This month I want to spend some time with the Psalms –
After two months of Practical Faith – lets explore a little bit what Walter Brueggemann calls "the most reliable theological, pastoral and liturgical resource given to us in the biblical tradition. In season and out of season, generation after generation, faithful men and women turn to the Psalms as a most helpful resource for conversation with God about the things that matter the most."
There are 150 Psalms and they are often poetic as they express the gamut of our speech from profound praise to anger and doubt. And this month I am going to lift up three of them.. They represent the different catagories of Psalms – according to Walter Brueggemann
Today’s Psalm 33 – is a Psalm of orientation – which represents a confident serene settlement of faith issues. As we say in one of our most common table graces: God is great and God is Good
Life is well ordered by God – and it is in many ways a NO Surprise world – and therefore a no fear world. Invite you to open your Bibles and follow along
Organization of the Psalm - 22 verses, the number of letters in the Hebrew alphabet. This is not a classic alphabetic acrostic (each verse beginning with a successive Hebrew letter) but a case can be made that the versification is deliberately intended to show the coherence of the psalm’s message. God is great and God is good and God is in control.
And it reminds us that God has order in this life - we see it every day as the sun comes up – we see it in the seasons of the year – and the seasons of life – a time to be born and a time to die.
And so the Psalms are God’s people praying to God and this kind of Psalm is a Psalm which is God’s people praising God – it is about the primacy of praise.
Psalm 33 is a psalm without a title. We do not know who the author of the psalm was nor the occasion of its composition, but we do know that this psalm exhorts the people of God to praise the Lord with passion, freshness, and skill.
1Rejoice in the Lord, O you righteous. Praise befits the
upright.
2Praise the Lord with the lyre; make melody to him
with the harp of ten strings.
3Sing to him a
new song; play skillfully on the strings, with loud shouts.
This exhortation is given in six commands in the
first three verses: Sing joyfully, praise the Lord, make music to him, sing to
him a new song, play skillfully, and shout for joy. – And then the rest of the Psalm tells us why . First, God is Steadfast –
4For the word of
the Lord is upright, and all his
work is done in faithfulness.
5He loves
righteousness and justice; the earth is full of the steadfast love of the Lord.
God can be counted on – three times - steadfast love, hesed – changes
around us, changes within us, changes in relationships , changes in job
circumstances, changes in weather, changes in the stock market. Change is
constant – but God is steadfastAnd steadfast means with us in our goodness and our badness, in our responsibility and in our times of rebellion, And it means loving us, forgiving us, strengthening us, healing us. Steadfast -
Second, God is Creating–
- 6By the word of the Lord the heavens were made, and all their host by the breath of his mouth.
- 7He gathered the waters of the sea as in a bottle; he put the deeps in storehouses.
- 8Let all the earth fear the Lord; let all the inhabitants of the world stand in awe of him.
- 9For he spoke, and it came to be; he commanded, and it stood firm.
“Who made the world? Who made the swan, and the black bear? Who made the grasshopper,
This grasshopper I mean – the one who has flung herself out of the grass
The one who is eating sugar out of my hand
Who is moving her jaws back and forth instead of up and down
Who is gazing around with her enormous and complicated eyes.
Now she lifts her pale forearms and thoroughly washer her face
Now she snaps her wings open and floats away
I don’t know exactly what a prayer is.
I do know how to pay attention…..
why is it that we find peace and illumination in a walk in the woods – we become aware of the creating work of God – there is something so deep about it all - may we pay attention!
Finally, God gives Oversight –
- 13The Lord looks down from heaven; he sees all humankind.
- 14From where he sits enthroned he watches all the inhabitants of the earth—
- 15he who fashions the hearts of them all, and observes all their deeds.
looking
over us – from a distance – no where we can go that God is not seeing us.
Not in a Santa Claus judgmental way. In a way of care, concern, God is
free of the world and utterly attentive to it and to us
Psalm 139 is about the unescapable God Begins like this:Lord, you have searched me and known me.
2 You know when I sit down and when I rise up;
you discern my thoughts from far away.
3 You search out my path and my lying down,
and are acquainted with all my ways
And so, for Israel – they need not be anxious – there is confidence in God’s love, creating work and attention to us! We pray this today – joining Christians who have prayed and sung the psalms for 3000 years. Because something happens to us when we say these words and remember this God
And here it is – our praise enables our spiritual sight. Our praise of God lifts us up beyond our little lives, our provincial concerns, our fears, our anxieties And we start to Read God in creation – our praise enables our spiritual sight.
So that when we sit at the bedside of an aging parent or friend and they leave us – to go to the next destination – we remember that this is part of the circle of life. That there is birth, life, death, new life. It is a circle – it is not a tragedy – it is all God’s plan for life.
I love that All Saint's Day we remember and celebrate those who have touched our lives. I love imagining that this is one of the times (because of our attention to such things) that the veil between the daily, ordinary and spiritual is very thin. And in our spiritual sight feel that they are not so far from us.
We celebrate all saints and this psalm and know that we are all saints in our own way, worthy of love and memory. And with god – we are passing that love along.
And so we praise God through psalms like this – so that we can see God and the new world that God is creating. And the climax of this Psalm is found in verse 18 which is translated here as TRULY – but better as BEHOLD – the eye of Yahweh is on the faithful - - those who fear him and who HOPE IN HIS Steadfast love
18Truly the eye
of the Lord is on those who fear
him, on those who hope in his steadfast love, 19to deliver
their soul from death, and to keep them alive in famine.
It is our faith – our praise – our looking up pass the mess of the moment to
recognize the HOLY GOD who is here It made me think about a man who recently had cataract surgery. He realized he needed the surgery when he could no longer see where his ball went as he was playing golf – he has he had priorities straight! Once the cataracts were removed, his vision was a lot crisper and clearer.
It’s easy for us to develop cataracts over our vision – layers of worry, fear, cynicism, expectations of how things ought to work and then disappointment when they don’t work out that way – which can cloud our vision so that we cannot see clearly what is in fact there (just like a golf ball which was someplace out there – hopefully on the green) God’s kingdom, God present and at work in our world.
And the more we live this new song praising a new world of God’s justice, the more we see evidence of that new world around us And the more we sing and the more we sing, the more we do and the cycle just keeps going.
I have made an announcement this month – about my upcoming retirement – which I see to be part of the circle of life For a while I have had a sense of God breaking through and telling me that it is time – to prepare myself for the next chapter in my life – which will not be full time ministry any more.
At the same time, the God is preparing someone to be your next pastor - someone younger with new ideas and ways of growing disciples and reaching out to share the gospel.
And I know God is s preparing you to go through the stages of grief and excitement that this kind of change brings to a church.
And this is – of course the circle of life. And this is part of God’s work in this world.
We don’t sing songs of praise for God without ignoring the reality of the world, - that change is hard for all of us - but in the face of those realities singing this song reminds us that God is steadfast, creating something new and watching over us.
The Psalm concludes the words that we all need
20Our soul waits for the Lord;
he is our help and shield.
21Our heart is glad in him, because we trust in his holy
name.
22Let
your steadfast love, O Lord, be
upon us, even as we hope in you. Let us continue to be people of faith. To go back to the very first verse – Praise befits the upright May we praise our God and live with our eyes looking for his presence
God’s steadfast love anchors us through all the changes that are part of the seasons of life
God is great – God is good. Amen
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