A new chapter

Re: Verse reading–Psalm 40 (day six)
“then He said, ‘Behold, I have come to do your will.’  He takes away the first in order to do the second.  By this will we have been sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all.”  (Hebrews 10:9-10)  In Psalm 40, David ponders the emptiness of Jewish religion.  He concludes  “sacrifice and offering you have not desired.”  (vs 5)  Everyone already knew it.   People were faithfully going to church, observing the rituals commanded by God’s word, but missing power!   It was a real problem for the man who would build the temple and establish this ceremonial/sacrificial form.  In a prophetic moment, David hears Christ speak.  He will do the Father’s new will.  He will be the needed sacrifice.   Perfect in obedience, perfect in effect, perfect in example.  We must never go back to a system of religion.  Only Christ has the power to cleanse our hearts.  He is the new chapter.

Majesty

RE Verse reading–Psalm 40 (day four) Have you stopped recently to consider who God is and what He has done?  40:5 says, “Many, O Lord my God, are the wonders which you have done,” The Psalmist was acknowledging the mighty works of God.  Verse 5 says, “…If I would declare and speak of them, they would be too numerous to count.” When we recognize how complete and extensive God is, what should be our response?  Look at verse 9…we are to proclaim the works of His hands.  The Psalmist says his words cannot be restrained…he has to speak of His faithfulness and loving kindness.  Verse 16 also shows us a response…it is worship.  “The Lord be magnified!” Back to the original question, have you reflected on the majesty of God lately?  What was the result of your experience?  Hopefully, it is declaration and worship!  God sustains us in our need and we must be faithful to exalt His name…even when the world presses in upon us.

 

Ears

RE Verse reading–Psalm 40 (day three)  “Sacrifice and offering you did not desire—but my ears you have opened—burnt offerings and sin offerings you did not require.”  People use their ears for more—much more—than listening.  Often, ears function as filters: You hear what you want to hear.  Ears also serve as early warning systems: You recognize the voice of someone you don’t wish to see, so you go somewhere else.  God calls us to hear him—to stop even our religious observances lest they become a substitute for paying attention to him.  Jesus often punctuated his teaching with a call for people to use their ears to take his words into their minds and think: “He who has ears, let him hear.”  If we listen, we can ponder; if we ponder, we can pray.  If we pray, we  God will hear.

 

When bombs go off…

RE Verse reading-Psalm 40 (day two) My thoughts were interrupted as I wrote this by the sudden and sad news from Boston, and this week’s passage became even more significant. “I waited patiently for the Lord, and He turned to me and heard my cry for help” (40:1). As senseless suffering and death again strike our people, can we find help? The song writer says, “Yes.” “He brought me up…making my steps secure. He put a new song in my mouth.” Easy for him to say, right? God helped him, but what about those people in Boston? Not so fast. The song writer’s story is not finished. “Troubles without number have surrounded me…my courage leaves me” (40:12). This is not a song about rescue from trouble but rather rescue through trouble. Help is needed precisely because troubles are still present. The hope is that help has come, a help that carries us through. Perhaps Jesus had this on his mind when he said, “In this world you will have trouble, but take heart. I have overcome the world!” (John 16:33).

Thy will

RE Verse reading–Psalm 40 (day one)  “Then I said, ‘Behold, I come. . .I delight to do Thy will, O my God.’ ”  (vs 7-8)  Ancient Judaism had a problem.  It was a system of worship designed around animal sacrifice which everyone knew was insufficient to change a heart.  “It is impossible for the blood of bulls and goats to take away sin.”  (Hebrews 10:4)  What was needed, then and now, was a perfect sacrifice, a volunteer, perfectly holy and yeilded.  David describes the exciting moment when this “Lamb” presents Himself.  It is a prophecy of Christ in His full surrender.  It describes HOW we are saved (by the death of a voluntary innocent).  It also describes WHAT we will be when we are saved.  Yielded.  Surrendered.  Obedient.  Had Christ refused God’s will, He could not love us.  When we refuse His will, we do not love Him.  These are Christ’s words and they should be ours.  “I have come to do thy will”. (Hebrews 10:7)

Seeking worshippers

RE Verse reading–Psalm 34 (day seven)  “O magnify the Lord with me, and let us exalt His name together.”  (vs 3)  Praise to God is not a choice that should be left to individual choice or mood.  Having overcome his own saddness (see 1 Samuel 22) David begins to enlist others to the life-giving privilege of praise.  Psalm 34 is a song.  A song of evangelism.  A song of enlistment.  A song sung to his men.  Are we compelled in similar fashion?  If others do not praise God, do we encourage them to join us?  Secular culture treats faith as a matter of privacy.  In many ways, some subtle, some not, it argues that believers should be silent and non-intrusive toward people who do not praise God.  David disagress.  So does Jesus.  “true worshippers will worship the Father in Spirit and truth; for such people the Father SEEKS to be His worshippers.” (John 4:23)  God seeks people to worship.  He extends an invitation.  Do we?

All times. Always. Praise.

RE Verse reading–Psalm 34 (day six)  “I will extol the Lord at all times; his praise will always be on my lips”  (vs 1)  It is changing my life!  Something that I learned late, and glad to know  even now.  To survive is not the highest goal.  To succeed is secondary.  To serve and praise God is my first and best responsibility.  “I will bless the Lord at all times“, says young David in the midst of a circumstance that would have destroyed most of us.  (See superscription for the historical context.)  “His praise will be always on my lips.”  All times!  Not just when things are good.  Always!  Not just when I feel safe or happy.  Praise is not something we give God as payment for services rendered.  It is not something we owe Him in prosperity.  At an early age (before he was 30) David came to a life-changing discovery.  “Rejoice always. . .in everything give thanks”  (1 Thessalonians 5:16, 18)  All times!  Always!

Hope

Re:Verse reading–Psalm 34 (day four)
The Psalmist gives us a contrast between the righteous and the wicked…the just and the unjust…those who seek Him and those who are proud…His servants and the evildoers.  His promises to protect, to sustain, to hear, to provide for, and to deliver the righteous give great comfort and strength to His saints.  The result in our lives when we live for God is praise; (v. 1) “I will bless the Lord, at all times; His praise shall continually be in my mouth.” Does His praise rest continually in your mouth?  When we live in continual praise of God and walk in a righteous fear of Him, our lives reflect the difference to the world around us.  Our speech is pure and there is no deceit on our lips.  We are not afraid and we are delivered when we are crushed in spirit.  May our lives communicate the hope of His promises to a lost and dying world.

Blot

Re:Verse reading–Psalm 34 (day three)
“…To blot out their name from the earth.”  Some things will last forever.  Some will not.  In the purifying renewal of all things, that which has no place under God’s reign will burn like impurities in a refiner’s fire.  When God makes all things new, the earth will be full of the knowledge of the glory of God as the waters cover the sea.  Those who do evil will not even be remembered.  The only way out of doing evil is to become an apprentice of Jesus Christ.  The modern mind shrinks from this thought, but it’s the truth.  How might we see people if we view them in light of this reality?  Who do you know who needs to know this?

Taste: The Door to Addiction and Redemption

Re:Verse reading–Psalm 34 (day two)
“Taste and see that the LORD is good” (34:8). It was a taste that got us into this mess. “She took some of its fruit and ate it…” (Genesis 3:6). Our first parents, Adam and Eve, had tastes that were designed to be satisfied by God Himself but willfully turned their tastes in another direction. They ate it, and like a deadly poison it worked death in them. Now, taste can turn into addiction so quickly that a person can be all but choked to death and not even know it. Food, social media, popularity, alcohol, authority, sex, influence, leisure…how often does taste lead to addiction, and addiction lead to death, relationally, emotionally and even physically? It was taste that got us into this mess, and it will be taste that gets us out. “I am the bread of life…if anyone eats this bread he will live forever” (John 6:35, 51). Willfully turning our taste to Jesus redeems not only our sense of taste but also our eternal soul.