{
  "schema_version": "simple_bible_commentary_page_v1",
  "generated_at": "2026-05-22T01:36:44.146177+00:00",
  "custom_id": "PSA_014",
  "testament": "OT",
  "book": "Psalms",
  "passage_ref": "Psalm 14",
  "title": "The Fool, God’s Search, and Hope for Zion",
  "canonical_url": "/commentary/old-testament-simple/psalms/psa_014/",
  "json_path": "/data/commentary/old-testament-simple/psalms/PSA_014.json",
  "simple_summary": "Psalm 14 says that foolish people live as if there is no God, and their lives become corrupt and harmful. The LORD sees all of this, judges the wicked, protects the oppressed, and gives hope that Israel will be rescued and restored from Zion.",
  "simple_explanation": "The psalm opens with a hard truth: the fool says in his heart, “There is no God.” In this psalm, that is not just a matter of words. It is a way of living without reverence for the LORD. Such a life leads to sin, evil deeds, and a lack of what is right.\n\nThen the psalm shows God’s view. The LORD looks down from heaven to see whether anyone is wise and truly seeks him. The answer is universal and sobering: people have all turned away and become corrupt. No one is righteous by nature.\n\nThe psalm then focuses on the wicked who oppress God’s people. They treat harming others as normal, as if they were eating bread. They do not call on the LORD, showing that their violence is joined to spiritual rebellion.\n\nBut the wicked do not have the last word. They are seized with terror, because God is with the righteous and defends them. The oppressed may be humiliated by human enemies, but the LORD himself is their shelter.\n\nThe psalm ends in hope. It longs for salvation to come from Zion, the place tied to the LORD’s rule and blessing. When God restores his people, they will rejoice and be glad.",
  "important_truths": [
    "Foolishness in this psalm is spiritual and moral, not just intellectual.",
    "Living as if God does not matter leads to corruption and evil.",
    "The LORD sees the whole human race and judges it truly.",
    "The psalm gives a sweeping diagnosis of human sin and turning away from God.",
    "The wicked oppress God’s people, but their violence is not hidden from the LORD.",
    "God defends the righteous and is a shelter for the oppressed.",
    "The psalm ends with hope for Israel’s salvation and restoration from Zion."
  ],
  "warnings_promises_commands": [
    "Warning: those who live without God are corrupt and under God’s judgment.",
    "Warning: the wicked who devour God’s people and shame the poor will face terror before God.",
    "Promise: the LORD is the refuge of the oppressed.",
    "Promise: God defends the godly and will restore his people.",
    "Command: seek God with wisdom instead of living in folly.",
    "Command: look to the LORD for deliverance rather than trusting human strength."
  ],
  "gods_plan_connection": "Psalm 14 belongs to Israel’s life under the covenant, where human sin is measured against the LORD’s holy standard. It shows the need for divine rescue because people cannot solve their corruption on their own. Its hope for deliverance from Zion fits the Bible’s larger hope that God will save and rule his people from the place of his presence.",
  "simple_application": "This psalm calls us to honest self-examination. It warns against living as if God were absent. It also comforts the oppressed by saying that God sees, judges, and shelters. So we should repent of sin, seek the LORD, and trust him when evil seems strong.",
  "net_bible_attribution": "Scripture quoted by permission. Quotations designated (NET) are from the NET Bible®, copyright ©1996, 2019 by Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. All rights reserved.",
  "source_status": {
    "stage3_status": "",
    "normalized_final_release_status": "",
    "final_release_status": "",
    "stage3_final_release_status": "",
    "operator_review_status": ""
  }
}