saw it before it even happened. He watched it as it did happen, and God wrote down every detail.

God knows every word you say. It has been said that every day the average articulate man speaks enough words to fill a good size volume, and in the course of a lifetime enough words to make enough books to fill a college library. I'm sure most of us have long forgotten most of the words we have said. But Jesus said, "Every idle word that men speak will be accounted for on the day of judgment." God knows whether or not O. J. Simpson is lying, and one day, if necessary, the truth will come out.

d. God Knows Your Every Maneuver

"You have hedged me behind and before, and laid Your hand upon me." (v.5) The word hedged literally means "to be cramped or limited." It is the word used for besieging a town. In other words, God hems us in on every side so there is no escape. You may think you can run from God, but there is no place to run, and there is a reason for that.

II. God Is Omnipresent

You're going to find out you cannot run from God. You cannot hide from God. David tells us three things that cannot hide us from God.

a. Death Does Not Hide Us from God

"Where can I go from Your Spirit? or where can I flee from Your presence? If I ascend into heaven, You are there; if I make my bed in hell, behold You are there." (vv.7-8) It doesn't matter how high you go; if you were to go as high as heaven itself, you'd meet God. Trying to run away from God by going to heaven would be like trying to run away from heat by going to the sun.

It doesn't matter how low you go. Even if you were to make your bed in hell, you would find God right there.

That is the ultimate folly of suicide. Suicide never solves a problem, it just creates a bigger one. It simply hurls persons into eternity where they come face to face with God with all of their problems unresolved, and their guilt aggravated by self murder.

b. Distance Does Not Hide Us from God

"If I take the wings of the morning, and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea, even there Your hand shall lead me, and Your right hand shall hold me." (vv. 9-10) It doesn't matter how high or how low you go; it doesn't matter how far you go, you cannot get away from the presence of God. The wings of the morning that David talks about there refers to the rays of the sun. In other words, even if you could hijack a sunbeam and travel at the speed of light, you could never get away from God.

No matter where you go, David says in v.10, "Your right hand shall hold me." The word for hold literally means "to snatch." Jonah discovered that. He got on a ship and thought he would take to the ocean, and the waves would separate him from God. But, as you know, God literally snatched him out of the boat, snatched him out of the sea, snatched him out of the belly of the fish, and brought him to where he wanted him to be.

c. Darkness Does Not Hide Us from God

"If I say, ‘Surely the darkness shall fall on me,' even the night shall be light about me; indeed, the darkness shall not hide from You, but the night shines as the day; the darkness and the light are both alike to You." (vv. 11-12) Did you know with God darkness and light are the same to Him? God has divine infrared vision; he can see through the darkness. God has divine x-ray vision; He can see through you. Why do you think most of the world's crimes are committed under the cover of darkness. There is something inherent within us that says if you do it in the dark, nobody will see it, and nobody will know it. Well, darkness may hide man from man, but it does not hide man from God. Darkness and light are both alike to him.

III. God Is Omnipotent

"For You have formed my inward parts; You have covered me in my mother's womb. I will praise You, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made; marvelous are Your works, and that my soul knows very well. My frame was not hidden from You, when I was made in secret, and skillfully wrought in the lowest parts of the earth. Your eyes saw my substance, being yet unformed. And in Your book they all were written, the days fashioned for me, when as yet there were none of them." (vv. 13-16) Did you know that God even knows you genetically? God has a unique genetic code he has given to every human being.

As you well know, much of the O. J. Simpson evidence revolved around a little molecule known as DNA. The technical term is Deoxyribonucleic Acid.

A study of DNA is really fascinating. In the human body there are 75 trillion cells. Just one of these cells is more complex than any super computer ever built. Each cell has 220 trillion atoms called protein molecules. The largest of these molecules is called DNA. If you took just one strand of DNA it would stretch out to be 6 ft. long. If you took all of the DNA in the human body and put it in a box, it would fit in a box the size of an ice cube. But listen to this: If you took all of the DNA and stretched it out lengthwise, it would go from the earth to the sun and back 400 times.

The Bible says that God has taken strands of molecules, strung them into atoms, and used them as the building blocks of this magnificent machine known as the human body.

Now what does all of this mean as far as Elvis Presley and O. J. Simpson are concerned? Well, number one: we know that Elvis is alive. Elvis Presley right now is in one of three places: He's either in heaven, in hell, or he is still on earth. Beyond a shadow of doubt, in my mind, I know that Elvis is alive. What I do not know is, is he in heaven, or is he in hell? I pray for one, I fear for the other.

Well, what about O. J. Simpson? Well, listen to these verses of Scripture: Acts. 17:30-31, "Truly, these times of ignorance God overlooked, but now commands all men everywhere to repent, because He has appointed a day on which He will judge the world in righteousness by the Man whom He has ordained. He has given assurance of this to all by raising Him from the dead." Now you cannot have a trial if the judge is dead, or the defendant is dead. But one day there is going to be one more trial for O. J. Simpson. He's going to make one final run; he's going to run to God.

When he stands before this Judge, he will stand the way all of us will stand. There will be no high priced attorneys; there will be no jurors, biased one way or the other; it will simply be the Judge, all-knowing, all-powerful, omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent; and He will determine the final verdict.

Therefore the great question that we face this moment is this: Whether or not Elvis is alive on earth; whether or not O. J. Simpson is guilty; the question for the moment for us is: Are we ready to stand before God? Praise God that's where the Lord Jesus comes in. Because if Jesus Christ is your Lord, then He is not only going to be your Judge, but praise His Holy Name, He's going to be your Defense Attorney, and He's never lost a case. I would say to O. J. Simpson, if I had the opportunity, whether you are guilty or whether you are not, is between you and your God, but there's mercy, regardless, at the cross of the Lord Jesus Christ.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by James Merritt