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Showing posts from October, 2023

Greater Faith | Day 1 | November 1, 2023

 It's time to go deeper, further, higher... It's time to take your faith to a new level.  We would like to thank Christine Caine for providing this plan. For more information, please visit:  www.christinecaine.com This verse has to be one of my favorites in the entire Bible. I love the fact that David makes no apologies about the kind of house that must be built for the Lord. It was to “be of great magnificence and fame and splendor,” one that exceeded every expectation. I believe that is exactly how we should see the church of Jesus Christ today. Our lives should make people stop and wonder, “How is this possible?” If the same Spirit that raised Jesus Christ from the dead lives on the inside of you and me, how could we live lives that are any less? Our God lives in us! We are the temple of the Holy Spirit, and we should not shrink back from all that God has called us to do. We all carry the Spirit of God Himself within us, and there is nothing ordinary about that. It is ...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 31 | October 31, 2023

 The Psalter ends on a triumphant note of praise: “Let everything that has breath praise the Lord!” (v. 6). The picture given by this psalm is one of complete celebration of who the Lord is and what he does. Instruments are played, and the psalmist even calls for dancing (v. 4). As the Psalter comes to an end, we are being led as the readers of Scripture to ponder the character of God and the extent of his great grace toward his people, as reflected throughout the entire Psalter.  Given the God who is portrayed throughout the Psalms—a God who is merciful and gracious, a God who will not ignore the needy or helpless, a God who hates wickedness and will execute perfect justice one day, a God who heals the brokenhearted, a God who is a refuge and shelter for his troubled people, a God who understands his people’s internal highs and lows of living in this fallen world—what can we do but offer our lives and hearts unreservedly to him? He is our Shepherd, our Friend, our Deliverer....

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 30 | October 30, 2023

 “But now that you have come to know God, or rather to be known by God . . .” (Gal. 4:9). In the New Testament letter to the Galatians, Paul seems almost to correct himself mid-thought, as if saying, “But now that you Galatians have come to know God—no, wait, the deeper truth is that God has come to know you.” That blessed reality of being known by God is the sustained theme of Psalm 139.  Do you know God? Knowing God is a true and useful category for understanding your Christian experience. The Bible itself uses it repeatedly; the purpose of life, after all, is “that we may know him who is true” (1 John 5:20). But our human capacities do not exhaust what it means to be a child of God. “Such knowledge is too wonderful for me; it is high; I cannot attain it” (Ps. 139:6). The broader, deeper, wraparound category of life as the people of God is that he knows us. Not only now, in our present, but way back when we were being formed in the womb, God knew us (v. 15). He also knows ou...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 29 | October 29, 2023

“Great is the glory of the Lord. For though the Lord is high, he regards the lowly, but the haughty he knows from afar” (vv. 5–6).  Where is God’s glory seen? In his greatness, to be sure: his omnipotence, infinitude, and eternality. Even more, however, the glory of God is seen in his goodness in light of that greatness. In all his immensity, he delights in showering his wayward creatures with grace upon grace. God is not glorious merely because he is great (although he is!) but because in that great immensity, he is also merciful when he has every reason to turn the shoulder and vaporize us.  Jonathan Edwards wrote in a letter to a woman whose son had died: “Especially are the beams of Christ’s glory infinitely softened and sweetened by his love to men, the love that passeth knowledge. The glory of his person consists, preeminently, in that infinite goodness and grace, of which he made so wonderful a manifestation in his love to us.” The great French reformer John Calvin agre...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 28 | October 28, 2023

 It is easy to go through life feeling vulnerable. Vulnerable to financial collapse, to physical illness, to relational rejection, to emotional meltdown. We naturally and easily feel small, weak, and defenseless. What does it mean to be part of the people of God? Among a hundred other things, it means that the God who created the universe never ceases to watch over and actively protect you. It means he never takes a nap on you, never is distracted, never turns away. “He who keeps you will not slumber” (v. 3). But how can we really know? Where is the proof? The proof is there on a hill called Calvary. There Jesus died. Jesus Christ became truly vulnerable, truly defenseless, exposed not simply to adverse circumstances but to the forces of hell, receiving the judgment we deserved. He was overcome so that we could walk through life with the certain knowledge that we are God’s children and that he is ever watching over us. Scripture: Psalms 121

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 27 | October 27, 2023

 This psalm celebrates the gift of God’s law, his Torah, and his covenant instruction for his people. Having redeemed his people and brought us through grace into a relationship with him, God now lovingly instructs us in the way to enjoy the fullness of life.  Although no one keeps God’s law perfectly, and in fact, we abuse it through legalism and works righteousness, the psalmist reminds us throughout this lengthy psalm of the delight that the law should be for the child of God. The psalm uses different words to describe the law, such as statutes, rules, commandments, law, words, and other similar terms; this reflects the richness of the Torah and the flourishing life into which it brings us.  We tend to view God’s law as inhibiting human flourishing. C. S. Lewis helps us in his words to a friend in a 1933 letter: “God not only understands but shares the desire which is at the root of all my evil—the desire for complete and ecstatic happiness. He made me for no other pur...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 26 | October 26, 2023

 This psalm is saturated with joy. Ponder the language. Note the exclamations and exultations. Out of deep “distress” (v. 5), the Lord has met and delivered the psalmist. It seemed like the whole world was against him (vv. 10–13). But God himself was the psalmist’s “strength” and “song” (v. 14).  Not only has God rescued the psalmist out of deadly peril, but he also has worked a remarkable reversal so that such peril has been transformed into triumph; the valley has become the mountaintop. This is what the psalmist means when he declares, “Glad songs of salvation are in the tents of the righteous” (v. 15). God has worked “valiantly” (vv. 15–16). This is also what is meant in verse 22: “The stone that the builders rejected has become the cornerstone.” The stone thrown onto the rubble heap as useless has now become the most important building block of all, the very cornerstone.  This is how God works. He comes near to us in all our distress, taking what the world rejects an...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 25 | October 25, 2023

 This short psalm calls for the nations (v. 1) to rejoice in God’s love for Israel (v. 2). How can that be? The psalmist knows that God’s love is pledged to Israel for the sake of the whole world. God called Abraham and his descendants to be a channel, not a dam; to pass on, not gobble up, God’s grace and mercy (Gen. 12:2–3; Ex. 19:5–6; 1 Kings 8:41–43). And the true and final descendant of Abraham, Jesus Christ, broke open God’s grace for all the world once and for all (Gal. 3:7–9, 16).  Are you a follower of Jesus Christ? Enjoy God’s grace. But pass it on. To hoard God’s grace is to demonstrate you do not yourself understand it. If grace is as promised, it is free—indiscriminately open to all. Who in your life needs to hear of this grace? If grace is truly gracious, then you are permanently forgiven, liberated, and rinsed clean. Let your delight in this freedom bubble over into telling others what they might enjoy. Scripture: Psalms 117

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 24 | October 24, 2023

 We find ourselves praising all day long. Praise tumbles out of our mouths without our even knowing it. We praise musical ability, athletic prowess, a beautiful snowfall, a child’s ability to take its first steps, a well-written book, and a delicious dish. This psalm calls us to praise God. Why? Because the majestic God who rules over all (vv. 4–6) delights to take notice of the distraught and the needy (vv. 7–9). Who could have ever imagined that this is what the Creator is like? Who would have ever presumed him to be inclined in this way? How about you? Have you seen his heart? Or do you view him as stoically distant and removed? Are you distraught? Are you perplexed by life? The Lord of heaven is drawn like a magnet to your distress. Open up to him. Welcome him into your need. “He raises the poor from the dust and lifts the needy from the ash heap” (v. 7). Above all, remember that the great and high God proved once and for all that he loves to come down to meet distraught sinner...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 23 | October 23, 2023

This psalm triumphantly looks to the future, to the Son of David who towers over David himself as God’s ultimate solution to a world hostile toward its Creator. The first verse of this psalm is cited all throughout the New Testament, and especially throughout Hebrews, as ancient testimony fulfilled in Christ of God’s promise of a coming Messiah who would establish justice over God’s enemies once and for all. How does this text integrate into your own life? Christ’s enemies are your enemies, as you are his disciple aligned with him. Your greatest battle has been won. But what is this greatest battle? Your deepest struggle is against sin and death and condemnation. This transcends all other struggles. This is your real danger: separation from the Father because of your own rebellion. Conquest by Satan and the forces of hell, accusing you of your actual sinfulness. And how is this battle won? By the fulfillment of verse 4: God has sent a priest who, unlike every other priest, will never d...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 22 | October 22, 2023

We live in a world of accusation. Sometimes our accusers are actual people, as is the case for David as he writes this psalm: “Wicked and deceitful mouths are opened against me” (v. 2). When he attempts to forgive and show his accusers love (v. 4), they respond in intensified hatred, slander, and attacks. They will not allow him a moment of peace. David’s cry to God in this psalm is clear: “End it! Cut them off! Shut them up!” To our ears, this sounds too harsh, selfish, impatient, and unloving. How can David ask that “his days be few” (v. 8) or for God to “cut off the memory of them from the earth” (v. 15)? Is this even a Christian prayer? We want to plead with David to show a bit more grace, perhaps pointing him to Jesus’ words in Matthew 5 about loving our enemies and turning the other cheek. However, before we do, let us consider one more thing.  David is the king, anointed by God to rule over Israel. His accusers are, in reality, accusing the One who appointed him king. If God...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 21 | October 21, 2023

 Who is God? Who is he, really? What is at the center of his heart? As much as any place in the Bible, this psalm opens up to us who he most deeply is.  What is it, above all else, that weary sinners most need to know? What is oxygen to us in our distressed, pain-riddled lives? The radiant sun of divine favor shining down on God’s children. While the clouds of sin and failure may darken our feelings of that favor, it cannot be lessened any more than a tiny, wispy cloud can threaten the sun's existence. The sun is shining. It cannot stop. Be at peace.  The Lord looks on his children with utterly unflappable affection (v. 13). Consider the affection of the fatherly heart of God. Let this psalm wash over you. Growth in the Christian life is the process of bringing your sense of self, your swirling internal world of fretful panic arising out of gospel deficit, into alignment with the more fundamental truth that “The Lord is merciful and gracious, slow to anger and abounding i...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 20 | October 20, 2023

 A miserable Christian is a contradiction in terms.  To be sure, life is hard. The pain accumulating throughout one’s journey in this world is a strong temptation to cynicism. The Christian life is not one of painted-on smiles, pretending that all is right in the world when in truth, there are horrors all around. Sometimes the pain in life is so great that rejoicing seems distant and a mockery to our true emotional state.  Yet we must receive what the Bible says in passages such as Psalm 100 because the Bible itself acknowledges the deep pain of life, not only in other books (such as Ecclesiastes) but even in the Psalms. And even more deeply, the Bible gives us resources for wading through the pain of life with joy and calm that transcends the darkness. As this psalm concludes, “The Lord is good; his steadfast love endures forever, and his faithfulness to all generations” (v. 5). Your pain never outpaces his love. The deeper reality of his goodness surrounds your difficul...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 19 | October 19, 2023

This psalm is a song of deep consolation to the one looking to God for rest amid life's adversities. Its consistent theme is the rest and peace God gives. Amid the storms of life, God is a safe and serene harbor. Have you experienced this? Or are you internally frenetic? Do you see the Lord himself, your Heavenly Father, ruling over all that washes into your life, hard and easy, good and bad? Do you see him nurturing you along in life, loving you, protecting you, working all for good? Rest in him again today.  After all, the Lord Jesus proved that this is who God is. Jesus said, “Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest” (Matt. 11:28). Dwelling in the shelter of the Most High slows down the frantic spinning of our hearts. Life with God blankets our fast-paced lives with inner shalom. He is the God of peace (Rom. 15:33; 16:20; 1 Cor. 14:33). This is why Jesus came, as announced by the angels at his birth (Luke 2:14).  The eighteenth-century hymn w...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 18 | October 18, 2023

Who among us does not know the need to go to Psalm 51 and make it ours? David prayed this psalm after committing adultery with Bathsheba, but his words and heart of repentance are universally relevant to all who feel the weight of their sin.  Note the pervasive metaphor used throughout the psalm: David feels  dirty . He needs God to make him clean. “Wash me” (vv. 2, 7), he begs. “Cleanse me” (v. 3). “Purge me” (v. 7). “Blot out all my iniquities” (v. 9). But this is a dirtiness that cannot be washed off in a shower. It is inside us.  Do you feel dirty? The good news of the gospel is that you can be rinsed clean. David pleads for God to have mercy on him (v. 1). Is this an empty, hopeless plea? By no means. Look at the next words: “according to your steadfast love” (v. 1). David asks God to be who he is. He is asking God to act in a way consistent with himself. David knows he is a God of “abundant mercy” (v. 1), so he asks for mercy accordingly.  Is this who you know ...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 17 | October 17, 2023

 To turn on the television or radio or to drive down a billboard-filled highway is to be bombarded with the message that various products and services are the secret to achieving inner calm. If you can just get the right body, education, financial structure, and entertainment system, then you will have achieved that deep “soul-sigh” everyone longs for. Psalm 46 offers an alternative to the world. It says: Be still. Be quiet. Look up. Calm down. God reigns.  This psalm does not offer a Pollyanna view of life. This psalm gives us sober realism. Even though the earth goes haywire (vv. 2–3), even though nations assault each other (v. 6), all of this is under the wise and far-reaching hand of God.  What troubles you today? What is it about which you think, “If I can just get that sorted out, life will become manageable”? What worries your heart as you lie awake in bed? God says: I, not any circumstantial solution, am your refuge amid your adversities. I am a very present help ...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 16 | October 16, 2023

 It is one thing to endure pain. It is another thing to endure pain that you know has come from your own sin.  David writes this psalm out of the anguish of his heart. He is completely overwhelmed with life, “utterly bowed down and prostrate” (v. 6). But his pain is doubled by the knowledge that this pain is “because of my sin” (v. 3), “because of my foolishness” (v. 5). As a result, he is at wit’s end, enduring physical distress (v. 3), emotional pain (v. 8), and relational dysfunction (v. 11).  Every child of God knows something of this pain—to know that various trials in life arise from our own foolishness. This is a double pain, for we are not innocent victims of someone else’s folly; it is our own folly. Does God have an answer for this? Is this an anguish that goes beyond the resources of the grace of God? Can true believers sin their way out of the mercy of God?  May it never be. The apostle Paul insists with reassuring clarity that where sin piles up, grace p...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 15 | October 15, 2023

 This psalm upends our natural impulses of how to live a full and abundant life. The core message of this psalm is that the true fullness of life comes not as we expect. It is found not in manipulating our circumstances, controlling those around us, or violently silencing those who threaten our ambitions but in quietly looking to God and letting him sort out our lives. “Be still before the Lord and wait patiently for him” (v. 7). There is a glorious inevitability to the final glory of God’s people as they look to him, trust in him, and delight in him (vv. 4–6). When the wicked, on the other hand, function out of self-trust and seek to build their lives on their own strength and reliance, the enduring significance becomes elusive (vv. 35–36). They vanish as quickly as plumes of smoke disappear from a roaring fire (v. 20).  “But the meek shall inherit the land” (v. 11). those who refuse to force their way into worldly control and power will, one day, inherit such a rule. This de...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 14 | October 14, 2023

 We have all come across someone who constantly complains. No matter what good things wash into their lives, they focus on the bad. Psalm 34 takes that sinful impulse within all of us and flips it inside out. No matter how many bad things wash into our life, we can be someone who focuses on the good. “I will bless the Lord at all times; his praise shall continually be in my mouth” (v. 1). The rest of the psalm unpacks why and how we can praise God moment by moment as we move through life.  Notice one particular element of rejoicing in God in all of life. “Those who look to him are radiant” (v. 5). Have you ever met a radiant man or woman? Have you seen a countenance of brilliant light on someone else's face? This is on another plane beyond mere physical attractiveness or health. Have you ever spent time with someone with a certain glow and magnetic charm, and you knew it was because that person had lived a life of looking to the Lord?  Consider how the psalmist speaks of ...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 13 | October 13, 2023

 What else do you need in life beyond the truths of Psalm 27?  Fears press in on David (vv. 1, 3). Such is life. Who among us does not know what it is to wake up in the morning and, as consciousness slides over us once more, feel clutching at our hearts the pressing anxieties and fears of the day ahead? This is normal. This is life.  Consider the words of this psalm. Read them slowly. Drink them in. If the Lord is your light and salvation, of whom will you be afraid (v. 1)? Even if your own parents forsake you, the Lord will take you in (v. 10). And note David’s single longing, the “one thing” he has asked: to dwell in the house of the Lord and gaze upon the beauty of the Lord (v. 4).  Have you tasted this? Is the Lord beautiful to you? What is the beauty of God? It is his brilliance, radiance, and sun-like shining forth in who he is for sinners. And in Jesus, we see the ultimate embodiment of the beauty of God. Jonathan Edwards put it this way:  Christ has infi...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 12 | October 12, 2023

 This is perhaps the most famous poem in the history of the world. And justly so. It is a deep consolation for the people of God.  This psalm tells us that life with God means we have no lack (v. 1). A life walking with him is like “green pastures” and “still waters” (v. 2). But notice that David does not claim this about God when life is easy. This is how God cares for us when we “walk through the valley of the shadow of death” (v. 4). How can this be? How can life be green pastures and still waters in the enveloping fog of deep fears or bitter disappointment? In a sadness that refuses to lift, a habitual sin in which you feel trapped, a rejection by one you loved, or a deep sense that you keep disappointing God? The psalm tells us: “You are with me” (v. 4). Period.  Would you rather have the mountaintop experience without God or the dark valley with him?  How does the presence of God actually help me when I am in darkness? In this way: We know that Jesus Christ wal...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 11 | October 11, 2023

 The pain of feeling forsaken is not a rarity among the people of God. As life unfolds before us as we walk with God, we will often battle feelings of wondering where God is. “If God were really with me,” we may ask, “would this be happening?” Where is his fatherly care in this loss, in this sickness, in this depression, in this pain?  These feelings and thoughts do not take God by surprise. He has given us many texts in Scripture to care for us in these times of darkness. Psalm 22 is one of these. “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (v. 1), we cry out. Perhaps the pain is too raw even to tell another person about it. We are suffering alone, the pain of solitude amplifying the agony.  Notice that David assumes God has forsaken him. He does not ask God if he has forsaken him. He asks why, assuming God already has. Yet in light of the promises made to David in Scripture (see, for example, 2 Sam. 7:4–17), David ought to have known that God would never have finally fo...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 10 | October 10, 2023

 In David’s day, how did nations win battles? Through superior military strength. Horses. Chariots. Yet David saw beyond surface realities to the deeper meaning of all that happens—the sovereign governance of God, caring for his people, protecting them, and giving them what they most need. For this reason, David writes, “Some trust in chariots and some in horses, but we trust in the name of the Lord our God” (v. 7). It is one thing to use chariots and horses in battle. It is another thing to trust in them.  What about your own life? Consider your finances, for example. It is one thing to use money. It is another thing to trust in money. God calls us to use money shrewdly, yet not to entrust ourselves to it as our final security. God alone is able to bear the weight of our deepest trust. And God alone will never let us down when we place the full weight of our trust on him. In Christ, he proved it. Scripture: Psalms 20

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 9 | October 9, 2023

 God does not want to stay hidden from us. He wants us to know him. We know him through his creation (vv. 1–6) and also through his law, the Torah, God’s revelation to Moses, now found in the first five books of the Bible.  David exults in the preciousness of this Word. Is this how you feel about the revelation God has given of himself in his Word? How do you approach Scripture? Do you see it as fuel to revive your soul (v. 7)— “rejoicing the heart” (v. 8)? Do you desire the Word of God more than a ten million dollar inheritance and all that it could purchase (v. 10)?  And yet the Word of God not only reveals who God is; it also reveals who we are, in all our sin and need. The lofty call of Scripture is worthy of all pursuit, yet frustratingly beyond our reach in light of our weakness and inadequacy. David knows this—thus his concluding remarks in the psalm, beginning with “Who can discern his errors?” (v. 12). He closes by praying for his words and thoughts to be accepta...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 8 | October 8, 2023

 The Lord’s strong deliverance of David from Saul elicits from David a song of love (v. 1). The Lord has delivered David from deadly peril at the hands of an aggressive and hostile enemy. David recognizes that it is only by God’s mercy and provision that he has been spared.  While David appeals to his uprightness, we should remember two things. First, the events of this psalm are described in 2 Samuel, the book in which David’s greatest sins are narrated. Second, David is not claiming sinless perfection but is merely acknowledging that Saul has been aggressive toward him in a way far out of proportion to what David deserved. David is being treated unjustly. But God has delivered him.  “But the psalm is not merely biographical of David, nor is it simply pietistic words for the worshiper. When David speaks similar words elsewhere, it is apparent that the purpose of preserving his line is to provide a Redeemer for the world (2 Sam. 7:4–17; 22:1–51). Indeed, the note on which...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 7 | October 7, 2023

 The tone of Psalm 10 turns sharply from the Psalms that have come just before. Here we find the psalmist distraught at the victimization of the helpless. And this cruelty seems to come not at the hand of foreign nations but at the hands of fellow Israelites—fellow members of the people of God.  Seeing such evil carried out against fellow humans—fellow members of God’s people—can easily cause deep cynicism and emotional fatigue. How does one persevere in the face of horrors done to others, especially horrors perpetrated by those who ought to have been the kindest? Everything in us screams out for justice.  David feels the same way, but he realizes that “you [the Lord] do see, for you note mischief and vexation, that you may take it into your hands” (v. 14). The Lord will “do justice to the fatherless and the oppressed” (v. 18). God will, one day, right all wrongs, straighten out all that is bent, and rinse this world clean of all injustice.  And how do we know this? ...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 6 | October 6, 2023

 The Bible restores our human dignity, scarred but not lost in the fall. Alluding to the opening chapters of Genesis, where mankind is called to exercise dominion over the created order, David brings us to praise God for the remarkable care he has entrusted to us. He is the God of the heavens, having placed the stars in their orbits, yet he has entrusted to humanity the care of the earth. When he speaks of our being crowned “with glory and honor” (v. 5), David speaks of the image of God bestowed upon every human.  The references to “foes,” “enemy,” and “avenger” in the course of praising God for his creation remind us that there was also a fall (v. 2; Gen. 3:1–24). Yet despite our fall into sin, God still dignifies his people as the stewards of his creation (Ps. 8:5–8; Gen. 1:28–31).  And yet we need a Savior to overcome not only personal sin but also the fallen condition of the creation (Gen. 3:15, 18–19). By quoting this psalm, the writer of the book of Hebrews later cl...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 5 | October 5, 2023

 This psalm is another individual lament and is the first instance of a psalm that includes prayers for the personal downfall of one’s enemies. Such psalms are not expressions of petty annoyances or insults but are cries to God for justice in the face of bloodthirsty and deceitful persecutors.  This psalm is one of many places in the Bible where we can be greatly encouraged by the sheer earthiness of the Bible. Despite being the religious book of billions, the Christian Scriptures are not abstract or ethereal, disconnected from life's visceral emotions and experiences in a fallen world. The Bible is concrete, tangible, and rooted in gritty reality. David is “groaning” (v. 1). Disgusted by the deceitful schemes of the wicked, he pleads with God for justice, for a righting of wrongs, for the evil of the wicked to be returned on their own head (v. 10). Such language—even more, such prayer—sounds abrasive to modern ears, immersed as we are in a culture of tolerant niceness. Yet Da...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 4 | October 4, 2023

 This psalm expresses quiet trust amid troubling circumstances, combining the classic psalm categories of “individual lament“ and “psalm of confidence.” Many take this psalm to be a companion to Psalm 3 because 4:8 seems to echo 3:5. Perhaps the two psalms were meant to be read at the beginning and end of a single day since the past tense of 3:5 sets Psalm 3 in the morning while the future tense of 4:8 sets Psalm 4 in the evening.  Psalm 4 echoes the feelings of being overwhelmed expressed in the previous psalm. Here, however, David is in anguish not simply because of overwhelming opposition but because of the slander and taunting of his enemies. This is the pain not only of fear but of shame as well (v. 2).  David expresses the battle that rages in our hearts at night as we lay our heads on the pillow. On one side is stacked up all of the clamoring accusations, misunderstandings, and painful words of the day—of actual people in our lives, of demonic attack, or of our fal...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 3 | October 3, 2023

 This is the first psalm with a title. We are told that David wrote this psalm as a response to the heart-wrenching experience of being violently pursued by his son, Absalom (see 2 Samuel 15–16). We see in this psalm how a man of God models genuine faith amid dire circumstances. What must it have been like to be murderously hunted by his own child?  David felt utterly overwhelmed by the sheer weight of opposition: “Many are rising against me” (Ps. 3:1); “many thousands of people . . . have set themselves against me” (v. 6).  What strengthens David, however, is not strength mustered up from within. What stabilizes him is not self-generated optimism. David knows that earthly help is worthless when the tidal waves of life threaten to overwhelm and drown us. Instead, he looks to God: “But you, O Lord, are a shield about me” (v. 3). This is the posture of faith. Only in this way does David’s internal frenetic anxiety die away so that he can sleep in peace once more (v. 5). Sel...

31 Days in the Psalms | Day 2 | October 2, 2023

When we, as the people of God, sing Psalm 2, we remind ourselves of how God made David and his descendants to be kings, tasked with carrying out God’s redemptive purposes in the world. In the face of overwhelming opposition, this psalm exults in the promises made to the Davidic king at his coronation. With its prospect of a worldwide rule for the house of David, this psalm also looks to the future, when David’s ultimate heir, the Messiah, would indeed accomplish this.  With the coming of the Messiah, this psalm’s triumphant portrait of the Davidic throne takes on heightened significance and finds its ultimate meaning. Believers today are the heirs of this psalm, and its promises come to rest on the worldwide church and its faith in the true and final Davidic heir, Jesus. Those who take refuge in him have found the only truly safe place in this broken world. Those who persist in resisting God and his rule, even if they are powerful “rulers of the earth,” will be finally defied and j...