July 30 Sermon: My Salvation, My God
We’ve all desired something and desired it deeply. These longings that we have can often end up consuming our thoughts and become our focus. Often this goes beyond just what we think about, these desires can often end up directing our lives, even without us even realizing it. It frames not only how we think but it can cause us to act in different ways. These yearnings often also shape our loves and the path of our lives soon follow. This is why it is so important that we are mindful of our thoughts. This has been true in any time but as I was pondering this concept the past week I was once again drawn to the affluence of our time.
Dwell in the Word: Psalm 13
Psalm 13 has us in another psalm of David and in this chapter of the psalter we find David asking some questions. Once again, the psalmist is clearly facing a difficult circumstance of some kind and here we see a pretty high level of desperation. The questions David is asking shows that he might be to a bit of a breaking point. When we read the first verse you have to not only appreciate the honesty of David but I also appreciate that these questions are in scripture. We know that God does not forget his people. We know that he is slow to anger and abounding with steadfast love.
Dwell in the World: Psalm 12
We find ourselves in Psalm 12 and once again we see the psalmist feeling overwhelmed with the state of the world around him. Right away with the first three words here in this chapter we have David asking for rescue from Yahweh. In this instance it isn’t David calling out to have his health restored in a sickness and he isn’t asking to be saved from a military attack or coup. Instead, the concern that we see being expressed here is that the godly one is gone. David says that those who are faithful have vanished from among the children of man.
July 23 Sermon: Lead Me to the Rock
There are times in life where we just feel like giving up and like there is no point in us continuing with the path that we are on. Whether these are substantial, life altering decisions or frustrations we have building up over small things. We have all gotten to the point in our lives where we want to give up or change course. We have seen situations like this in another psalm that we have looked at this summer. In that psalm we saw that the writer just wanted to give up and die but God provided rescue and sustained the psalmist that he might bring glory to his name.
Dwell in the Word: Psalm 11
We come to the eleventh chapter of the Psalter and we have another psalm that is attributed to David. Here we see some strong imagery about how David understands his relationship to Yahweh.
As we have seen many times so far in the first ten chapters and will continue to see as we move through the Psalms, the occasion for the writing of this psalm is a time of turmoil and where the psalmist is under attack of some kind. And we start out here without any indication that anything is wrong.
July 16 Sermon: Surely
Let’s be honest. As you read through the pages of scripture there are many times where you come upon passages that can make us feel uncomfortable. And this is only naturally because there are difficult passages in scripture that speak of things that can come up against many of our modern sensibilities. We live in a time that is very different than the one in which the Bible was written. Things were naturally very different and even some simple customs might seem off to us just because it is nothing like anything we would ever even imagine doing. There are also times where the way sin has been softened in our culture even makes us as Christians balk at some of the bold statements about what is sinful.
July 9 Sermon: Not Even One
There is a spiritual and theological truth that is very easy to objectively verify. That truth is the doctrine of original sin. You see it everywhere when you observe the world around you. Sin and depravity are everywhere. You can observe it in the big problems of the world when we see moral decay all over the place. You can see it in the issues that happen closer to home as well with a plethora of examples we could list of things that show us the world is broken. We can see it in our homes when we have struggles and conflict within our own families but at the end of the day, we must also acknowledge that the greatest proof of this depravity is the sin that we know is in our own hearts.
Dwell in the Word: Psalm 10
We come to Psalm 10 and we see a question that many of us have most likely asked. God, why do you seem so far away and why are you hiding yourself in the worst of times? You may have asked this question in time of personal difficulty or when someone you know was experiencing hardship. You may have also had this question come to mind when there was something going on in the world that you were deeply troubled about. This is something all of us have considered and it is a blessing that we see these things talked about openly in the pages of scripture because there is an answer to these thoughts that can plague our minds.
Dwell in the Word: Psalm 9
As we continue our way through the Psalms we once again see the connection between the praises offered to God and what God has done for his people.
We see this right away in verse one when the Psalmist says that he will recount all of the LORD’s wonderful deeds. As we continue through this Psalm we see a list of things that God has done for David and it is an impressive list. You can easily understand why David has sat down to write this song. As I said, the stuff that David mentions that God has done for him is pretty impressive and it is all stuff that is related to David as king. This list of the deeds of God here isn’t that something small has happened and David is happy. He didn’t pray for a new bike for his birthday and he got one. It is also important that we understand that this faithfulness to David is also a faithfulness to the people of God. David is more than just an ordinary earthly power. He is the anointed of God and that anointing is not just that he has the authority as a king over a particular plot of land in the middle east. The faithfulness of God to David points to the faithfulness of God that will come in the one who will one day descend from David. When we talk about God being faithful it encompasses all these things and that is important as we consider how the Psalm applies to us, but we will get to that a little later. Let’s consider this list of things that David is recounting.
Dwell in the Word: Psalm 8
Of the psalms we have looked at so far it is likely that Psalm 8 is the one that we are most familiar with. It is one of the psalms that you come to and you read through it and discover that several phrases that are used in prayers and songs come from this Psalm. And of course we do, this is a psalm of praise with majestic language not only about the glory of God but it also sets out how amazing it is that the maker of heaven and earth cares for us.
Right away with the first verse we see a statement that we say in praise along with the Psalmist: O LORD, our Lord, how majestic is your name in all the earth. As we read this you may have notice that in the original language this isn’t repetitive like it is in the English. As you’ve heard me mention before in our English bibles we get an indication of when the proper name of God is being used in the Old Testament. When we see all caps used for the word Lord it means that in the Hebrew it is the proper name of God, Yahweh, being used. You may have also noticed that the second time the word lord is used in English it isn’t in all caps. There in the original language it is not the proper name of God but the Hebrew word for lord, which is adonai.
Dwell in the Word: Psalm 7
Here in the seventh Psalm we find David proclaiming that he takes refuge in the LORD. We have seen so far that David’s life is anything but ordinary. As the anointed one of God he is pursued by those who would do him harm in order to take his position of authority. As we think about these circumstances that the King of Israel might get himself in it would be easy to find the solution in building up earthly armies and resting on the military strength and strategy that you can come up with. Despite our natural human tendency to find our strength within ourselves we find that David finds his refuge in God. Yahweh is the one who will save him from these assorted difficulties that he encounters. We see this trust that David has in the LORD in verse one when he says O Lord, my God, in you do I take my refuge. His refuge isn’t in bows or swords. His trust is in God. The LORD is the fortress that he will use to remain safe and as it continues we get the idea of how serious the situation is for David. If God does not shelter him from this storm he is experiencing he believes they may tear apart his soul like a lion and he will be torn to pieces.
June 18 Sermon: I Love the Lord
There are many different types of prayers that we find in the book of Psalms. As I mentioned last week, we see everything from prayers of praise to prayers calling for harsh judgment on the enemies of God. This week we are looking at Psalm 43 and it is a prayer crying out for deliverance. No matter how well off your life has been, my guess is that at some point you have prayed to God for deliverance from a situation. It could be something as simple as praying that God help you through a stressful situation or it could have been a prayer asking to be delivered from the most intense circumstances of your life. Regardless, deliverance is something I think that we have all prayed for at some point in our life. And in those type of situations, we have all probably been to a point where we have felt like we just wanted to give up.
Dwell in the Word: Psalm 6
We see once again that the Psalmist is in a very desperate state of affairs. We see, as verse 1 comes about, that he is begging God, Rebuke me not in your anger nor discipline me in your wrath. He is asking for mercy. In fact, in verse 2, we see that he's asked God to be gracious to him because he is languishing. He's in a desperate state of affairs to the point that his bones are troubled. In fact, verse three, My soul is greatly troubled, but you, O Lord, how long... In other words, he is wondering how long is God going to allow this to happen? How long is this state of affairs going to be the way that His life is because this is getting deep down into Him? Notice, My bones are troubled. Now, I don't know if you've ever had something go wrong where you were grieving or you felt it down within your bones physically, but we know what this phrase means, and there are ways in which we grieve and things that we feel that affect parts of us that have nothing to do with what we've experienced, right? We can feel it deep down in our bones.
June 11 Sermon: Send Out Your Light
There are many different types of prayers that we find in the book of Psalms. As I mentioned last week, we see everything from prayers of praise to prayers calling for harsh judgment on the enemies of God. This week we are looking at Psalm 43 and it is a prayer crying out for deliverance. No matter how well off your life has been, my guess is that at some point you have prayed to God for deliverance from a situation. It could be something as simple as praying that God help you through a stressful situation or it could have been a prayer asking to be delivered from the most intense circumstances of your life. Regardless, deliverance is something I think that we have all prayed for at some point in our life. And in those type of situations, we have all probably been to a point where we have felt like we just wanted to give up.
Dwell in the Word: Psalm 5
When we think of the Psalms, what do we normally think of? We think of Psalms of praise, right? The idea of praising God because this is a Book of Praise. It's a Book of prayers. That's what we expect. But we really haven't seen much of that yet, have we? Sure, there is ascribing of glory and honor to God, but we have seen a lot of crying out to God, haven't we? We see that here in this Psalm as well. The Psalmist asks for God to hear and consider his groaning, to give attention to the sound of his cry. The Psalmist, and we see here that it is David, he is experiencing very negative things, and he is going to God each day, calling out to him and asking for help.
Dwell in the Word: Psalm 4
Landing in the fourth chapter of the psalter, we once again see the psalmist calling out for help. He expects God to come and to rescue him. We see this right away in verse 1, Answer me when I call, O God, of my righteousness. He understands who God is. He calls out to him, understanding that this God is the God of his righteousness. He doesn't have this on his own. He needs God. And he also acknowledges what has happened in the past. You have given me relief. When I was in distress, you have answered me before, so I am trusting you to answer me again. And there is this cry here, Be gracious to me and hear my prayer. In other words, the Psalmist knows that it is a gracious act of God that he hears the prayers of his people. We don't deserve an Almighty, righteous God to hear us, but creatures of the dirt who were in rebellion against him, but we know that he is gracious and he will listen because he has listened in the past. And we see also in verse 3 that we can know that God has a particular people that he cares for, that he looks after, that he does something special with.
Dwell in the Word: Psalm 3
As we come now to Psalm chapter three, we are getting a little bit different taste than we had in Psalm one and two. In the first Psalm, we saw that there was the blessed one, and we saw how that pointed to the Lord Jesus Christ. Then we saw the futility of opposing the anointed one of God. Now we are seeing that David is experiencing some very difficult situations, and he is calling out to God. We see here in the notes that this Psalm is about when David fled from Absalom. Well, that was a terrible situation. There was a lot of bad things going on in the life of David there, but what is his strength? What is he looking to? He is not looking to himself. He is seeing all that is going on around him, and he is realizing his hope is in God. And in fact, as we read this chapter, we see that there are so many foes that are coming after him, and they're scoffing him. They're saying there's no salvation for him and God. The idea here is that God does not seem to be on his side, that there is an opposition to David, and so he must not be the anointed one of God.
June 4 Sermon: Who Is Like the Lord?
There are some things that we find really hard to describe. The world is packed with all kind of things that can leave us speechless. We could struggle to find words because what we have witnessed is incredible and you struggle to believe what you have seen. Maybe it is because you feel that you can’t do what you have seen justice and so you stumble over your words in an attempt to plumb the depths of your vocabulary to get the right words. Or perhaps you can’t find the words because you and the person you are trying to explain it to don’t have categories to frame what you are trying to explain, and you just can’t get on the same page to really describe it well.
Dwell in the Word: Psalm 2
As we come to Psalm 2 today, it's important that we remember Psalm 1, this idea of the blessed one. We understood that the blessed one spoken of there is ultimately pointing us to Jesus, and he unlocks the Psalms for us. We can see that not only in Psalm one, we see that theme continuing here as we come to Psalm two. This Psalm starts out with a question, and it's a great question.
Why do the nation's rage in the people's plot in vain? In other words, why would the people set themselves up against God, against the blessed one, against the Messiah. Why would they go against Him? Why would people go up against God?
Dwell in the Word: Psalm 1
We come to Psalm 1 today and begin our journey through the psalter, and we see this description of the blessed man, the one who walks not in the council of the wicked nor stands in the way of sinners and doesn't sit in the seat of scoffers. As we look at this and if we stopped at that first verse, our idea here would be that this blessed man is blessed because of what he avoids. Yes, that is absolutely true. We want to avoid the wicked and sinners, and we want to make sure that we are not those who scoff. But at the same time, there is an active element to this. The one who is blessed delights in the law of the Lord.