Monday, April 30, 2012

Monday April 30th sent a second time because I am not sure it went through the first time

This past week a question was raised in the small group I attend: "Is there a difference between praise and thanksgiving.  We determined that there most definitely is. 
As defined:
Praise means to exalt, to express admiration, exalt in worship, to proclaim or describe the glorious attributes of a deity (that would be God).
Thanksgiving means to express feelings or thoughts of gratitude and to acknowledge divine favours (Grace and/or mercy)
Praise is recognizing and giving glory and admiration for who God is. The total focus is on the greatness and goodness of Gods character.  It is for our benefit not his.  Thanks is recognizing and giving gratitude for what God has done in our lives and how we are blessed by who he is.  Again it is for our benefit not his.
Thanksgiving is a much easier thing for most of us to do then praise is.  Why?  Because we so often are "me" focused and "problem" focused that we don't remember who our God is and how big he is; what he is capable of doing.  We just know when he intervenes and help us in our times of need and in response (which is correct) we give him thanks.
But what if we changed our focused from being me centered and focused on the temporal world we live in to being focused on the Creator of heaven and Earth and the life eternal that awaits us?
What I found remarkable is all of today's Psalms were nothing but verse after verse of praise.  I haven't been feeling well today but from what I can see the word thanks is not mentioned once in any of them.  These Psalms were all about praise to a very big, a very powerful, a very mighty, a very loving, a very majestic, a very gracious God (and this list goes on and on doesn't it?).  It has points where the Psalmist remembers what God has done but instead of thanks being offered up the writer chooses to focus on praise and adoration for the God who was able to do such mighty works.
Question for you: "How often do you spend in each day simply giving praise to God?"
Another question for you: "How much of your daily prayer time is spent in praise? How much in thanksgiving?  How much in confession? How much in lifting up requests?"
All 4 areas are of vital importance to a well-rounded prayer life but I think that we can tend to skimp on the praise portion.  We say a "Praise you Lord" here and a "You are gracious and merciful" there.  But, when was the last time you lifted your voice in nothing but simple adoration for the Great God who loves you enough to leave his throne in heaven to take a seat in a manger bed and live a life of a poor carpenter so that he could one day hang on a tree in your place?  What kind of God would do that? When we take time to praise we find out, we remember exactly what kind of God we have.
Despite the difficulties of their lives the Psalmist who penned these 6 Psalms found it important to "Ascribe to the LORD" praises and what beautiful and uplifting pieces of scripture they are.
The very first phrases we read say the following:
"Ascribe to the LORD, O mighty ones (that would be you mighty warriors)
ascribe to the LORD glory and strength.

Ascribe to the LORD the glory due his name;
worship the LORD in the splendor of his holiness."  Psalm 29
I want to challenge you, as well as myself this week.  I want to challenge you to spend at least 5 minutes each day doing nothing but ascribing to the LORD the praise that is due to his glorious name.  Leaving the prayers of gratitude, confession, and requests for another time of day.  Let your mind become enveloped in the majesty of who God is.  Let it wash over you, fill you and transform you.
If you want some help one of the women in our small group had a great idea.  Sit with your bible open and use the words the Psalmists wrote to help get you started.  Pray and ask the Holy Spirit to help direct your heart in an attitude of praise and worship.
I would love to know at the end of 7 days of consistent prayers of praise if any of you experience a change in how you enter your prayers.  In how you face your difficult situations each day.   If we are faithful to give back to God the Glory due his name and worship the LORD in the splendor of his holiness then I truly believe that a blessing unlike any we have experienced awaits us ahead.
The challenge has been given.  Are you willing to take it? 

Monday April 30th

This past week a question was raised in the small group I attend: "Is there a difference between praise and thanksgiving.  We determined that there most definitely is. 
As defined:
Praise means to exalt, to express admiration, exalt in worship, to proclaim or describe the glorious attributes of a deity (that would be God).
Thanksgiving means to express feelings or thoughts of gratitude and to acknowledge divine favours (Grace and/or mercy)
Praise is recognizing and giving glory and admiration for who God is. The total focus is on the greatness and goodness of Gods character.  It is for our benefit not his.  Thanks is recognizing and giving gratitude for what God has done in our lives and how we are blessed by who he is.  Again it is for our benefit not his.
Thanksgiving is a much easier thing for most of us to do then praise is.  Why?  Because we so often are "me" focused and "problem" focused that we don't remember who our God is and how big he is; what he is capable of doing.  We just know when he intervenes and help us in our times of need and in response (which is correct) we give him thanks.
But what if we changed our focused from being me centered and focused on the temporal world we live in to being focused on the Creator of heaven and Earth and the life eternal that awaits us?
What I found remarkable is all of today's Psalms were nothing but verse after verse of praise.  I haven't been feeling well today but from what I can see the word thanks is not mentioned once in any of them.  These Psalms were all about praise to a very big, a very powerful, a very mighty, a very loving, a very majestic, a very gracious God (and this list goes on and on doesn't it?).  It has points where the Psalmist remembers what God has done but instead of thanks being offered up the writer chooses to focus on praise and adoration for the God who was able to do such mighty works.
Question for you: "How often do you spend in each day simply giving praise to God?"
Another question for you: "How much of your daily prayer time is spent in praise? How much in thanksgiving?  How much in confession? How much in lifting up requests?"
All 4 areas are of vital importance to a well-rounded prayer life but I think that we can tend to skimp on the praise portion.  We say a "Praise you Lord" here and a "You are gracious and merciful" there.  But, when was the last time you lifted your voice in nothing but simple adoration for the Great God who loves you enough to leave his throne in heaven to take a seat in a manger bed and live a life of a poor carpenter so that he could one day hang on a tree in your place?  What kind of God would do that? When we take time to praise we find out, we remember exactly what kind of God we have.
Despite the difficulties of their lives the Psalmist who penned these 6 Psalms found it important to "Ascribe to the LORD" praises and what beautiful and uplifting pieces of scripture they are.
The very first phrases we read say the following:
"Ascribe to the LORD, O mighty ones (that would be you mighty warriors)
ascribe to the LORD glory and strength.

Ascribe to the LORD the glory due his name;
worship the LORD in the splendor of his holiness."  Psalm 29
I want to challenge you, as well as myself this week.  I want to challenge you to spend at least 5 minutes each day doing nothing but ascribing to the LORD the praise that is due to his glorious name.  Leaving the prayers of gratitude, confession, and requests for another time of day.  Let your mind become enveloped in the majesty of who God is.  Let it wash over you, fill you and transform you.
If you want some help one of the women in our small group had a great idea.  Sit with your bible open and use the words the Psalmists wrote to help get you started.  Pray and ask the Holy Spirit to help direct your heart in an attitude of praise and worship.
I would love to know at the end of 7 days of consistent prayers of praise if any of you experience a change in how you enter your prayers.  In how you face your difficult situations each day.   If we are faithful to give back to God the Glory due his name and worship the LORD in the splendor of his holiness then I truly believe that a blessing unlike any we have experienced awaits us ahead.
The challenge has been given.  Are you willing to take it? 

Sunday, April 29, 2012

April 29

Sunday April 29, 2012
Psalms of Joy and Praise! (Psalms 8 8, 9, 16, 19, and 21)

Psalm 8
This psalm had one line that stuck out to me, and it is "what is man that you are mindful of him" because it is almost the same exact wording as a lyric of one of the songs we sing called "I Am A Friend Of God." I'll put the link to the song at the end, because it's a catchy song and it nicely sums up the message from this psalm.
The title says "Praise for man's glory and status in God's sight" and it is, but it's more than just David praising God for his titles and status. David also recognizes God's power and craftsmanship in His organization of the universe. David is praising God for His treatment of man, but also praising his majesty.

Psalm 9
The first stanza of this psalm, to me, hints that David wants God's help because of all of the "I will"'s. How many times do you bargain with God? Tell Him you'll do anything if He would help you out. This is what I feel David is doing here.
He then acknowledges God's work in David's beating his enemies, saying how God has destroyed the wicked. But then David says that though the Lord does judge, He judges justly. The line that I love from this stanza is "the Lord is a refuge for the oppressed, a stronghold in times of trouble. Those who know your name will trust in you, for you, Lord, have never forsaken those who seek you" because even though the stanza before commented on the power of God, this one line really brings home the idea that if you are with God, He can be the best friend you could ever have in your life.
Then David gets to his point, this is where he is asking God for the help he needs.

Psalm 16
This psalms is David's expression of thanks to God for all that He's done for him. This psalm is probably one of my favorites we've read this year, because it is so nice. David takes all this time to thank God, something that I don't think I do enough. Usually I'll think Him after something goes my way, but why not when it doesn't? He does everything for us, even when we think He might have missed us. My old principal used to say that everyone has their crosses to bear, but God will never make yours too heavy for you to carry. That is sure something to be thankful for.

Psalm 19
This psalm is my second favorite one we've read. The first two stanzas are so poetic, especially the second one. It hints at David's character, because while he does write many psalms with beautiful messages, this psalm has such a beautiful wording, at least for the first two stanzas. Then he gets to his point and is pretty straightforward about how perfect God and his laws are.

Psalm 21
This psalm is talking about how all David asked for is his life, but God gave him that and so much more. God helped David win all the battles he entered, and this is the people of David praising God for all of the help He gave their king.
It is also a reminder to all the people who are against God that He is not someone to be crossed.

Hope you all had a great Sunday!
Gina

here's the song!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JuI4SrBa_VA&feature

Saturday, April 28, 2012

April 28: Psalms About Righteousness and Wickedness

(POSTED FOR JOHN LANUZA)
APRIL 28, 2012
Psalms About Righteousness and Wickedness
 
So much to take from today's readings.  Where to begin?

How about with our insignificance...which makes the fact God loves us all the more incomprehensibly amazing?  Psalm 90 and 76 speak so much of that.  He has "been our dwelling place throughout all generations"; he turns men "back to dust" and "a thousand years in Your sight are like a day that has just gone by, or like a watch in the night."  We cannot stand before Him - "We are consumed by Your anger and terrified by your indignation".  At His rebuke "both horse and chariot lie still.  You alone are to be feared.  Who can stand before You when You are so angry?"  And He is right to be angry...for He has "set our iniquities before You, our secret sins in the light of Your presence." 

And yet we are able to cry out to Him, to His "unfailing love, that we may sing for joy and be glad all our days."  They say the opposite of love isn't hatred, because you have to care about someone in order to get riled up to the level of hatred.  No, the opposite of love is indifference, and we are often indifferent to those we deem insignificant.  This psalm hints at our insignificance before God...yet not only does He pay us attention, He loves us.  How amazingly incomprehensible is that?

There's more...we read about the futility of wickedness in Psalm 82, where we hear of those who "know nothing, they understand nothing.  They walk about in darkness", how they will "die like mere me; you will fall like every other ruler" and how "I would rather be a doorkeeper in the house of my God than dwell in the tents of the wicked", we read of the wages of wickedness in Psalm 92, where we see "that though the wicked spring up like grass and all evildoers flourish, they will forever be destroyed."  And Psalm 115 just goes through a litany of the futility of an idolater's existence. 

But it gets better - for despite our sinfulness, we can cry out to Him..."he is their help and shield...the Lord remembers us and will bless us." He has "exalted my horn like that of a wild ox, fine oils have been poured upon me" and "mine eyes have seen the defeat of my adversaries."  We can "flourish like a palm tree...grow like a cedar of Lebanon, planted in the house of the Lord..."

When I read all the blessings that come to the man who fears the Lord and finds great delight in His commands that are listed in Psalm 112, I do not understand why I am so stubborn as to insist on my ways, on the world's ways and the world's wickedness.  Wouldn't it be great to "have no fear of bad news; [because] his heart is steadfast, trusting in the Lord"?  To keep my heart secure, and have no fear, and in the end look on triumph upon my foes."? And yet we struggle to reciprocate the love He gives those who, next to Him, are insignificant. 

Dear Lord, as we struggle to live a life that has You as both goal and guide, please continue to show us the mercy we do not deserve when, inevitably we fall into the wickedness that rightfully has no place with You.  Grant us the ability to recognize You for who You are, and the desire to live our lives according to that recognition. 
 

A few questions:

1.  What are the persistent idols in my life?  What are the things we aspire to that take us off the path God has chosen?  That distract us from His blessing?  Money - either wealth, or even something as innocuous and innocent-sounding as "sufficiency"?  Respect, admiration, acceptance?

2.  When do these idols manifest themselves?  When do we find they affect our decisions, or perhaps even unconsciously guide our actions? 

3.  What do we really believe is worth aspiring to?  What is our treasure...and how do we remind ourselves of that constantly, that we might stay on track to attain it?

Friday, April 27, 2012

Friday, April 27, 2012 - Messianic Prophecy and Redemption

Friday, April 27, 2012
Psalm 40, 49, 50, and 73
Messianic Prophecy and Redemption

Psalm 40:6-8
6 Sacrifice and offering you did not desire—
but my ears you have opened—
burnt offerings and sin offerings you did not require.
7 Then I said, "Here I am, I have come—
it is written about me in the scroll.
8 I desire to do your will, my God;
your law is within my heart."

David's prophetic words in this Psalm were later spoken by Jesus
Christ and documented in the book of Hebrews in the New Testament
shown below:

Hebrews 10:5-7
5 Therefore, when Christ came into the world, he said:
"Sacrifice and offering you did not desire,
but a body you prepared for me;
6 with burnt offerings and sin offerings
you were not pleased.
7 Then I said, 'Here I am—it is written about me in the scroll —
I have come to do your will, my God.'"

What powerful words that embody Christ's messianic identity!!!
Remember, He was sacrificed once for all for the atonement of our
sins. As believers, we feel pleased and sanctified with this offering.
Sacrificed animals however, did not create this feeling of redemption
in the hearts of believers (before Christ's sacrificial offering) as
the scripture articulates. In fact, David knew that even mere human's
could not redeem one another as demonstrated in Psalm 49:7-9 displayed
below:

7 No one can redeem the life of another
or give to God a ransom for them—
8 the ransom for a life is costly,
no payment is ever enough—
9 so that they should live on forever
and not see decay.

Redemption has a cost that no man can pay. Only God could pay this
price for what is impossible with man, is possible with God. Jesus
came, "to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many" (Matthew
20:28). Let's fix our eyes on our redeemer and meditate on Psalm 73:

23 Yet I am always with you;
you hold me by my right hand.
24 You guide me with your counsel,
and afterward you will take me into glory.
25 Whom have I in heaven but you?
And earth has nothing I desire besides you.
26 My flesh and my heart may fail,
but God is the strength of my heart
and my portion forever.

God Bless,
Anthony

Thursday, April 26, 2012

April 26: Psalms About Righteousness and Wickedness

THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2012

Psalms About Righteousness and Wickedness



Today’s Psalms provide us with rich insight regarding God’s relationship with both the righteous and the wicked and what characteristics define the righteous and the wicked.

 

First, we note that all our righteousness is merely a reflection of God’s character, brought about by a thankful heart and a willing spirit.  We know that God has a great love for His children, regardless of their circumstances or stature:

 

“Your love, O Lord, reaches to the heavens,

                your faithfulness to the skies.

Your righteousness is like the might mountains,

                your justice like the great deep.

O Lord, you preserve both man and beast.

                How priceless is your unfailing love!

Both high and low among men

                find refuge in the shadow of your wings.

They feast on the abundance of your house;

                you give them drink from your river of delights.

For with you is the fountain of life;

                in your light we see light.” (Psalm 36)

 

 

This foregoing passage shows us the depth of God’s lovingkindness and provision for His holy ones.  We learn that only in relation to God may we find enduring wisdom (“light”).  Yet, experiencing His abundance does not require that we have a mansion on a hill.  In Psalm 37, we read that we are to “delight yourself in the Lord / and he will give you the desires of your heart.”  What happens, however, when we delight in the Lord?  We find ourselves satisfied with His very presence; just as with a dear friend or family member, we find that we value their presence more than their presents.  As John Piper has pointed out, God is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in Him.  The person who “delights” in the Lord seeks His presence and not just His blessings.  Ironically, desert periods in our spiritual life often draw us closer to God because we recognize the value of His presence.

 

The passages also touch upon the character that God may develop in the righteous:

 

1.       Psalm 1:1-3:

 

“Blessed is the man

       who does not walk in the counsel of the wicked

       or stand in the way of sinners

       or sit in the seat of mockers.

But his delight is in the law of the Lord,

       and on his law he meditates day and night.

He is like a tree planted by streams of water,

       which yields its fruit in season

       and whose leaf does not wither.

       Whatever he does prospers.”

 

2.       The righteous seek after God; there are not many who join them in this pursuit.

 

3.       The righteous keep “his oath/ even when it hurts.” (Psalm 15)  They are faithful and true to their word.

 

4.       They are patient in waiting upon the Lord:  “Be still before the Lord and wait patiently for him;/ do not fret when men succeed in their ways,/ when they carry our their wicked schemes.” (Psalm 37)

 

5.       Their words bring forth wisdom based on the content of their hearts:

 

“The mouth of the righteous man utters wisdom,

                and his tongue speaks what is just.

The law of his God is in his heart;

                his feet do not slip.” (Psalm 37)

 

6.       The righteous recognize the shortness of life, giving them perspective of God’s timing.  We are merely stewards of the time that God has given us; how are we doing in serving Him with it? (Psalm 39)

 

7.       In all things, we increasingly see the sovereignty, mercy, and justice of God.  In our present-world experience, we struggle to comprehend how the wicked may prosper but the righteous struggle.  From Romans 8:28,29, “…we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.  For those God foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the likeness of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brothers.”  God works all things so that we might be “conformed to the likeness of His Son,” the highest good.  Therefore, we may view even struggle or pain as part of God’s loving and purposeful will for His children.  His sovereignty is inextricably linked to His goodness.

 

 

QUESTIONS

 

  1. How can you seek more of God’s presence?  How have you seen “light” in His light? 
  2. Which characteristics of the righteous would you better like to model in your life?  How might you gain the wisdom and perspective to live these characteristics out?


________________________________________
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2) Facebook:  http://on.fb.me/tc6jkS

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Psalms 120, 121, 140, 143, 144

Psalms 120, 121, 140, 143, 144
 
In middle school the year revolved the first week of July for me and my best friends.  There were countdowns, lists and planning of what we would pack, and non stop thoughts.  Lone Tree Bible Ranch is a place that molded me into who I am and where I learned what it meant to commit my life to Christ beyond what I prayed when I was 5 years old.  In the Sacramento Mountains of New Mexico is the small town of Capitan, home of Smokey the Bear, and Lone Tree.  Some of the best memories I have of those weeks were Friday nights where we would have a bon fire in a small outdoor amphitheater (usually the evening talks were held inside.)  Imagine cool mountain air.  So crisp that in the middle of July you need a hoodie, crackling wood,  millions of stars up above, the fullest, brightest moon you think you've ever seen, a couple guitars, and about 60 middle schoolers going through puberty, singing their hearts out.  Yup…that priceless.  
 
We would focus on God being our refuge, our strength.  Just like some of these passages we have read.  We all have troubles and we all have storms.  We have enemies (sin, external, and our self.)  We only have one salvation: our God.  I want to share a couple of the songs that have stayed with me all these years that we would sing in those mountains to our Creator. 
 
I Lift My Eyes Up  (I don't know the author)
I life my eyes, up, to the mountains, where does my help come from?
My help comes from you, maker of heaven, Creator of the Earth.
Oh how I need you Lord, You are my only hope,
You are my only prayer.
So I will wait for You.  To come and rescue me. 
To come and give me life.
Come and give me life.  Come and give me life
 
 Psalm 143 (Revive Me) By Shane Barnard
Hear my prayer, give Your ear
In Your faithfulness answer me
In Your righteousness do not judge
For no one is righteous
 
Teach me to do Your will Lord
For you are my God
Your Spirit is good good good
Lead me on level ground Lord
For You are my God
Your Spirit is good
It is good
 
Revive me, revive me
Not for me but for Your name
In Your mercy deliver me from my enemies
Revive me
 
I remember days of old
Your works I meditate oh Lord
I consider all the works of Your hands
I lift up my hands to you
My soul longs
 
Love the Psalms.  

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

April 24: Psalm 88, 91, 95, 108, 109

For the past couple days we've been reading Psalms of the troubled soul. When David was in distress, he turned to God and poured out his heart. He pleaded to the Lord and acknowledged that He was the only one who could save him. 

I was listening to another David Crowder song last week called I Am a Seed. There is a verse that says: "I can see it won't be long, Till I break free from what I was, Your river of grace flows endlessly, You won't turn Your back on me." I started to think about how God won't turn His back on me. I realized that I fully believed that He would always be there no matter what is happening to me. If I were sick, heartbroken, stressed, lonely, under attack... He would always be there for me, like He was for David. God will always save me in times of trouble. 

Then a question popped into my head: What if I need Him to save me from myself? What if the reason I am troubled is not because of outside circumstances or the sins of other people? What if I need help because of my own sinful nature? Do I fully believe that He would save me from trouble I have caused for myself? I realized that it's easy for me to believe that God would save me from any storm that life could send my way... but it's really difficult for me to believe that He would save me from myself, that He would not turn His back on me because of my own sin. The shame and guilt that I feel when I mess up gets in the way of crying out to Him for help. Then I end up trying to fight a battle that I have no chance of winning on my own.

In Psalm 95, it says: "Come, let us bow down in worship, let us kneel before the Lord our Maker; for He is our God and we are the people of his pasture, the flock under his care." Here is another reference to God being the shepherd and us being His flock. If a sheep under the care of a shepherd is lost, does that shepherd then say, "It's their own fault for getting lost, they are on their own." Absolutely not! The shepherd does everything in his power to bring that lost sheep back home. 

I don't know if any of you struggle with the same thing as me, letting guilt, shame, and pride get in the way of seeking God's saving power. I encourage you to fully believe that He will never turn His back on you. He will never leave you alone in times of need. No matter what.

"He who dwells in the shelter of the Most High will rest in the shadow of the Almighty. I will say of the Lord, 'He is my refuge and my fortress, my God, in whom I trust.' "   Psalm 91:1-2

I Am a Seed
David Crowder Band
http://youtu.be/UDpkj9Kamqg

Monday, April 23, 2012

Monday April 23rd

But as for me, I will always have hope…Psalm 71:14
What a great line, "I will always have hope."  The Psalms are filled with phrases of pain, struggle, heartbreak, burden, calamity, distress, trouble, etc… yet hope is the common denominator in each one.  The psalmists write them from places of darkness (or after emerging from darkness) and always write of hope, hope found only in God.
But how can the psalmist of 71 truly write the line, "I will always have hope" when facing the dark trials of life?  How does one always have hope especially when hope is hidden by the darkness of struggle in our eyes? 
I am not talking about just knowing that hope exists.  I am not talking about believing that God is a God of hope.  I am talking about actually possessing hope; holding onto it when the shadows of trial begin to blind us, begin to loosen our grip. 
When facing death how do you hold onto hope for a future?  When facing illness how do you hold onto hope for what tomorrow might bring?  When facing joblessness how do you hold onto hope and not worry that you won't loose everything?  When watching a family member waste away from addiction how do you have hope that their life will ever change?  When watching your child live separated from the Lord how do you have hope for their eternity?  The list just goes on and on and on.  Dark shadow after dark shadow of trial, pain, and heartbreak. 
Yet we can always have hope, not just knowledge but actual possession of hope.  How?  It tells us in the verses following the proclamation: "I WILL ALWAYS HAVE HOPE"
"I will praise you more and more.  My mouth will tell of your righteousness, of your salvation all day long, though I know not its measure.  I will come and proclaim your mighty acts, O Sovereign LORD; I will proclaim your righteousness, yours alone."                                                 Psalm 71:14-16
The key is giving God the dark struggles that can choke the hope right out of our hearts so that we can then be filled with praise and give that back to him as well.  We can then proclaim that which fills us – hope in place of worry and doubt.  We need think of and then to speak of God's righteous salvation.   We need to remember and proclaim what He has done in our lives and the lives of others, and to remember and declare to all around us the righteousness that is found in God and God alone.  None compare to him, no blessing, no struggle, nothing compares to the great righteousness that is God.
So what does this look like for us today?  How do we get started on the path to possessing hope always?  I think a great way to start is with holding onto the wisdom in the passage from Philippians 4. 
"Rejoice in the Lord always (if you want hope always you need to rejoice always – makes sense). I will say it again: Rejoice! Let your gentleness be evident to all. The Lord is near. Do not be anxious (worry) about anything, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus. Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable--if anything is excellent or praiseworthy--think about such things (this does not say dwell on the trial or struggle but on the goodness that is God and give it in praise).  Whatever you have learned or received or heard from me, or seen in me--put it into practice. And the God of peace will be with you.    Philippians 4: 4-9
I encourage you to mediate on these words.  Write them down.  Keep them with you as a reminder and when things get tough don't let the worry and pain overshadow the Hope that we HAVE (that is always there for us) in God our savior.  Think about - remember the things that are worth remembering.
I HOPE that in the midst of your storms in life that you will remember and think on all that is good and lovely and praiseworthy about your God. 
I hope that you too will be able to proclaim: "I Will always have hope!"

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Plasm 61,62,64 and 69

Since I cannot sleep, running through the songs for church today. Running through all of the details of the service worrying if everything is in place for friend day. It was nice to be reminded that God has the service planned, He is to be glorified, honored, and His name will be praised today!
What I love about the Psalm's is they are songs of praise, hardship, faith, hope, and desperate cry's for help.
 
Psalm 61: After I finished this Psalm the Lord showed me five ways in which He protects His children.
1. A mighty, Rock of Safety. (v2)
2. My Refuge. (v3)
3. A high tower where my enemies can never ever reach me. (v3)
4. We are safe beneath the Shelter of your wings. (v4)
5. You send your loving-kindness and your truth to guard and watch over me. (v7)
To fully understand and appreciate these five places of safety, it's so important to have a visual knowledge of the of the land (the topography) of Israel.  There are not very many trees in Israel and you can often find yourself exposed to the attacks of the enemy.
Psalm 61 painted a picture of safety above all the attacks and storms of life. . .a place of peace and protection.
 
Psalm62:
Waiting on God. (v1,2)
Address to the psalmist's enemies. (v3)
The character of the psalmist's enemies. (v4)
 Advice to wait upon God and to trust Him at all times. (vs5-8)
God's evaluation of men. (vs9)
Good wholesome advice. (vs10)
God is the source of power and grace. (vs11,12).
Psalm 62 has been a source of great comfort to the distressed people of God through the centuries. David, the human author, was used of God to write this insightful revelation since he knew what it was to wait patiently for God to bring the desired deliverance. This psalm, was one of the favorites of Martin Luther, who knew what it was to patiently to wait for Him to come to his rescue. Doubtless it will be the source of great inspiration and encouragement to many of God's hurting people in the future, who will come to know Him in a real and personal manner.
Psalm 64:
Inside this psalm David is meditating upon, and pondering all the ways of the wicked. The wicked are involved in what they think are hidden schemes and plans that involve cunning, craftiness and the items of planning that goes under the surface of what can be found out.
Because these wicked schemes are cunning, shrewd and very carefully crafted in the depths of their thinking they think that these schemes are also hidden from being made public and can therefore be implemented easily without any impeding force coming down on these plans.. That they really are for all intents and purposes secret plots, conspiracies. Well hidden within the depths of their own thinking, far under the surfaces of possible detection from their advisories. Likewise David's meditation is also secret and reaching far into the depths.
These depths of thinking that David is writing to the wicked and their seemingly hidden plots, also applies to his own meditations which includes his contemplation of their actions and the depths of their plots as he is also thinking and reaching into the depths himself.
Psalm 69:
This begins our look at the face of God.  As you read through any of these psalms, underline every request David makes to God.  Then, underline and circle every and all characteristics of God.  Beginning in verse one, we see David crying out for God to save Him.  That would be a request.  Note in verse five our sins cannot be hidden from God.  This is because God is omniscient (all-knowing). 
We learn that God is the Lord God of hosts and the God of Israel (v6). 
He is the receiver of our prayers, He is LORD, He is God, He has endless mercy, and He alone saves (v13). 
He is the Deliverer (v14). 
He has complete loving-kindness and tender mercies (v16). 
He has the power to redeem and deliver all (v18). 
We see a side of Him we never want to see in verse 24:  He experiences disgruntlement and wrathful anger. 
He is righteous (v27). 
Again, He has the power to save (v29). 
Finally we see that He is worthy of praises sung and to be magnified (v30).

Chuck Goulart