Psalm 123: Looking to Our Master

Today’s reading is Psalm 123.

Vulnerable

I get it. I understand why some, after reading yesterday’s post, decided to abandon Jesus. We love the idea of Jesus saving us, but enslaving us? That’s a tough pill to swallow. Frankly, it digs right down to the reason why it takes faith to be saved. We have to believe with such conviction and confidence that Jesus is saving us, we decide to do what unbelievers find repugnant. We decide to put our lives and eternities in someone else’s hands.

Our pilgrim psalmist does not use the metaphor of slave and master because in his day slavery was pleasant. Let us not soften this psalm by acting like slavery was not just as hard, difficult, even horrific in our psalmist’s day as it was in 19th century America. Yes, people accepted slavery more readily in the time of the ancient psalmist, but no one wanted to be a slave more readily. Certainly, the Law contained legal codes offering some protections to Hebrew slaves. What a blessing. I mean, it would be if those ancients followed the legal codes better than supposed Christians in America followed the legal codes of the new covenant about slavery (see Ephesians 6:9; Colossians 4:1)–which, of course, few of them did. But do not for a moment think people in the psalmist’s day thought slavery was a pleasant or even desirable occupation. Think about it: redemption from slavery was such a great metaphor for salvation because nobody wanted to be a slave.

The pilgrim psalmist’s metaphor did not express comfort. It expressed vulnerability. Slaves looked to their masters’ and mistresses’ hands because slaves had no choice and no control. They had no control over whether their lives would be pleasant or miserable. Their masters’ and mistresses’ hands determined that. Therefore, slaves looked to their masters’ and mistresses’ hands.

When slaves looked to their masters’ hands, they would as likely see a fist or a whip as anything else. Slaves might not see actively abusive hands, but selfish, grasping, neglectful hands–hands which used the slaves as human tools to serve the master but did not care for the slaves at all. The slave’s entire life was held in the hand of that master. Again, not an expression of pleasing comfort, but of desperate vulnerability.

Here now is the difference. Our psalmist willingly made this pilgrimage. Our psalmist willingly placed himself under the hand of YHWH. Our Psalmist willingly looked to the LORD as Master. In the face of scoffers, mockers, warmongers, attackers, our psalmist didn’t look to the opponents, attempting to side with them in hopes they would back off. He didn’t look to himself, deciding he was strong enough to win the battle. He didn’t look to idols and false gods, especially the ones the Meshechians and Kedarians claimed to follow.

Like Jehoshaphat of 2 Chronicles 20:12, our psalmist essentially says, “We do no know what to do, but our eyes are on you” (ESV). Which, of course, actually means they both knew precisely what to do. Trust the Lord. Yes, the volunteer slaves make themselves vulnerable. But Jehoshaphat, the pilgrim, and hopefully we ourselves realize the risk is worth it. It is.

Tomorrow we’ll discuss why.

Praise the Lord!

Tomorrow’s reading is Psalm 123.

PODCAST!!!

Click here to take about 15 minutes to listen to the Text Talk conversation between Andrew Roberts and Edwin Crozier.

PATHS:
Discuss Today’s Meditation with Your Family

How does Psalm 123 prompt or improve your trust in God?

Psalm 120: The Journey Begins

Today’s reading is Psalm 120.

Ascending the Mountain of God

In Book V of the Psalms, we’ve studied some exciting things. We studied the Hallel psalms (113-118). We spent eleven weeks with a deep dive into delight for God’s Word walking through Psalm 119. Now we begin another fantastic series: the Songs of Ascents. Psalms 120-134 are all labeled “A Song of Ascents.”

We don’t quite know why they were called that. Some suggest these were songs compiled for the return journey of Ezra or Nehemiah. Many suggest these were songs sung by Israelites as they traveled their annual pilgrimages to Jerusalem for the feast days. Apparently at some point, there is evidence the temple choirs would sing these psalms as they ascended the 15 steps of the temple one at a time during the feasts.

No matter what the origination was, the series presents a story of pilgrimage. We begin this week in Psalm 120 dwelling in enemy territory, we travel to Jerusalem over the next few psalms and by Psalm 134 we are ascending to the peak of God’s mountain to lift our hands in His holy place and worship the Lord.

As Psalm 48 declares, Zion is the envy of the world. It’s elevation is beautiful. It’s city is daunting. The kings of the earth panic at the sight of her. These psalms ascend that mountain. Psalm 24:3 asks who shall ascend the Lord’s holy hill. While that particular psalm had its own answer in context, we come back to that theme in these songs of ascents and we make the journey.

Whatever the original time of compilation, we can clearly see layers of application. We can see the original ascent from Egypt in the time of Moses to the Promised Land under Joshua to Jerusalem in the time of David. We can see the second Exodus from Babylon and the restoration of God’s people. We can see the annual ascent of pilgrims longing to be in the Lord’s city to worship. But perhaps most of all, we can see our own ascent. We can see our pilgrimage from this world up the heavenly mountain to find ourselves in eternity around the throne of God on His high mountain. Picture the scene of worship in Revelation 5.

Each step of this journey from Psalm 120-134 will give us insight to our path, holding on to Jesus’s hand, to the throne room of God in eternity.

I’m so excited as our journey begins this week. Don’t miss a single day. I believe we will all be blessed by this study of pilgrimage.

Praise the Lord!

Tomorrow’s reading is Psalm 120.

PODCAST!!!

Click here to take about 15 minutes to listen to the Text Talk conversation between Andrew Roberts and Edwin Crozier.

PATHS:
Discuss Today’s Meditation with Your Family

How does Psalm 120 prompt or improve your praise of God?