Peter: Alright, so here's the deal. In Psalms 58, the writer asks God to judge the wicked. He says that their words are like a serpent's venom, and that their tongues are like a sharp sword. Then, he says that the wicked will be destroyed in an instant and that their children will be swept away.

Lois: Oh, wow! That sounds pretty intense.

Brian: Yeah, but don't worry, because the writer also talks about how God will make the righteous prosperous, and how they will be like a well-watered garden, and they'll be like a tree planted by the water.

Stewie: Yeah, and then the writer talks about how God will judge the righteous and the wicked, and how the wicked will be snared in their own traps, and how their evil schemes will be brought to nothing.

Peter: Haha, yeah, like those evil schemes in the movies! Like the one in the latest Avengers movie, where Ultron was gonna take over the world and stuff.

Lois: Peter, I don't think that's what the writer was talking about.

Brian: Yeah, I think he was more referring to how God's justice will prevail in the end, no matter what the wicked do.

Stewie: But if God's justice will prevail, then why do we need to ask God to judge the wicked?

Lois: I think the writer is asking God to judge the wicked because it's a reminder that justice can and will be served. It's a reminder that God is still in control.