Threads from Henry's Web

Tag: Psalm 119

  • Psalm 119:124 – Grace

    Psalm 119:124 – Grace

    Deal graciously with your servant
    and teach me your statutes.

    I’m going to use the words of this verse, written long before there was such a thing as a Christian, to discuss a peculiarly Christian issue: Sanctification.

    Sanctification is a long word for becoming or being made holy, and “holy” is a word that we’re often not that sure about, though we act like we are. We can have a high concept of our own holiness, which usually manifests itself as self-righteousness. “Look how holy I am! I’m closer to God than you are!”

    We quote or paraphrase Ephesians 2:8, “For it is by grace that you are saved and not of works, lest anyone should boast.” But at the same time we have a picture of what a good Christian should be, and we’re quick to judge other people who don’t fit into our vision of Christian behavior.

    The result is that we’re often judging our salvation and that of others based on our perception of their holiness, or on what they have done. This is the unfortunate result of us being afraid to talk about works lest people think we’re basing our salvation on our works.

    But look at this verse. The word I’ve translated “graciously” is more literally (and commonly) translated “lovingkindness,” which is God’s love given to us. I think “graciously” gets the point. So when God deals graciously with us, what does God do?

    God teaches us statutes, rules to live by.

    You see, salvation is not just a gift of getting out of whatever nasty results we can expect in the next lives based on our behavior. It’s not a “get out of hell free card.” Well, actually it is, but it’s so very much more. And you can see the same divine approach with Israel. Israel is called to be God’s people. They become God’s people not because of something they’ve done. Passages from Genesis 12 when Abraham is called through Deuteronomy emphasize this.

    The rules come afterward. What is their purpose? Their purpose is to produce a holy people. That’s the plan. So I guess we ought to get busy and get this sanctification thing done, right?

    Not even close. Becoming a holy people is also God’s gift, which starts with the gracious gift of God’s law, carefully packaged to fit the circumstances of those who receive it. “Be holy for I am holy,” is repeated over and over in Leviticus. It’s a call, but the call is to receive the gift. When King David is called to be a man after God’s own heart (1 Samuel 13:14), it is not because he as done everything perfectly, or because he will lead a perfect life, but rather because he will be open to God and allow God to work in and through him.

    “Teach me your statutes” is a call to the one who empowers everything in the universe to empower one’s own life.

    What can God do in you today?

    (Featured image generated by Jetpack AI.)

  • Psalm 119:123 – Patience

    Psalm 119:123 – Patience

    My eyes have failed looking for your salvation,
    and for your righteous word.

    Any number of people have told me that I shouldn’t pray for patience. If I do, God will doubtless send me all kinds of trials and keep me waiting so as to teach me patience by experience.

    I think it doesn’t matter if you pray for patience or not. You’re going to get an opportunity to learn patience by experience.

    The psalmist is living, well, life! I think we can all relate. From childhood trips when we doubtless drove our parents nuts by asking “are we there yet?” to expectations of other people, to our hopes even in old age for new blessings to come–and even to looking for the end of long sentences–we have opportunities to practice patience.

    Usually we don’t. If you keep wondering why your patience is being tested so much, you might consider whether you are actually gaining patience or just repeating our experience of extended impatience.

    But one of the experiences of Christian life, and yes, the lives of people of other faiths, is that things we hope for, whether they are secular in nature or the result of a perceived promise by God is delay.

    One of the big ones for Christians is the wait for the second coming of Jesus. How are we doing with that?

    Well, I grew up as a Seventh-day Adventist. Back in 1844 (well, first in 1843), Adventists calculated that Jesus would return on October 22, 1844. The history books, not to mention we’re still hanging out on this planet, suggest that prediction wasn’t right.

    I don’t bring up SDAs in order to laugh at them, but rather to point out just how normal is this is. People continuously set dates for the second coming. Many more don’t set dates, but come up with various reasons to declare that the second coming is “really near” now. We’re obviously in the last days, because [list of things we don’t like about the world here].

    In growing up I remember evangelists coming by regularly, and in order to provide the appearance of an audience when really very few visitors showed up, we’d all attend. After a time I started to notice a problem. At one point I remember wondering why Russia (the USSR back then) wasn’t part of the prophecies of the end, considering how much the older folks talked about it. A couple of years later, Russia suddenly appeared in one of these evangelistic meetings as a really-truly sign that the end was really near.

    Our eyes just get worn out reading all the explanations of why the end hasn’t come yet and why we ought to keep hoping for it.

    There’s a good side to staying on the watch for God’s promises. I think that’s what the psalmist is pointing out. No matter what has happened, no matter how long he has had to look, he has kept hoping. That is a good thing.

    Trying to make up the result you want–not so much. Perhaps we would be better to “evangelize” about the good news that Jesus loves you now and invites you into his family, rather than trying to pin down the time when he appears in the clouds. Making new predictions can just be wearing on our eyes and our hopes.

    And as someone pointed out to me today, the one thing we can’t do is give up. Ultimately that is what patience is about. We practice patience when we keep moving forward and don’t give up.

    What opportunities will you have to practice patience today? Will you take advantage of them, or will you just demonstrate your skill at impatience?

  • Psalm 119:122 – Are You Beastly?

    Psalm 119:122 – Are You Beastly?

    Be the assurance for your servant’s well-being;
    Don’t let the arrogant oppress me.

    Do God’s rules for living actually work?

    This is one of those questions that usually gets a pious answer. “Of course they do!” But do we really mean it?

    When we see a crisis, do we turn to God or do we turn to human answers: human politics, human authority, self-reliance, and self-serving?

    I think these things we should each consider seriously. There are so many individual choices concerning which we can disagree. My father spent World War II in a camp in Canada, planting trees. He did not believe it was right for a Christian to bear arms, even in defense of his country. His government did not give him the option of serving in the medical corps. So he planted trees.

    I, on the other hand, served 10 years in the United States Air Force voluntarily. I was not in the medical corps. I believed then as I believe now that a democratic nation requires a military establishment that carries out the lawful orders of the civilian authorities.

    It would probably take some time to debate this, and I doubt that I would come to agreement with a pacifist. But I respect my dad’s position and I respect the position of even more committed pacifists. When they ask what Jesus would do, they can’t imagine participating in warfare as an option.

    The question I’m asking today is simply whether you have considered whether you are carrying out the vision of Jesus, or when things get difficult to you resort to the methods of the enemy?

    In a post I wrote on Revelation 12 & 13 some time ago, I made a list of “beastly attributes.” Here they are:

    1. Tears down others – 12:4, drawing 1/3 of the stars. Beasts and dragons rarely fall alone.
    2. Consumes and destroys – 12:4
    3. Is not the greatest power – 12:8. Note that verses 8 & 9 compile a great deal of what is now Christian belief about the Devil. The imagery hear draws on a number of passages in Hebrew scripture.
    4. Persecuter – 12:13
    5. Sweeps people/things away – 12:15. It’s humorous to note here that there is a single Greek word for “carried away by a river.” There’s got to be some history for that word!
    6. Angry with those not on his side – 12:17.
    7. Speaks blasphemy – 13:1,5.
    8. Though not the geatest power (see #3), operates with great authority – 13:2.
    9. Puts anger into action in war with the “other side” – 13:7.
    10. Wants all the attention and worship – 13:13.
    11. Deceives – 13:14.
    12. Applies force to get worship – 13:16-17

    I then (May 22, 2024) asked whether we, in the church, are making an image to the beast. Beasts want images.

    In that post I asked the question:

    So what image do we display through our churches? When someone looks at the reality, is the beast behind the image, or the lamb?

    I’d extend that question to this: When someone looks at your life, do they see an image being built to the beast, or to the lamb?

    Let God make the right image in you today. (Philippians 2:12-13).

  • Psalm 119:121 – Don’t Let Them Get Me!

    Psalm 119:121 – Don’t Let Them Get Me!

    I have done what is just and right,
    Don’t let my oppressors get me!

    My translation is a little more informal today. I get to do that since I’m not writing a translation of Psalm 119, but rather meditating on each verse.

    Do you sometimes feel like people are after you? I do!

    But for me it’s not people who are enemies or oppressors. It’s friends, clients, and customers, and even potential candidates for one of those relationships.

    I recall coming in a few days ago and telling Jody, “I could deal with people not needing me any more.” I had been answering computer questions, Bible questions, and questions about publishing for a couple of hours and hadn’t been able to get away from my phone and computer screen even for a moment of thought.

    When that happens, I start to wonder if I’m giving people useful answers or even understanding their questions. I begin to wonder if I’m giving the right person the answer. I come to a point where it’s imperative that I ignore the phone, the emails, and texts for a period of time and reorient myself.

    Not one of those people were actually enemies. They were, in fact, all people whose relationship I value.

    I wonder how often we drive ourselves, or more precisely I drive myself, to these lengths, not by what others expect of us but by our own unrealistic expectations of our own performance. I know at the moment that there are many things that it would be good for me to get done that I can’t. I am a caregiver as well as carrying on my business and doing some ministry work apart from that. That means some things don’t get done.

    I think our verse refers more to an appeal to God for protection based on one’s efforts to do right, protection from those who are hostile.

    But what about protection from friends? No, that’s not really it. How about protections from myself? Lord, don’t let me fall into my own oppressive hands!

    Yep, I’ve strayed from the verse, but I can’t resist another note advocating meditation. For me, the time when God speaks to me is when I’m meditating on a passage of scripture, and sometimes that meditation leads me well away from the direct meaning of the verse.

    Over the last few weeks I have more and more frequently been telling people that I can’t answer right now and then setting a time when I can. And you know what? Nobody has gotten upset about it at all. They’re all willing to work with me in order to fit their particular questions/needs into my schedule.

    Who is the oppressor? I am.

    Lord, deliver me from me!

    (Featured image generated by Jetpack AI, and very slightly edited by me.)

  • Psalm 119:120

    Psalm 119:120

    I get goosebumps from dread of you,
    I’m afraid of your judgments.

    C. S. Lewis has a wonderful quote on this, which is fairly well known. I suspect, however, that many people don’t know the context.

    Sometimes this question has been pressed upon our minds with the purpose of exciting fear. I do not think that is its right use. I am, indeed, far from agreeing with those who think all religious fear barbarous and degrading and demand that it should be banished from the spiritual life. Perfect love, we know, casteth out fear. But so do several other things—ignorance, alcohol, passion, presumption, and stupidity. It is very desirable that we should all advance to that perfection of love in which we shall fear no longer; but it is very undesirable, until we have reached that stage, that we should allow any inferior agent to cast out our fear.

    C. S. Lewis, “The World’s Last Night” in The World’s Last Night

    This question is asked in the context of concern about the second coming or the end of the world, however you see it. Lewis argues that an emotion of fear would not be helpful in that case, because the valuable results of a rational fear cannot be sustained for a long time. I would argue that repeated claims that the end of the world is around the corner make fear ineffective.

    There is valuable fear. That’s the kind of fear that keeps us from doing stupid things. Well, sometimes it fails to keep us from doing stupid things. That’s what Lewis is talking about when he says that ignorance, alcohol, passion, presumption, and stupidity can cast out our fear. I recall quite a number of times I did stupid things. In fact, even though I have never been drunk, there were a number of times when I did stupid things with people who were drunk, because I was part of they group, and hey!, the stupid things were fun!

    I figure the Lord had to have angels working over time to allow me to attain maturity. Not necessarily intelligence and good judgment, but survival, at least!

    There’s another way in which fear can be destructive, and that’s when it’s random fear. A child who is abused by a parent and can’t find a way out is threatened with destruction by the fear. The fear is constant, whether the abuse is currently taking place or not.

    Evil is the source of that kind of fear. Effective fear is consistent with reality and helps direct our paths.

    Often, people try to remove “fear” from the “fear of the Lord.” There’s a good point to this. There are those who live in fear of God as they would fear an angry, abusive father. That is not the fear of the Lord. But there is a healthy fear. The God who made gravity made it such that gravity will get you at the bottom of a cliff. You should fear jumping off.

    In our verse today what strikes me is the personal closeness of this fear. There are several ways to translate the Hebrew words, especially of the first line. But what is clear is that the fear is producing a reaction in his body. He is reacting to the presence of God and the realization of who he is and who God is.

    But then, in the presence of God, there is the perfect love. Continuing in the presence of God will cast out that fear, replacing it with a realization of love.

  • Psalm 119:119 – Scorn

    Psalm 119:119 – Scorn

    You hold in scorn all the wicked of the land,
    therefore I love your testimonies.

    I will confess that the lasts several verses seem to have given me less elevated thoughts. Holding people in scorn often sounds like a pretty good idea. How can those idiots do such stupid things. Not just wicked, but stupid! God is right to be scornful of them!

    At this point, I recall something I say all the time about teaching an preaching: Be sure to target the text at yourself before you target it at others.

    There’s a second issue as well. Why is it that I read this text as one of the good guys? Now you might quickly say that the author is speaking as one of the good guys. I’m not so sure of that. He frequently invokes God’s aid, and as I’ve done a few times thus far, I can point to verse 176 – “I have gone astray like a lost sheep …”

    Now I imagine there’s a sense in which the psalmist does regard himself as one of the good guys. He is, after all, one of God’s chosen people. He has God’s Torah with statutes, testimonies, commands, and yes, the stories of God working with the people. So he’s in the family. That’s one thing. At the same time, he has shown considerable awareness of shortcomings, and of his need for God to work with and on him in dealing with those.

    So we could view this verse in a completely different way. Not a condemnation of “them” and a congratulation of self, but rather as an accurate observation. God doesn’t look well on the wicked. The very laws of nature tend to punish those who will not cooperate. But the way the psalmist is advocating for avoiding this is love for God’s testimonies.

    I suspect this latter has a great deal to do with what the Psalmist is saying. And one of the elements I see in the use of “testimonies” here is that look at how God has acted.

    To reference another Psalm I love, Psalm 78:

    He established a decree in Jacob,
    and appointed a law in Israel,
    which he commanded our ancestors
    to teach to their children;
    that the next generation might know them,
    the children yet unborn,
    and rise up and tell them to their children,
    so that they should set their hope in God,
    and not forget the works of God,
    but keep his commandments;
    and that they should not be like their ancestors,
    a stubborn and rebellious generation,
    a generation whose heart was not steadfast,
    whose spirit was not faithful to God.

    Psalm 78:5-8 (NRSV)

    I think Psalm 119 as a whole is doing precisely this.

    What will you pass on to the next generation, whether biological or spiritual?

    (Featured image generated by Jetpack AI and edited slightly by me.)

  • Psalm 119:118 – Deceit

    Psalm 119:118 – Deceit

    You disdain all those who stray from your statutes,
    for in falsehood is their deceit.

    I spent most of my time thinking about translation issues today, because this verse is rather difficult. You’ll notice the second line, which could be literally translated, “for lying is their lie.” Let’s look at some other solutions.

    You reject all who stray from your statutes,
    for their whole talk is malice and lies.

    REB

    You spurn all who go astray from your statutes;
    for their cunning is in vain.

    NRSV

    You treat with contempt all those who revolt against your statutes,
    because their thoughts are crooked.

    LXX (my translation)

    Suspended have you all who stray from your statutes
    for falsehood is their deceit

    Bob MacDonald, Seeing the Psalter, p. 386

    Bob provides the following note: “118 suspended, סלה (slh) the same letters as in the untranslatable pause or suspense in a psalm, and used of wisdom suspending in the balance, weighing (Job 28:16).” This is quite a good explanation and a real possibility for the first line. “Falsehood is their deceit,” remains a bit difficult still.

    Mitchell Dahood, well known for creative reconstructions of the text, translates:

    Make a mound of all who stray from your precepts,
    because their idolatry is false.

    Psalms III, p. 168 and note

    Both of these changes, “make a mound” and “idolatry are possible, though I would not regard them as probable.

    The difficulty with a verse like this is that it uses a number of words that have similarly spelled roots to others, and that are not found in the Hebrew scriptures very many times. The most important element in understanding the precise meaning of a word is the context, and in poetry, it’s hard to determine precisely what the intention is, as the context itself is flexible.

    This illustrates why you should be interested, but not worried, if you find footnotes in your Bible that indicate alternate texts or possible translation. This is part of the process of working with translation, and especially with translation of ancient documents where we have some difficulty discerning the intent.

    It also suggests that we should be grateful to those who do this work. The sources I’ve mentioned here each involved significant research and discussion by many people. I benefited by simply having a reference that gave me the results of their efforts.

    And finally, one thing is clear in the text: Rebellion against God’s statutes and deceit and falsehood are not good things.

  • Psalm 119:117 – Sustain

    Psalm 119:117 – Sustain

    Sustain me and I shall be saved,
    And I will continually meditate on your statutes.

    The Message gives a nice feel for this verse:

    Stick with me and I’ll be all right;
    I’ll give total allegiance to your definitions of life.

    Psalm 119:117, The Message

    Now this translation has the problem that many do, which is that it’s clearer than the text it translates. One of the features of poetry is expression which evokes meaning and feeling, but does not lay it out blow by blow. Nonetheless, a translation like The Message can sometimes force us to look for the boundaries of a text.

    One thing I prefer over The Message on this verse is the idea of meditation. The verb used in Hebrew can cover a lot of ground, such as “gaze at,” “pay attention to,” and yes, “meditate” or “keep/observe.” The precise point in that range of meanings that the author intended is difficult to say for certain. My view is that in poetry, the intent is often to evoke broader meaning. When we narrow such a verse to just one set of precise meanings, we can lose the intention of the verse.

    And that’s the thing about meditation. An attorney needs to know more than simply the textual content of the law. In our legal tradition, they need to know the history of interpretation in the form of previous court rulings. Once they know that, they also need to be able to understand the story into which they have been drawn in order to know how they can apply all that material to their particular situation.

    It is similar with God’s law. God could have inspired a compendium, carefully cataloged and containing just the specific ordinances. But that’s not what we have. If you’d like to see what that would look like, consider passages such as Exodus 22 & 23 or the Hammurabi Code. These are codes of law, but in the case of those chapters of Exodus, the code is contained in history, and the foundation of that code of law is in the actions of the lawgiver.

    Is it any wonder that the psalmist can spend 176 verses expressing his joy in the law? He can see his God in that law, and in the way in which that law was presented. He knows that the reality behind the law is the creator-redeemer God. The word used here for “saved” as I uncreatively translated it, can also be translated with words like “be rescued” or “be victorious.”

    The God revealed in the law is the God who saves. When one meditates on the law, one learns about the lawgiver who also rescues, supports, and sustains to the end.

    I again find this verse to be an encapsulation in two short lines of the message of the Psalm.

    Live today as a child of the Creator who sustains you. Always!

    (Featured image credit: Viktor Aheiev. Licensed via iStockPhoto.com.)

  • Psalm 119:116 – Supported

    Psalm 119:116 – Supported

    Support me according to your word that I may live
    and don’t let my hope fail.

    As a note on translation, this verse is simply and sparsely expressed in Hebrew, which leaves some work to the translator in choosing precisely how to translate. Yet the overall result doesn’t change that much. Try comparing a number of translations. The words will vary, but the overall meaning remains similar.

    Sometimes we stress too much about translation details. It’s quite possible to get so hung up on precise words that we miss the message, which is unfortunate. I keep quite a collection of Bible translations and editions, and I deeply appreciate the vast majority of them.

    This verse fills an important role in the tapestry of Psalm 119. We find the psalmist grateful, determined, confident, hopeful, and fearful. We find him claiming accomplishments in one verse and calling for God’s help in another. The overall effect is a powerful picture of a person of faith carrying out life as one of God’s own.

    Our verse today covers much of this ground in one poetic couplet. The psalmist calls on God’s support that he may live. He recognizes the dependence on God for his very existence. If the creator and sustainer of the universe doesn’t sustain him, he can’t live. It’s as simple as that.

    At the same time he is expressing confidence. God’s sustaining power will provide life, and let him attain to his hope.

    Sometimes we have that kind of dual feeling. Confident, but feeling the need of support. Sports teams feel it with supportive crowds. The professional athletes are not underconfident. They know what they’re doing, but they’ll still acknowledge the value of that support.

    Sometimes we separate our efforts and what God does, but they are not so easily divided. If we hold that God is the creator, and that God’s creative power upholds the universe (Psalm 104 comes to mind), then we also know that our existence is dependent. At the same time, we know that those laws that God created are reliable enough that we don’t need to be concerned that the will end.

    For the believer, this covers everything, both physical and spiritual. The connection is there. Support me, and I will live. I hope, but I know that you, God, are the real hope, because you are the source and foundation of all hopes.

    Today, try to feel the support that God gives you. Look for ways in which he is taking you toward your greatest hopes.

    (Featured image generated by Jetpack AI.)

  • Psalm 119:115 – Leave!

    Psalm 119:115 – Leave!

    Leave me you evildoers
    that I may obey the commands of my God.

    Being harassed as you try to do good can be a problem. Both bad influences, those who by word or example lead you toward bad behavior, and bullies who try to pressure you into doing wrong are a reality. That’s what I think the Psalmist is saying here. “I want to follow God’s commands. If you’re not on that program, go away!”

    This reminds me of the very first verse in Psalms:

    Blessed is the man who does not walk in the counsel of evildoers, nor does he stand in the way of sinners, nor does he sit in the seat of scornful people.

    Psalm 1:1 (my translation)

    And in that case too, the next line talks about the man’s delight in God’s law. Good advice, I think.

    But this made me think of another situation, one in which someone claims the wicked as an excuse, but is actually responsible. This is the person who wants to do something wrong and then finds an evildoer to use as an excuse.

    “But everyone is doing it” was an excuse many of us used in our youth. “How can I resist if I’m the only one?”

    As adults and even leaders, we often replace this with the excuse that other people, or the other “side” does certain things, so it’s OK for us. Sometimes this is presented as a necessity. In order to match those other guys, which I call the “infernal they,” we have to use the tactics or that they do. We’ll be weak and lose if we behave well.

    There’s a view of war that suggests that we really can’t fight a war without becoming more like our enemy. I suspect that is true. If you get into the fight, in which winning is important, you will often find yourself embracing tactics that you might have rejected at the start. The question is, I think, what happens to your soul in the process?

    Psalm 1 suggests a few things. Speaking of the blessing that results from not following the counsel of the wicked, the righteous person is compared to a tree planted by streams of water. “Whatever he does will prosper,” ends this blessing.

    “Not so the wicked,” the Psalm continues. Their description ends up with the opposite. “The way of the wicked will perish.” Following the temptation to become more like sinners in order to have success is predicted by the Psalmist to result in failure. I see the path coming to an end.

    How we do things matters. The process matters. We can ramrod an idea through our church council, pushing people around in order to get our way, but what does that do to the longer term work of the church. Henry Hazlitt, an economist, in his book Economics in One Lesson says that every error in economics results from looking at things over too short a period of time and/or too narrow a range (I paraphrase).

    The choice of destructive tactics may make you a winner in the short term, but in the long term, you, or more likely others, will pay.

    Keep away from me, evildoers. In fact, keep away from my mind. I don’t want to think about the success of evildoers nor to be tempted by their methods.

    What tactic tempts you that cannot be reconciled with godly living?

    (Featured image was created in Adobe Express using two separately generated images. The engine for image generation in Adobe Express is Firefly.)