Friday, September 18, 2009

It is amazing how the Psalms of the Old Testament so clearly speak to the issues of our lives today. They seem to pray for us, don’t they? They speak for us and moan for us, and complain for us, and cry out to God for us. They give us permission to work out our humanity in the relationship we have with God. They let us be human, in fact, and show us how to be real and honest and transparent before God. In the psalms the human meets up with the Divine, and we see that God is with us in the very stuff of our lives.

Psalm 116 is an example in this. Verse three tells us that the writer had faced many serious issues of life. “The cords of death encompassed and the terrors of Sheol came upon me; I found distress and sorrow.” Rather than abandoned God in his suffering and questions, the psalmist “called upon the name of the Lord” (vs. 4). Instead of using his pain as a reason to stand against the reality of God, he took his pain into the very heart of God and proclaimed there, “Gracious is the Lord, and righteous; yes, our God is compassionate” (vs. 5).

In this, we see that who the Lord is to the psalmist saturates the very heart of what it means for him to live in this world. His testimony is, “I love the Lord, because He hears my voice and my supplications” (vs. 1). Life was just as hard for him as it is for everybody, but he lived is life within the life of God.

Where do we live our lives? How influential is God in the very real stuff of our daily living? May God help us to live and move and have our being within His very life. The reality of life in this world may or may not change, but being in a personal and vital relation with God through faith defines life in a fresh new ways for us. It caused the psalmist to say, “Return to your rest, o my soul, for the Lord has dealt bountifully with you” (vs. 7).

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