Psalm 130

Psalm Reading for June 30, 2024

 

Psalm 130 Out of the DepthsSTART WITH SCRIPTURE:
Psalm 130
CLICK HERE TO READ SCRIPTURE ON BIBLEGATEWAY.COM

OBSERVE:

Psalm 130 is described as a “Song of Ascents.”  These were Psalms sung by Israelite pilgrims as they climbed the temple mount in Jerusalem. This Psalm begins as a lamentation full of penitence, but ends with hope.

The Psalmist cries Out of the depths to the Lord.  The metaphor here suggests imagery that is familiar to the avid Bible reader.  The depths in this metaphor might be the depths of the sea, or perhaps the Pit, otherwise known as Sheol, the shadowy underworld of the dead.

What the metaphor suggests to us, though, are the depths of sorrow and grief.  The Psalmist is expressing his deep sense of distance and estrangement from joy and from God.  However, the first verses also express the Psalmist’s hope that the Lord will hear his cries.

In verses 3-4, we get a glimpse of the source of the Psalmist’s distress.  He poses the question to Yahweh:

If you, Yah, kept a record of sins,
Lord, who could stand?

In one sense he is confessing his sin, but at the same time he is suggesting that in the face of God’s holiness no one could possibly be innocent.

And yet, he declares his confidence in the mercy of the Lord:

But there is forgiveness with you,
therefore you are feared.

This is an interesting statement.  The Psalmist seems to suggest that because God is forgiving, therefore he is worshiped by those whom he forgives.  Is this because of the forgiven sinner’s gratitude?  Or is Yahweh’s forgiveness so magnanimous that the sinner is overwhelmed with awe?

The Psalmist then turns to his own personal aspiration in verses 5 and 6 — he is longing for God’s forgiveness and presence:

I wait for Yahweh.
My soul waits.
I hope in his word.

He yearns for God’s self-disclosure, as his next imagery suggests:

My soul longs for the Lord more than watchmen long for the morning;
more than watchmen for the morning.

The repetition of these key lines is a Hebrew poetic technique that denotes a sense of emphasis.  The imagery of those watching for the morning may relate to the watchmen of the city who call out the hours, or to the Levites whose task it was to announce the sunrise on the Sabbath day or for a holy festival.  In other words, this suggests a highly anticipated event.  The Psalmist is eagerly and expectantly watching for the presence of the Lord and his mercy.

Finally, the Psalmist’s plea becomes corporate, imploring all Israel:

 Israel, hope in Yahweh,
for with Yahweh there is loving kindness.

This Psalm begins with a sense of lamentation but ends with a strong statement of faith about the nature of God’s character, power, and forgiveness:

With him is abundant redemption.
He will redeem Israel from all their sins.

APPLY:  

This Psalm suggests our paradoxical relationship with God.  When we consider God’s holiness and power, we are filled with despair.  Yet when we consider God’s loving kindness and his abundant redemption, we are filled with profound hope, even assurance.

There are many circumstances in which we might find ourselves crying to the Lord out of the depths of our own souls — illness, tragedy, the death of a loved one, a national catastrophe.  Here, the lamentation appears to be about a sense of personal guilt.

The fact is, measured against God’s holiness who could stand? This is a consistent theme in Scripture, reemphasized in the New Testament as Paul reminds us in Romans 3:23:

 all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.

And yet, the power of God to redeem is also available to all who truly turn to the Lord in repentance, as the Psalmist calls upon the nation to do. For the Christian, this correlates with the Gospel’s solution to the universality of sin. Paul completes his thoughts from Romans 3:23. Though all have sinned they are now:  

justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus; whom God sent to be an atoning sacrifice, through faith in his blood, for a demonstration of his righteousness through the passing over of prior sins, in God’s forbearance (Romans 3:24-25).

God answers our sin with his steadfast love and mercy, expressed in Christ.

This is a SONrise  worth watching for! And we await his mercy and forgiveness with the same certainty with which the watchmen wait for the morning, assured that God will forgive us.

RESPOND: 

As an entry for May 24, 1738, John Wesley wrote in his journal that he attended St Paul’s Cathedral in London. There he heard a choir sing the verses from Psalm 130:

Out of the deep have I called unto thee, O Lord: Lord, hear my voice. O let thine ears consider well the voice of my complaint. If thou, Lord, wilt be extreme to mark what is done amiss, O Lord, who may abide it? For there is mercy with thee; therefore shalt thou be feared. O Israel, trust in the Lord: For with the Lord there is mercy, and with him is plenteous redemption. And He shall redeem Israel from all his sins (Wesley’s Works).

At the time, John Wesley was experiencing what we might call a sense of alienation:

strange indifference, dullness, and coldness, and unusually frequent relapses into sin (Wesley’s Works).

And yet he was yearning for the assurance of faith that he saw in his new Moravian friends.  When he was invited to a Moravian class meeting that evening, he really didn’t want to go.  But he went anyway.  And he was to write later that while someone was reading Luther’s preface to the Epistle to the Romans (which focused on the great doctrine of justification by faith):

About a quarter before nine, while he was describing the change which God works in the heart through faith in Christ, I felt my heart strangely warmed. I felt I did trust in Christ, Christ alone for salvation: And an assurance was given me, that he had taken away my sins, even mine, and saved me from the law of sin and death.

Only those who have become acutely aware of the reality of their distance from God can fully appreciate the miracle of God’s steadfast love and the power of redemption.

From my own experience, the transition from the lowest depths to the highest of heights is like that of one passing from darkness to light.

Thanks be to God that we can cry out to God even from the depths of our soul, and in the worst of our human condition, and be confident that we are heard, forgiven, and redeemed!

Our Lord, hear my cries when I feel that I am in the depths, and raise me up through your steadfast love and mighty redemption.  Amen. 

PHOTOS:"Out Of the Depths130" by Hope Church North Park is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic license.

Psalm Reading for March 26, 2023

Note from Celeste:

Before we look at today’s lectionary reading, I’d like to draw your attention to my Holy Week Bible Study book.

Go and Find a Donkey is the latest installment of the Choose This Day Multiple Choice Bible Studies series.

The daily devotionals take 10-15 minutes and include:

  • Scripture passage (World English Bible)
  • Fun, entertaining multiple choice questions focused directly on the Scripture passage
  • Short meditation that can be used as a discussion starter.

Use them on the suggested dates, or skip around.  Designed to be used during Holy Week, this nine-day Bible study takes you from Palm Sunday through Easter Monday.

Use this book personally during a coffee break or with the family in the car or at the breakfast table.

Order Go and Find a Donkey  today to prepare your family for this year’s Easter season!
CLICK HERE for Amazon’s Kindle book of Go and Find a Donkey.
CLICK HERE for Amazon’s Paperback of Go and Find a Donkey.

AND NOW, BACK TO TODAY’S LECTIONARY READING:

Psalm 130 Out of the DepthsSTART WITH SCRIPTURE:
Psalm 130
CLICK HERE TO READ SCRIPTURE ON BIBLEGATEWAY.COM

OBSERVE:

Psalm 130 is described as a “Song of Ascents.”  These were Psalms sung by Israelite pilgrims as they climbed the temple mount in Jerusalem. This Psalm begins as a lamentation full of penitence, but ends with hope.

The Psalmist cries Out of the depths to the Lord.  The metaphor here suggests imagery that is familiar to the avid Bible reader.  The depths in this metaphor might be the depths of the sea, or perhaps the Pit, otherwise known as Sheol, the shadowy underworld of the dead.

What the metaphor suggests to us, though, are the depths of sorrow and grief.  The Psalmist is expressing his deep sense of distance and estrangement from joy and from God.  However, the first verses also express the Psalmist’s hope that the Lord will hear his cries.

In verses 3-4, we get a glimpse of the source of the Psalmist’s distress.  He poses the question to Yahweh:

If you, Yah, kept a record of sins,
Lord, who could stand?

In one sense he is confessing his sin, but at the same time he is suggesting that in the face of God’s holiness no one could possibly be innocent.

And yet, he declares his confidence in the mercy of the Lord:

But there is forgiveness with you,
therefore you are feared.

This is an interesting statement.  The Psalmist seems to suggest that because God is forgiving, therefore he is worshiped by those whom he forgives.  Is this because of the forgiven sinner’s gratitude?  Or is Yahweh’s forgiveness so magnanimous that the sinner is overwhelmed with awe?

The Psalmist then turns to his own personal aspiration in verses 5 and 6 — he is longing for God’s forgiveness and presence:

I wait for Yahweh.
My soul waits.
I hope in his word.

He yearns for God’s self-disclosure, as his next imagery suggests:

My soul longs for the Lord more than watchmen long for the morning;
more than watchmen for the morning.

The repetition of these key lines is a Hebrew poetic technique that denotes a sense of emphasis.  The imagery of those watching for the morning may relate to the watchmen of the city who call out the hours, or to the Levites whose task it was to announce the sunrise on the Sabbath day or for a holy festival.  In other words, this suggests a highly anticipated event.  The Psalmist is eagerly and expectantly watching for the presence of the Lord and his mercy.

Finally, the Psalmist’s plea becomes corporate, imploring all Israel:

 Israel, hope in Yahweh,
for with Yahweh there is loving kindness.

This Psalm begins with a sense of lamentation but ends with a strong statement of faith about the nature of God’s character, power, and forgiveness:

With him is abundant redemption.
He will redeem Israel from all their sins.

APPLY:  

This Psalm suggests our paradoxical relationship with God.  When we consider God’s holiness and power, we are filled with despair.  Yet when we consider God’s loving kindness and his abundant redemption, we are filled with profound hope, even assurance.

There are many circumstances in which we might find ourselves crying to the Lord out of the depths of our own souls — illness, tragedy, the death of a loved one, a national catastrophe.  Here, the lamentation appears to be about a sense of personal guilt.

The fact is, measured against God’s holiness who could stand? This is a consistent theme in Scripture, reemphasized in the New Testament as Paul reminds us in Romans 3:23:

 all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.

And yet, the power of God to redeem is also available to all who truly turn to the Lord in repentance, as the Psalmist calls upon the nation to do. For the Christian, this correlates with the Gospel’s solution to the universality of sin. Paul completes his thoughts from Romans 3:23. Though all have sinned they are now:  

justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus; whom God sent to be an atoning sacrifice, through faith in his blood, for a demonstration of his righteousness through the passing over of prior sins, in God’s forbearance (Romans 3:24-25).

God answers our sin with his steadfast love and mercy, expressed in Christ.

This is a SONrise  worth watching for! And we await his mercy and forgiveness with the same certainty with which the watchmen wait for the morning, assured that God will forgive us.

RESPOND: 

As an entry for May 24, 1738, John Wesley wrote in his journal that he attended St Paul’s Cathedral in London. There he heard a choir sing the verses from Psalm 130:

Out of the deep have I called unto thee, O Lord: Lord, hear my voice. O let thine ears consider well the voice of my complaint. If thou, Lord, wilt be extreme to mark what is done amiss, O Lord, who may abide it? For there is mercy with thee; therefore shalt thou be feared. O Israel, trust in the Lord: For with the Lord there is mercy, and with him is plenteous redemption. And He shall redeem Israel from all his sins (Wesley’s Works).

At the time, John Wesley was experiencing what we might call a sense of alienation:

strange indifference, dullness, and coldness, and unusually frequent relapses into sin (Wesley’s Works).

And yet he was yearning for the assurance of faith that he saw in his new Moravian friends.  When he was invited to a Moravian class meeting that evening, he really didn’t want to go.  But he went anyway.  And he was to write later that while someone was reading Luther’s preface to the Epistle to the Romans (which focused on the great doctrine of justification by faith):

About a quarter before nine, while he was describing the change which God works in the heart through faith in Christ, I felt my heart strangely warmed. I felt I did trust in Christ, Christ alone for salvation: And an assurance was given me, that he had taken away my sins, even mine, and saved me from the law of sin and death.

Only those who have become acutely aware of the reality of their distance from God can fully appreciate the miracle of God’s steadfast love and the power of redemption.

From my own experience, the transition from the lowest depths to the highest of heights is like that of one passing from darkness to light.

Thanks be to God that we can cry out to God even from the depths of our soul, and in the worst of our human condition, and be confident that we are heard, forgiven, and redeemed!

Our Lord, hear my cries when I feel that I am in the depths, and raise me up through your steadfast love and mighty redemption.  Amen. 

PHOTOS:"Out Of the Depths130" by Hope Church North Park is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic license.

Psalm Reading for August 8, 2021

START WITH SCRIPTURE:
Psalm 130
CLICK HERE TO READ SCRIPTURE ON BIBLEGATEWAY.COM

OBSERVE:

Psalm 130 begins as a Psalm of penitence, but ends with hope.

The Psalmist cries Out of the depths to the Lord.  The metaphor here suggests imagery that is familiar to the avid Bible reader.  The depths in this metaphor might be the depths of the sea, or perhaps the Pit, otherwise known as Sheol, the shadowy underworld of the dead.

What the metaphor suggests to us, though, are the depths of sorrow and grief.  The Psalmist is expressing his deep sense of distance and estrangement from joy and from God.  However, the first verses also express the Psalmist’s hope that the Lord will hear his cries.

In verses 3-4, we get a glimpse of the source of the Psalmist’s distress.  He poses the question of the Lord:

 If you, O Lord, should mark iniquities, Lord, who could stand?

In one sense he is confessing his sin, but at the same time he is suggesting that in the face of God’s holiness no one could possibly be innocent.

And yet, he declares his confidence in the mercy of the Lord:

But there is forgiveness with you, so that you may be revered.

This is an interesting statement.  The Psalmist seems to suggest that because God is forgiving, therefore he is worshiped by those whom he forgives.  Is this because of the forgiven sinner’s gratitude?

The Psalmist then turns to his own personal aspiration in verses 5-6. He is longing for God’s forgiveness and presence:

I wait for the Lord, my soul waits, and in his word I hope.

Is the word in which the Psalmist hopes the law that has been revealed to Moses, or is this a more general meaning of God’s word? In any event, he yearns for God’s self-disclosure, as his next imagery suggests:

my soul waits for the Lord more than those who watch for the morning, more than those who watch for the morning.

The repetition of these key lines is a Hebrew poetic technique that denotes a sense of emphasis.  The imagery of those watching for the morning may relate to the watchmen of the city who call out the hours, or to the Levites whose task it was to announce the sunrise on the Sabbath day or for a holy festival.  In other words, this suggests a highly anticipated event.  The Psalmist is eagerly and expectantly watching for the presence of the Lord and his mercy.

Finally, the Psalmist’s plea becomes corporate, imploring that all Israel might hope in the Lord!

This Psalm begins with a sense of lamentation  but ends with a strong statement of faith about the nature of God’s character, power, and forgiveness:

For with the Lord there is steadfast love, and with him is great power to redeem.  It is he who will redeem Israel from all its iniquities.

APPLY:  

This Psalm suggests our paradoxical relationship with God.  When we consider God’s holiness and power, we are filled with despair.  Yet when we consider God’s steadfast love and his great power to redeem, we are filled with profound hope, even assurance.

There are many circumstances in which we might find ourselves crying to the Lord out of the depths of our own souls — illness, tragedy, the death of a loved one, a national catastrophe.  Here, the lamentation appears to be about a sense of personal guilt.

The fact is, measured against God’s holiness who could stand? This is a consistent theme in Scripture, reemphasized in the New Testament as Paul reminds us in Romans 3:23:

 all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.

And yet, the power of God to redeem is also available to all who truly turn to the Lord in repentance, as the Psalmist calls upon the nation to do. For the Christian, this is a correlation to the Gospel’s solution to the universality of sin, as we pick up Romans 3:24-25:

they are now justified by his grace as a gift, through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus,  whom God put forward as a sacrifice of atonement by his blood, effective through faith.

God answers our sin with his steadfast love and mercy.

This is a SONrise  worth watching for! And we await his mercy and forgiveness with the same certainty with which the watchmen wait for the morning, assured that God will forgive us.

RESPOND: 

Only those who have become acutely aware of the reality of their distance from God can fully appreciate the miracle of God’s steadfast love and the power of redemption.

From my own experience, the transition from the lowest depths to the highest of heights is like that of one passing from darkness to light.

Thanks be to God that we can cry out to God even from the depths of our soul, and in the worst of our human condition, and be confident that we are heard, forgiven, and redeemed!

Our Lord, hear my cries when I feel that I am in the depths, and raise me up through your steadfast love and mighty redemption.  Amen. 


PHOTOS:
"Psalm 130" by Walter Hoover is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic license.

Psalm Reading for June 27, 2021

Psalm 130 Out of the DepthsSTART WITH SCRIPTURE:
Psalm 130
CLICK HERE TO READ SCRIPTURE ON BIBLEGATEWAY.COM

OBSERVE:

Psalm 130 is described as a “Song of Ascents.”  These were Psalms sung by Israelite pilgrims as they climbed the temple mount in Jerusalem. This Psalm begins as a lamentation full of penitence, but ends with hope.

The Psalmist cries Out of the depths to the Lord.  The metaphor here suggests imagery that is familiar to the avid Bible reader.  The depths in this metaphor might be the depths of the sea, or perhaps the Pit, otherwise known as Sheol, the shadowy underworld of the dead.

What the metaphor suggests to us, though, are the depths of sorrow and grief.  The Psalmist is expressing his deep sense of distance and estrangement from joy and from God.  However, the first verses also express the Psalmist’s hope that the Lord will hear his cries.

In verses 3-4, we get a glimpse of the source of the Psalmist’s distress.  He poses the question to Yahweh:

If you, Yah, kept a record of sins,
Lord, who could stand?

In one sense he is confessing his sin, but at the same time he is suggesting that in the face of God’s holiness no one could possibly be innocent.

And yet, he declares his confidence in the mercy of the Lord:

But there is forgiveness with you,
therefore you are feared.

This is an interesting statement.  The Psalmist seems to suggest that because God is forgiving, therefore he is worshiped by those whom he forgives.  Is this because of the forgiven sinner’s gratitude?  Or is Yahweh’s forgiveness so magnanimous that the sinner is overwhelmed with awe?

The Psalmist then turns to his own personal aspiration in verses 5 and 6 — he is longing for God’s forgiveness and presence:

I wait for Yahweh.
My soul waits.
I hope in his word.

He yearns for God’s self-disclosure, as his next imagery suggests:

My soul longs for the Lord more than watchmen long for the morning;
more than watchmen for the morning.

The repetition of these key lines is a Hebrew poetic technique that denotes a sense of emphasis.  The imagery of those watching for the morning may relate to the watchmen of the city who call out the hours, or to the Levites whose task it was to announce the sunrise on the Sabbath day or for a holy festival.  In other words, this suggests a highly anticipated event.  The Psalmist is eagerly and expectantly watching for the presence of the Lord and his mercy.

Finally, the Psalmist’s plea becomes corporate, imploring all Israel:

 Israel, hope in Yahweh,
for with Yahweh there is loving kindness.

This Psalm begins with a sense of lamentation but ends with a strong statement of faith about the nature of God’s character, power, and forgiveness:

With him is abundant redemption.
He will redeem Israel from all their sins.

APPLY:  

This Psalm suggests our paradoxical relationship with God.  When we consider God’s holiness and power, we are filled with despair.  Yet when we consider God’s loving kindness and his abundant redemption, we are filled with profound hope, even assurance.

There are many circumstances in which we might find ourselves crying to the Lord out of the depths of our own souls — illness, tragedy, the death of a loved one, a national catastrophe.  Here, the lamentation appears to be about a sense of personal guilt.

The fact is, measured against God’s holiness who could stand? This is a consistent theme in Scripture, reemphasized in the New Testament as Paul reminds us in Romans 3:23:

 all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.

And yet, the power of God to redeem is also available to all who truly turn to the Lord in repentance, as the Psalmist calls upon the nation to do. For the Christian, this correlates with the Gospel’s solution to the universality of sin. Paul completes his thoughts from Romans 3:23.  Though all have sinned they are now:  

justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus;  whom God sent to be an atoning sacrifice, through faith in his blood, for a demonstration of his righteousness through the passing over of prior sins, in God’s forbearance (Romans 3:24-25).

God answers our sin with his steadfast love and mercy, expressed in Christ.

This is a SONrise  worth watching for! And we await his mercy and forgiveness with the same certainty with which the watchmen wait for the morning, assured that God will forgive us.

RESPOND: 

As an entry for  May 24, 1738, John Wesley wrote in his journal that he attended St Paul’s Cathedral in London. There he heard a choir sing the verses from Psalm 130:

Out of the deep have I called unto thee, O Lord: Lord, hear my voice. O let thine ears consider well the voice of my complaint. If thou, Lord, wilt be extreme to mark what is done amiss, O Lord, who may abide it? For there is mercy with thee; therefore shalt thou be feared. O Israel, trust in the Lord: For with the Lord there is mercy, and with him is plenteous redemption. And He shall redeem Israel from all his sins (Wesley’s Works).

At the time, John Wesley was experiencing what we might call a sense of alienation:

strange indifference, dullness, and coldness, and unusually frequent relapses into sin (Wesley’s Works).

And yet he was yearning for the assurance of faith that he saw in his new Moravian friends.  When he was invited to a Moravian class meeting that evening, he really didn’t want to go.  But he went anyway.  And he was to write later that while someone was reading Luther’s preface to the Epistle to the Romans (which focused on the great doctrine of justification by faith):

About a quarter before nine, while he was describing the change which God works in the heart through faith in Christ, I felt my heart strangely warmed. I felt I did trust in Christ, Christ alone for salvation: And an assurance was given me, that he had taken away my sins, even mine, and saved me from the law of sin and death.

Only those who have become acutely aware of the reality of their distance from God can fully appreciate the miracle of God’s steadfast love and the power of redemption.

From my own experience, the transition from the lowest depths to the highest of heights is like that of one passing from darkness to light.

Thanks be to God that we can cry out to God even from the depths of our soul and in the worst of our human condition, and be confident that we are heard, forgiven, and redeemed!

Our Lord, hear my cries when I feel that I am in the depths, and raise me up through your steadfast love and mighty redemption.  Amen. 

PHOTOS:"Out Of the Depths130" by Hope Church North Park is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic license.

Psalm Reading for March 29, 2020

Note from Celeste:

Before we look at today’s lectionary reading, I’d like to draw your attention to my Holy Week Bible Study book.

Go and Find a Donkey is the latest installment of the Choose This Day Multiple Choice Bible Studies series.

The daily devotionals take 10-15 minutes and include:

  • Scripture passage (World English Bible)
  • Fun, entertaining multiple choice questions focused directly on the Scripture passage
  • Short meditation that can be used as a discussion starter.

Use them on the suggested dates, or skip around.  Designed to be used during Holy Week, this nine-day Bible study takes you from Palm Sunday through Easter Monday.

Use this book personally during a coffee break or with the family in the car or at the breakfast table.

Order Go and Find a Donkey  today to prepare your family for this year’s Easter season!
CLICK HERE for Amazon’s Kindle book of Go and Find a Donkey.
CLICK HERE for Amazon’s Paperback of Go and Find a Donkey.

AND NOW, BACK TO TODAY’S LECTIONARY READING:

Psalm 130 Out of the DepthsSTART WITH SCRIPTURE:
Psalm 130
CLICK HERE TO READ SCRIPTURE ON BIBLEGATEWAY.COM

OBSERVE:

Psalm 130 is described as a “Song of Ascents.”  These were Psalms sung by Israelite pilgrims as they climbed the temple mount in Jerusalem. This Psalm begins as a lamentation full of penitence, but ends with hope.

The Psalmist cries Out of the depths to the Lord.  The metaphor here suggests imagery that is familiar to the avid Bible reader.  The depths in this metaphor might be the depths of the sea, or perhaps the Pit, otherwise known as Sheol, the shadowy underworld of the dead.

What the metaphor suggests to us, though, are the depths of sorrow and grief.  The Psalmist is expressing his deep sense of distance and estrangement from joy and from God.  However, the first verses also express the Psalmist’s hope that the Lord will hear his cries.

In verses 3-4, we get a glimpse of the source of the Psalmist’s distress.  He poses the question to Yahweh:

If you, Yah, kept a record of sins,
Lord, who could stand?

In one sense he is confessing his sin, but at the same time he is suggesting that in the face of God’s holiness no one could possibly be innocent.

And yet, he declares his confidence in the mercy of the Lord:

But there is forgiveness with you,
therefore you are feared.

This is an interesting statement.  The Psalmist seems to suggest that because God is forgiving, therefore he is worshiped by those whom he forgives.  Is this because of the forgiven sinner’s gratitude?  Or is Yahweh’s forgiveness so magnanimous that the sinner is overwhelmed with awe?

The Psalmist then turns to his own personal aspiration in verses 5 and 6 — he is longing for God’s forgiveness and presence:

I wait for Yahweh.
My soul waits.
I hope in his word.

He yearns for God’s self-disclosure, as his next imagery suggests:

My soul longs for the Lord more than watchmen long for the morning;
more than watchmen for the morning.

The repetition of these key lines is a Hebrew poetic technique that denotes a sense of emphasis.  The imagery of those watching for the morning may relate to the watchmen of the city who call out the hours, or to the Levites whose task it was to announce the sunrise on the Sabbath day or for a holy festival.  In other words, this suggests a highly anticipated event.  The Psalmist is eagerly and expectantly watching for the presence of the Lord and his mercy.

Finally, the Psalmist’s plea becomes corporate, imploring  all Israel:

 Israel, hope in Yahweh,
for with Yahweh there is loving kindness.

This Psalm begins with a sense of lamentation  but ends with a strong statement of faith about the nature of God’s character, power, and forgiveness:

With him is abundant redemption.
He will redeem Israel from all their sins.

APPLY:  

This Psalm suggests our paradoxical relationship with God.  When we consider God’s holiness and power, we are filled with despair.  Yet when we consider God’s loving kindness and his abundant redemption, we are filled with profound hope, even assurance.

There are many circumstances in which we might find ourselves crying to the Lord out of the depths of our own souls — illness, tragedy, the death of a loved one, a national catastrophe.  Here, the lamentation appears to be about a sense of personal guilt.

The fact is, measured against God’s holiness who could stand? This is a consistent theme in Scripture, reemphasized in the New Testament as Paul reminds us in Romans 3:23:

 all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.

And yet, the power of God to redeem is also available to all who truly turn to the Lord in repentance, as the Psalmist calls upon the nation to do. For the Christian, this correlates with the Gospel’s solution to the universality of sin. Paul completes his thoughts from Romans 3:23.  Though all have sinned they are now:  

justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus;  whom God sent to be an atoning sacrifice, through faith in his blood, for a demonstration of his righteousness through the passing over of prior sins, in God’s forbearance (Romans 3:24-25).

God answers our sin with his steadfast love and mercy, expressed in Christ.

This is a SONrise  worth watching for! And we await his mercy and forgiveness with the same certainty with which the watchmen wait for the morning, assured that God will forgive us.

RESPOND: 

As an entry for  May 24, 1738, John Wesley wrote in his journal that he attended St Paul’s Cathedral in London. There he heard a choir sing the verses from Psalm 130:

Out of the deep have I called unto thee, O Lord: Lord, hear my voice. O let thine ears consider well the voice of my complaint. If thou, Lord, wilt be extreme to mark what is done amiss, O Lord, who may abide it? For there is mercy with thee; therefore shalt thou be feared. O Israel, trust in the Lord: For with the Lord there is mercy, and with him is plenteous redemption. And He shall redeem Israel from all his sins (Wesley’s Works).

At the time, John Wesley was experiencing what we might call a sense of alienation:

strange indifference, dullness, and coldness, and unusually frequent relapses into sin (Wesley’s Works).

And yet he was yearning for the assurance of faith that he saw in his new Moravian friends.  When he was invited to a Moravian class meeting that evening, he really didn’t want to go.  But he went anyway.  And he was to write later that while someone was reading Luther’s preface to the Epistle to the Romans (which focused on the great doctrine of justification by faith):

About a quarter before nine, while he was describing the change which God works in the heart through faith in Christ, I felt my heart strangely warmed. I felt I did trust in Christ, Christ alone for salvation: And an assurance was given me, that he had taken away my sins, even mine, and saved me from the law of sin and death.

Only those who have become acutely aware of the reality of their distance from God can fully appreciate the miracle of God’s steadfast love and the power of redemption.

From my own experience, the transition from the lowest depths to the highest of heights is like that of one passing from darkness to light.

Thanks be to God that we can cry out to God even from the depths of our soul,  and in the worst of our human condition, and be confident that we are heard, forgiven, and redeemed!

Our Lord, hear my cries when I feel that I am in the depths, and raise me up through your steadfast love and mighty redemption.  Amen. 

PHOTOS:"Out Of the Depths130" by Hope Church North Park is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic license.

Psalm Reading for August 12, 2018

9501045375_f39a3bd458_o

START WITH SCRIPTURE:
Psalm 130
CLICK HERE TO READ SCRIPTURE ON BIBLEGATEWAY.COM

OBSERVE:

Psalm 130 begins as a Psalm of penitence, but ends with hope.

The Psalmist cries Out of the depths to the Lord.  The metaphor here suggests imagery that is familiar to the avid Bible reader.  The depths in this metaphor might be the depths of the sea, or perhaps the Pit, otherwise known as Sheol, the shadowy underworld of the dead.

What the metaphor suggests to us, though, are the depths of sorrow and grief.  The Psalmist is expressing his deep sense of distance and estrangement from joy and from God.  However, the first verses also express the Psalmist’s hope that the Lord will hear his cries.

In verses 3-4, we get a glimpse of the source of the Psalmist’s distress.  He poses the question of the Lord:

 If you, O Lord, should mark iniquities, Lord, who could stand?

In one sense he is confessing his sin, but at the same time he is suggesting that in the face of God’s holiness no one could possibly be innocent.

And yet, he declares his confidence in the mercy of the Lord:

But there is forgiveness with you, so that you may be revered.

This is an interesting statement.  The Psalmist seems to suggest that because God is forgiving, therefore he is worshiped by those whom he forgives.  Is this because of the forgiven sinner’s gratitude?

The Psalmist then turns to his own personal aspiration in verses 5-6 — he is longing for God’s forgiveness and presence:

I wait for the Lord, my soul waits, and in his word I hope.

Is the word in which the Psalmist hopes the law that has been revealed to Moses, or is this a more general meaning of God’s word? In any event, he yearns for God’s self-disclosure, as his next imagery suggests:

my soul waits for the Lord more than those who watch for the morning, more than those who watch for the morning.

The repetition of these key lines is a Hebrew poetic technique that denotes a sense of emphasis.  The imagery of those watching for the morning may relate to the watchmen of the city who call out the hours, or to the Levites whose task it was to announce the sunrise on the Sabbath day or for a holy festival.  In other words, this suggests a highly anticipated event.  The Psalmist is eagerly and expectantly watching for the presence of the Lord and his mercy.

Finally, the Psalmist’s plea becomes corporate, imploring that all Israel might hope in the Lord!

This Psalm begins with a sense of lamentation  but ends with a strong statement of faith about the nature of God’s character, power, and forgiveness:

For with the Lord there is steadfast love, and with him is great power to redeem.  It is he who will redeem Israel from all its iniquities.

APPLY:  

This Psalm suggests our paradoxical relationship with God.  When we consider God’s holiness and power, we are filled with despair.  Yet when we consider God’s steadfast love and his great power to redeem, we are filled with profound hope, even assurance.

There are many circumstances in which we might find ourselves crying to the Lord out of the depths of our own souls: illness, tragedy, the death of a loved one, a national catastrophe.  Here, the lamentation appears to be about a sense of personal guilt.

The fact is, measured against God’s holiness who could stand? This is a consistent theme in scripture, reemphasized in the New Testament as Paul reminds us in Romans 3:23:

 all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.

And yet, the power of God to redeem is also available to all who truly turn to the Lord in repentance, as the Psalmist calls upon the nation to do. For the Christian, this is a correlation to the Gospel’s solution to the universality of sin, as we pick up Romans 3:24-25:

they are now justified by his grace as a gift, through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus,  whom God put forward as a sacrifice of atonement by his blood, effective through faith.

God answers our sin with his steadfast love and mercy.

This is a SONrise  worth watching for! And we await his mercy and forgiveness with the same certainty with which the watchmen wait for the morning, assured that God will forgive us.

RESPOND: 

Only those who have become acutely aware of the reality of their distance from God can fully appreciate the miracle of God’s steadfast love and the power of redemption.

From my own experience, the transition from the lowest depths to the highest of heights is like that of one passing from darkness to light.

Thanks be to God that we can cry out to God even from the depths of our soul,  and in the worst of our human condition, and be confident that we are heard, forgiven, and redeemed!

Our Lord, hear my cries when I feel that I am in the depths, and raise me up through your steadfast love and mighty redemption.  Amen. 


PHOTOS:
"Out Of the Depths130" by Hope Church North Park is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic license.



Psalm Reading for July 1, 2018

Psalm 130 Out of the DepthsSTART WITH SCRIPTURE:
Psalm 130
CLICK HERE TO READ SCRIPTURE ON BIBLEGATEWAY.COM

OBSERVE:

Psalm 130 is described as a “Song of Ascents.”  These were Psalms sung by Israelite pilgrims as they climbed the temple mount in Jerusalem. This Psalm begins as a lamentation full of penitence, but ends with hope.

The Psalmist cries Out of the depths to the Lord.  The metaphor here suggests imagery that is familiar to the avid Bible reader.  The depths in this metaphor might be the depths of the sea, or perhaps the Pit, otherwise known as Sheol, the shadowy underworld of the dead.

What the metaphor suggests to us, though, are the depths of sorrow and grief.  The Psalmist is expressing his deep sense of distance and estrangement from joy and from God.  However, the first verses also express the Psalmist’s hope that the Lord will hear his cries.

In verses 3-4, we get a glimpse of the source of the Psalmist’s distress.  He poses the question to Yahweh:

If you, Yah, kept a record of sins,
Lord, who could stand?

In one sense he is confessing his sin, but at the same time he is suggesting that in the face of God’s holiness no one could possibly be innocent.

And yet, he declares his confidence in the mercy of the Lord:

But there is forgiveness with you,
therefore you are feared.

This is an interesting statement.  The Psalmist seems to suggest that because God is forgiving, therefore he is worshiped by those whom he forgives.  Is this because of the forgiven sinner’s gratitude?  Or is Yahweh’s forgiveness so magnanimous that the sinner is overwhelmed with awe?

The Psalmist then turns to his own personal aspiration in verses 5 and 6 — he is longing for God’s forgiveness and presence:

I wait for Yahweh.
My soul waits.
I hope in his word.

He yearns for God’s self-disclosure, as his next imagery suggests:

My soul longs for the Lord more than watchmen long for the morning;
more than watchmen for the morning.

The repetition of these key lines is a Hebrew poetic technique that denotes a sense of emphasis.  The imagery of those watching for the morning may relate to the watchmen of the city who call out the hours, or to the Levites whose task it was to announce the sunrise on the Sabbath day or for a holy festival.  In other words, this suggests a highly anticipated event.  The Psalmist is eagerly and expectantly watching for the presence of the Lord and his mercy.

Finally, the Psalmist’s plea becomes corporate, imploring  all Israel:

 Israel, hope in Yahweh,
for with Yahweh there is loving kindness.

This Psalm begins with a sense of lamentation  but ends with a strong statement of faith about the nature of God’s character, power, and forgiveness:

With him is abundant redemption.
He will redeem Israel from all their sins.

APPLY:  

This Psalm suggests our paradoxical relationship with God.  When we consider God’s holiness and power, we are filled with despair.  Yet when we consider God’s loving kindness and his abundant redemption, we are filled with profound hope, even assurance.

There are many circumstances in which we might find ourselves crying to the Lord out of the depths of our own souls — illness, tragedy, the death of a loved one, a national catastrophe.  Here, the lamentation appears to be about a sense of personal guilt.

The fact is, measured against God’s holiness who could stand? This is a consistent theme in Scripture, reemphasized in the New Testament as Paul reminds us in Romans 3:23:

 all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.

And yet, the power of God to redeem is also available to all who truly turn to the Lord in repentance, as the Psalmist calls upon the nation to do. For the Christian, this correlates with the Gospel’s solution to the universality of sin. Paul completes his thoughts from Romans 3:23.  Though all have sinned they are now:  

justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus;  whom God sent to be an atoning sacrifice, through faith in his blood, for a demonstration of his righteousness through the passing over of prior sins, in God’s forbearance (Romans 3:24-25).

God answers our sin with his steadfast love and mercy, expressed in Christ.

This is a SONrise  worth watching for! And we await his mercy and forgiveness with the same certainty with which the watchmen wait for the morning, assured that God will forgive us.

RESPOND: 

As an entry for  May 24, 1738, John Wesley wrote in his journal that he attended St Paul’s Cathedral in London. There he heard a choir sing the verses from Psalm 130:

Out of the deep have I called unto thee, O Lord: Lord, hear my voice. O let thine ears consider well the voice of my complaint. If thou, Lord, wilt be extreme to mark what is done amiss, O Lord, who may abide it? For there is mercy with thee; therefore shalt thou be feared. O Israel, trust in the Lord: For with the Lord there is mercy, and with him is plenteous redemption. And He shall redeem Israel from all his sins (Wesley’s Works).

At the time John Wesley was, experiencing what we might call a sense of alienation:

strange indifference, dullness, and coldness, and unusually frequent relapses into sin (Wesley’s Works).

And yet he was yearning for the assurance of faith that he saw in his new Moravian friends.  When he was invited to a Moravian  class meeting that evening, he really didn’t want to go.  But he went anyway.  And he was to write later that while someone was reading Luther’s preface to the Epistle to the Romans (which focused on the great doctrine of justification by faith):

About a quarter before nine, while he was describing the change which God works in the heart through faith in Christ, I felt my heart strangely warmed. I felt I did trust in Christ, Christ alone for salvation: And an assurance was given me, that he had taken away my sins, even mine, and saved me from the law of sin and death.

Only those who have become acutely aware of the reality of their distance from God can fully appreciate the miracle of God’s steadfast love and the power of redemption.

From my own experience, the transition from the lowest depths to the highest of heights is like that of one passing from darkness to light.

Thanks be to God that we can cry out to God even from the depths of our soul,  and in the worst of our human condition, and be confident that we are heard, forgiven, and redeemed!

Our Lord, hear my cries when I feel that I am in the depths, and raise me up through your steadfast love and mighty redemption.  Amen. 

PHOTOS:"Out Of the Depths130" by Hope Church North Park is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic license.

Psalm Reading for April 2, 2017

Psalm 130 Out of the DepthsSTART WITH SCRIPTURE:

Psalm 130

CLICK HERE TO READ SCRIPTURE ON BIBLEGATEWAY.COM

OBSERVE:

Psalm 130 is described as a “Song of Ascents.”  These were Psalms sung by Israelite pilgrims as they climbed the temple mount in Jerusalem. This Psalm begins as a lamentation full of penitence, but ends with hope.

The Psalmist cries Out of the depths to the Lord.  The metaphor here suggests imagery that is familiar to the avid Bible reader.  The depths in this metaphor might be the depths of the sea, or perhaps the Pit, otherwise known as Sheol, the shadowy underworld of the dead.

What the metaphor suggests to us, though, are the depths of sorrow and grief.  The Psalmist is expressing his deep sense of distance and estrangement from joy and from God.  However, the first verses also express the Psalmist’s hope that the Lord will hear his cries.

In verses 3-4, we get a glimpse of the source of the Psalmist’s distress.  He poses the question to Yahweh:

If you, Yah, kept a record of sins,
Lord, who could stand?

In one sense he is confessing his sin, but at the same time he is suggesting that in the face of God’s holiness no one could possibly be innocent.

And yet, he declares his confidence in the mercy of the Lord:

But there is forgiveness with you,
therefore you are feared.

This is an interesting statement.  The Psalmist seems to suggest that because God is forgiving, therefore he is worshiped by those whom he forgives.  Is this because of the forgiven sinner’s gratitude?  Or is Yahweh’s forgiveness so magnanimous that the sinner is overwhelmed with awe?

The Psalmist then turns to his own personal aspiration in verses 5 and 6 — he is longing for God’s forgiveness and presence:

I wait for Yahweh.
My soul waits.
I hope in his word.

He yearns for God’s self-disclosure, as his next imagery suggests:

My soul longs for the Lord more than watchmen long for the morning;
more than watchmen for the morning.

The repetition of these key lines is a Hebrew poetic technique that denotes a sense of emphasis.  The imagery of those watching for the morning may relate to the watchmen of the city who call out the hours, or to the Levites whose task it was to announce the sunrise on the Sabbath day or for a holy festival.  In other words, this suggests a highly anticipated event.  The Psalmist is eagerly and expectantly watching for the presence of the Lord and his mercy.

Finally, the Psalmist’s plea becomes corporate, imploring  all Israel:

 Israel, hope in Yahweh,
for with Yahweh there is loving kindness.

This Psalm begins with a sense of lamentation  but ends with a strong statement of faith about the nature of God’s character, power, and forgiveness:

With him is abundant redemption.
He will redeem Israel from all their sins.

APPLY:  

This Psalm suggests our paradoxical relationship with God.  When we consider God’s holiness and power, we are filled with despair.  Yet when we consider God’s loving kindness and his abundant redemption, we are filled with profound hope, even assurance.

There are many circumstances in which we might find ourselves crying to the Lord out of the depths of our own souls — illness, tragedy, the death of a loved one, a national catastrophe.  Here, the lamentation appears to be about a sense of personal guilt.

The fact is, measured against God’s holiness who could stand? This is a consistent theme in Scripture, reemphasized in the New Testament as Paul reminds us in Romans 3:23:

 all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.

And yet, the power of God to redeem is also available to all who truly turn to the Lord in repentance, as the Psalmist calls upon the nation to do. For the Christian, this is a correlation to the Gospel’s solution to the universality of sin. Paul completes his thoughts from Romans 3:23.  Though all have sinned they are now:  

justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus;  whom God sent to be an atoning sacrifice, through faith in his blood, for a demonstration of his righteousness through the passing over of prior sins, in God’s forbearance (Romans 3:24-25).

God answers our sin with his steadfast love and mercy, expressed in Christ.

This is a SONrise  worth watching for! And we await his mercy and forgiveness with the same certainty with which the watchmen wait for the morning, assured that God will forgive us.

RESPOND: 

As an entry for  May 24, 1738, John Wesley wrote in his journal that he attended St Paul’s Cathedral in London. There he heard a choir sing the verses from Psalm 130:

Out of the deep have I called unto thee, O Lord: Lord, hear my voice. O let thine ears consider well the voice of my complaint. If thou, Lord, wilt be extreme to mark what is done amiss, O Lord, who may abide it? For there is mercy with thee; therefore shalt thou be feared. O Israel, trust in the Lord: For with the Lord there is mercy, and with him is plenteous redemption. And He shall redeem Israel from all his sins (Wesley’s Works).

At the time John Wesley was, by his own description experiencing:

strange indifference, dullness, and coldness, and unusually frequent relapses into sin (Wesley’s Works).

And yet he was yearning for the assurance of faith that he saw in his new Moravian friends.  When he was invited to a Moravian  class meeting that evening, he really didn’t want to go.  But he went anyway.  And he was to write later that while someone was reading Luther’s preface to the Epistle to the Romans (which focused on the great doctrine of justification by faith):

About a quarter before nine, while he was describing the change which God works in the heart through faith in Christ, I felt my heart strangely warmed. I felt I did trust in Christ, Christ alone for salvation: And an assurance was given me, that he had taken away my sins, even mine, and saved me from the law of sin and death.

Only those who have become acutely aware of the reality of their distance from God can fully appreciate the miracle of God’s steadfast love and the power of redemption.

From my own experience, the transition from the lowest depths to the highest of heights is like that of one passing from darkness to light.

Thanks be to God that we can cry out to God even from the depths of our soul,  and in the worst of our human condition, and be confident that we are heard, forgiven, and redeemed!

Our Lord, hear my cries when I feel that I am in the depths, and raise me up through your steadfast love and mighty redemption.  Amen. 

PHOTOS:"Out Of the Depths130" by Hope Church North Park is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic license.

Psalm Reading for August 9, 2015

9501045375_f39a3bd458_oSTART WITH SCRIPTURE:

Psalm 130

CLICK HERE TO READ SCRIPTURE ON BIBLEGATEWAY.COM

CLICK HERE FOR .PDF FILE TO PRINT WITHOUT PICTURES

OBSERVE:

Psalm 130 begins as a Psalm of penitence, but ends with hope.

The Psalmist cries Out of the depths to the Lord.  The metaphor here suggests imagery that is familiar to the avid Bible reader.  The depths in this metaphor might be the depths of the sea, or perhaps the Pit, otherwise known as Sheol, the shadowy underworld of the dead.

What the metaphor suggests to us, though, are the depths of sorrow and grief.  The Psalmist is expressing his deep sense of distance and estrangement from joy and from God.  However, the first verses also express the Psalmist’s hope that the Lord will hear his cries.

In verses 3-4, we get a glimpse of the source of the Psalmist’s distress.  He poses the question of the Lord, If you, O Lord, should mark iniquities, Lord, who could stand?  In one sense he is confessing his sin, but at the same time he is suggesting that in the face of God’s holiness no one could possibly be innocent.

And yet, he declares his confidence in the mercy of the Lord: But there is forgiveness with you, so that you may be revered. This is an interesting statement.  The Psalmist seems to suggest that because God is forgiving, therefore he is worshipped by those whom he forgives.  Is this because of the forgiven sinner’s gratititude?

The Psalmist then turns to his own personal aspiration in verses 5-6 — he is longing for God’s forgiveness and presence: I wait for the Lord, my soul waits, and in his word I hope.

Is the word in which the Psalmist hopes the law that has been revealed to Moses, or is this a more general meaning of God’s word? In any event, he yearns for God’s self-disclosure, as his next imagery suggests:  my soul waits for the Lord more than those who watch for the morning, more than those who watch for the morning.

The repetition of these key lines is a Hebrew poetic technique that denotes a sense of emphasis.  The imagery of those watching for the morning may relate to the watchmen of the city who call out the hours, or to the Levites whose task it was to announce the sunrise on the Sabbath day or for a holy festival.  In other words, this suggests a highly anticipated event.  The Psalmist is eagerly and expectantly watching for the presence of the Lord and his mercy.

Finally, the Psalmist’s plea becomes corporate, imploring that all Israel might hope in the Lord!

This Psalm begins with a sense of lamentation  but ends with a strong statement of faith about the nature of God’s character, power, and forgiveness:

For with the Lord there is steadfast love, and with him is great power to redeem.  It is he who will redeem Israel from all its iniquities.

APPLY:  

This Psalm suggests our paradoxical relationship with God.  When we consider God’s holiness and power, we are filled with despair.  Yet when we consider God’s steadfast love and his great power to redeem, we are filled with profound hope, even assurance.

There are many circumstances in which we might find ourselves crying to the Lord out of the depths of our own souls: illness, tragedy, the death of a loved one, a national catastrophe.  Here, the lamentation appears to be about a sense of personal guilt.

The fact is, measured against God’s holiness who could stand? This is a consistent theme in scripture, reemphasized in the New Testament as Paul reminds us in Romans 3:23 all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.

And yet, the power of God to redeem is also available to all who truly turn to the Lord in repentance, as the Psalmist calls upon the nation to do. For the Christian, this is a correlation to the Gospel’s solution to the universality of sin, as we pick up Romans 3:24-25:  they are now justified by his grace as a gift, through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus,  whom God put forward as a sacrifice of atonement by his blood, effective through faith.

God answers our sin with his steadfast love and mercy.

This is a SONrise  worth watching for! And we await his mercy and forgiveness with the same certainty with which the watchmen wait for the morning, assured that God will forgive us.

RESPOND: 

Only those who have become acutely aware of the reality of their distance from God can fully appreciate the miracle of God’s steadfast love and the power of redemption.

From my own experience, the transition from the lowest depths to the highest of heights is like that of one passing from darkness to light.

Thanks be to God that we can cry out to God even from the depths of our soul,  and in the worst of our human condition, and be confident that we are heard, forgiven, and redeemed!

Our Lord, hear my cries when I feel that I am in the depths, and raise me up through your steadfast love and mighty redemption.  Amen. 


PHOTOS:
"Out Of the Depths130" by Hope Church North Park is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic license.



Psalm Reading for June 28, 2015

11102985234_2889829006_oSTART WITH SCRIPTURE:

Psalm 130

CLICK HERE TO READ SCRIPTURE ON BIBLEGATEWAY.COM

CLICK HERE FOR .PDF FILE TO PRINT WITHOUT PICTURES

OBSERVE:

The ascription on this Psalm describes it as “a Psalm of Ascents.”  These were Psalms sung by Israelite pilgrims as they climbed the temple mount in Jerusalem.

Perhaps so, but the tone of this Psalm is lamentation and longing.  The Psalm begins with imagery suggesting that the Psalmist is overwhelmed by deep waters of sorrow. He is crying out for the Lord to hear his voice.

Why is he crying out from the depths?  Verses 3 – 4 suggest that he is confessing his iniquity – – and yet, he also seems to be seeking to escape its consequences: If you, O Lord, should mark iniquities, Lord, who could stand?  In other words, the holiness of God is such an extreme contrast to human sin that none could be acceptable — if not for God’s mercy: But there is forgiveness with you, so that you may be revered.

The Psalmist then returns to the cry of his heart.  Because he is overwhelmed, because sin is not something that can be atoned for by the efforts of the sinner, he can only throw himself on God’s mercy:

I wait for the Lord, my soul waits,
and in his word I hope;
my soul waits for the Lord
more than those who watch for the morning,
more than those who watch for the morning.

And finally, the Psalmist ends with exaltation and confidence, calling on Israel to hope in the Lord.  The Lord, he says, is full of steadfast love, and has made provision to redeem the sinner because of his  great power to redeem.

God alone is he who will redeem Israel
from all its iniquities.

APPLY:  

Orthodox Christian theologians and saints agree on one thing: sin radically separates us from God.  God is absolute holiness, and sin absolutely separates us from him.

We are asked, “do you mourn over your sins? do you bewail your manifold sins and wickedness?” by those who have meditated on the human condition.

C.S. Lewis says “Christianity has nothing to say to those who do not acknowledge they are sinners.”

But there is immense hope in the Lord:  For with the Lord there is steadfast love,  and with him is great power to redeem. And reading the scriptures “backward” as it were, we recognize that the forgiveness of sins comes through the perfect sacrifice — Jesus the Lamb of God.

RESPOND: 

I am sometimes tempted to take sin lightly; to excuse myself with rationalizations; to whine “at least I’m not as bad as other people.”

The scriptures don’t leave this open to us.  Sin is radically divisive.  It divides us from God, from other people, and from who we are meant to be.

Thanks be to God, he has provided a way out for us.  Ephesians 2:3- 5 sums up the radical nature of sin, and God’s radical mercy: All of us once lived among them in the passions of our flesh, following the desires of flesh and senses, and we were by nature children of wrath, like everyone else.  But God, who is rich in mercy, out of the great love with which he loved us  even when we were dead through our trespasses, made us alive together with Christ —by grace you have been saved—

Lord, may your holiness convict me of my sin, hold up a mirror to my depravity, and convince me of my absolute dependence on your mercy. 

Jesus, lover of my soul,
Let me to Thy bosom fly,
While the nearer waters roll,
While the tempest still is high.
Hide me, O my Savior, hide,
Till the storm of life is past;
Safe into the haven guide;
Oh, receive my soul at last.

Other refuge have I none,
Hangs my helpless soul on Thee;
Leave, ah! leave me not alone,
Still support and comfort me.
All my trust on Thee is stayed,
All my help from Thee I bring;
Cover my defenseless head
With the shadow of Thy wing.

Amen and Amen!


PHOTOS:

"Psalm 130" by Walter Hoover is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic license.