Saturday, September 8, 2012

Consign Your Gold To Dust - Job 22

Sometimes, prayer becomes difficult because we've lost our intimacy with God.  In Job 22:21-30, Eliphaz gives his friend Job some good advice about regaining closeness to God.  He says, "Come to terms with God and be at peace; in this way good will come to you.  Receive instruction from His mouth, and place His sayings in your heart (verses 21-22 HCSB)."  When a person can 'agree with God (ESV)', or 'come to terms with God (HCSB)', or 'acquaint now thyself with Him (KJV)', or 'reconcile yourself with God (NET)', then the result is peace.  Peace is found through by receiving God's instructions, and placing His sayings in your heart.  These words perfectly describe the practice of meditation.  The Logos Prayer, or praying the word of God, fills your heart with God's instructions, and thus draws your heart back into a place where you can agree with God once again.

Verses 23-25 (HCSB) say, "If you return to the Almighty, you will be renewed.  If you banish injustice from your tent and consign your gold to the dust, the gold of Ophir to the stones in the wadis, the Almighty will be your gold and your finest silver."  Returning to God doesn't necessarily mean that one has completely left him.  Rather, it means a change of heart and mind, once again aligning the Self with God.  This is done by banishing injustice (inequity) from the tent (soul) of the believer.  Eliphaz's point is that Job has departed from a close relationship with God, and that he needs to return.  Perhaps you also need to return to a closer walk with the Lord.  

Verse 24 says that the way to return to the Almighty is to consign your gold to the dust, and the gold of Ophir to the stones in the wadis.  This involves discarding all that the world offers, which has value in the eyes of society, and exchanging it for the riches of God.  Then, "the Almighty will be your gold and your finest silver (v. 25)."  

It also means considering all my glory as loss.  Philippians 3:7-8 (HCSB) says, "But everything that was a gain to me, I have considered to be a loss because of Christ.  More than that, I also consider everything to be a loss in view of the surpassing value of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. Because of Him I have suffered the loss of all things and consider them filth, so that I may gain Christ."

Verse 26 says, "Then [and only then] you will delight in the Almighty and lift up your face to God."  There's a difference between relating to God out if duty and fear (this attitude indicated by a posture of downcast head), and delighting in God (demonstrated by an uplifted face).  You can delight in God once you have aligned your soul to His, and agreed with Him.  The result is that "you will pray to Him, and He will hear you, and you will fulfill your vows.  When you make a decision, it will be carried out, and light will shine on your ways.  When others are humiliated and you say, 'Lift them up,' God will save the humble.  He will even rescue the guilty one, who will be rescued by the purity of your hands (Verses 27-30)."

When, like Job, you feel that prayer is difficult because you have lost your intimacy with God, return to a place of agreement with Him by consigning your gold to dust.  This means rejecting everything that the world says is important in favor of what God says is important.  It means letting go of your sense of self that is based on the world's view, and exchanging it for God's view of you in light of His redeeming love.  Then God will lift your face to Himself, and you will return once more to that right relationship that was lost. 


A MEDITATION WITH ECUMENICAL PRAYER BEADS

Invitatory
21 Come to terms with God and be at peace;
in this way good will come to you.
22 Receive instruction from His mouth,
and place His sayings in your heart.

Cruciform
24 ...Consign your gold to the dust...

Weeks
25 the Almighty will be your gold
and your finest silver.

Benedictory
26 Then you will delight in the Almighty
and lift up your face to God.
27 You will pray to Him, and He will hear you...

PRAYER:
Lord, show me all the gold that I have treasured in my heart, that I need to throw into the street, that I must regard as dust.  Let me never glory in my own wealth of talent or my own sense of worthiness.  May I never derive my self-esteem from what the world thinks of me (which is the value of gold).  Rather, may I glory in You, the Lifter of my head.  Amen.


Friday, August 24, 2012

The Kind of Person God Brags About

Job 2:3 “Have you considered my servant Job? There is no one like him on earth. The man is blameless as well as upright. He fears God and keeps away from evil. He remains firm in his integrity...”  (ISV)

Am I the kind of person God can brag about?  Scholars debate the question of whether God was inciting Satan to evil.  While I don't believe God tempts anyone to evil (even or especially Satan) that's not even the point.  The point is that God is proud of Job.

Consider that for a moment.  Here, God's greatest enemy has come before him.  God could take the occasion to remind Satan how powerful a God He really is.  He could have said, "Have you considered the Grand Canyon?"  Or He might have asked, "Have you noticed the Northern Lights lately?"   But He didn't.  He said, "Have you considered My servant Job?"

The question I ask myself today is whether God can say the same thing about me.  In this meditation, replace your name for Job's name.  See if it fits.  If it doesn't fit, ask God to reveal how you can change your life to make you into the kind of person that God brags about.

MEDITATION WITH ECUMENICAL PRAYER BEADS:
(Click here to get your own)

Invitatory
Job 2:3 “Have you considered my servant ________?

Cruciform
There is no one like him (her) on earth.

Weeks
The man (woman) is blameless as well as upright. He fears God and keeps away from evil.

Benedictory
He (she) remains firm in his (her) integrity...”

The Patience of Job: Understanding the Balance of Suffering and Pleasure

When Job's faith was tested, he had a choice to make.  He could either rail against God and curse God for being unjust, or he could accept his situation for what it was and try to find some peace in it.  Suffering is an undeniable fact of life.  It doesn't do any good to try to point fingers of blame or to wallow in self-pity.  Instead, Christians need to understand Jesus' words when He said that God makes the sun to shine and the rain to fall on the righteous as well as the wicked (Matthew 5:45).

The reader must realize that Job's story of suffering is only unusual for two reasons:  First, it is is unusual in the sense of its extremity.  Evil comes to everyone.  Job's story doesn't recount the troubles of his friends or his neighbors--not because they had no troubles, but because it is his story.  No doubt, their stories would, if they were told, also involve suffering on various levels.  

Second, it is unusual because Job's response to suffering was different than that of those around him.  Some told him that he should blame himself.  Others said he should curse God and die.  But only Job showed a righteous response that understood a balance of both pleasure and pain in the world.  The world is full of nakedness and loss, but it is also full of God's gracious gifts.  You can't experience one without the other, for they are inherently interconnected.  So his response is one of praise.  1 Thessalonians 5:18 tells us to "give thanks in all circumstances, for this is God's will for you in Christ Jesus."  Psalm 34:1 says, " I will extol the LORD at all times; his praise will always be on my lips."  Job took this sentiment literally.

In today's meditation from Job 1:21 (ISV), seek to understand the balance between pleasure and suffering in your own life.  Ask God to give you the patience, and the peace, of Job.

MEDITATION WITH ECUMENICAL PRAYER BEADS:
(Click here to get your own)

Invitatory
...I left my mother’s womb naked,
and I will return to God naked.

Cruciform
May the name of the Lord be blessed.

Weeks
The Lord has given,
and the Lord has taken.

Benedictory
2:10 ...Are we to accept what is good from God but not tragedy?”...

Thursday, August 23, 2012

The Prayer of a Weaned Child

The Prayer of a Weaned Child

Jehovah, my heart is not haughty, nor mine eyes lofty; Neither do I exercise myself in great matters, Or in things too wonderful for me.  Surely I have stilled and quieted my soul; Like a weaned child with his mother, Like a weaned child is my soul within me.  O Israel, hope in Jehovah From this time forth and for evermore. A Song of Ascents.   (Psalm 131 ASV)


This is one of my favorite psalms because of its simplicity and honesty.  Too often I find myself in a proud and haughty position.  As a father to my children, I must be aware that I'm constantly learning along with them.  As a pastor, I need to remind myself of the servant part of servant-leadership.  As a theologian, I have to constantly recall my own lowliness before the God whom I have the audacity to presume to understand.  This psalm puts a check on my pride and haughtiness, reminding me of my true position before God.

One of the things that bothered Jesus the most as he watched hypocrites pray was the way they would exalt themselves in prayer. In Matthew 6:5-8 (ISV), He said, "And whenever you pray, don’t be like the hypocrites who love to stand in the synagogues and on the street corners so that they will be seen by people. I tell all of you  with certainty, they have their full reward!  But whenever you pray, go into your room, close the door, and pray to your Father who is hidden. And your Father who sees from the hidden place will reward you.  When you are praying, don’t say meaningless things  like the gentiles do, because they think they will be heard by being so wordy.  Don’t be like them, because your Father knows what you need before you ask him."

Jesus understood the value of praying differently from the way the rest of the world prays.  Privately rather than pridefully--that was His motto.  If your prayers are going to be intimate then you shouldn't broadcast them to the world.  And you definitely should keep yourself in proper perspective.  In Luke 18:10-14 (ISV) Jesus tells a story about two different kinds of prayers and pray-ers.  “Two men went up to the Temple to pray. One was a Pharisee, and the other was a tax collector.  The Pharisee stood by himself and prayed, ‘O God, I thank you that I’m not like other people—thieves, dishonest people, adulterers, or even this tax collector.   I fast twice a week, and I give a tenth of my entire income.’  But the tax collector stood at a distance and would not even look up to heaven. Instead, he continued to beat his chest and said, ‘O God, be merciful to me, the sinner that I am!’   I tell you, this man, rather than the other one, went down to his home justified, because everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, but the person who humbles himself will be exalted.”

Psalm 131 demonstrates the kind of perspective that Jesus was talking about.  No pride.  No haughtiness.  Not trying to figure out theological puzzles or life conundrums that are too great or lofty, because such such arrogance displeases God.  Instead, the psalmist says that his prayer is altogether different.  What does he do when he goes into his private prayer room?  He stills and quiets his soul, like a weaned child with its mother.  That's it.  Silence and rest.  Perfect contentment in God's presence.  What could be more beautiful than that?

I remember when my children were nursing infants, how they cried after their mother when they were hungry.  One of my children in particular constantly wanted to nurse,  always groping to find a breast and the nourishment it provided.  One day, in despair, my wife said, "You don't want me--you just want Milk Factory".  And she was right.  That's exactly what the baby wanted.  How often we are like that baby, when we go to God in prayer.  We don't really want God.  We are only interested in the blessings we can get from Him.

Instead of ceaselessly grasping after God, the psalmist says he rests himself in the Lord.  Like a weaned child who finally appreciates his mother for who she is and is able to lay his head on her breast without asking for milk, the praying person should be able to rest in God without asking for anything.  "I have stilled and quieted my soul," says the psalmist.  To do this, just relax, understanding that God will feed you when it's time.  As you pray, try not to use words at all, for this is grasping after what you want.  Close your eyes with a contented smile, as a three-year-old would do as she places her head on her mother's breast.  Just be with God.  That is the prayer of a weaned child.

Monday, February 13, 2012

Psalm 55 - Enemies Within

            This psalm deals with enemies within—both enemies within the psalmist’s circle of friendship and enemies (attitudes) within himself.  Just as Psalm 3 dealt with David’s internal and external struggle at the rebellion of his son Absalom, so Psalm 55 also expresses David’s grief over the betrayal of a close friend.  
                 The Targum, an Aramaic translation of the Hebrew scriptures, names the offending character of Psalm 55 as Ahithophel.  The Holman Bible Dictionary gives the following information on this this Old Testament Judas:
 
AHITHOPHEL
(uh hihth' oh fehl) Personal name meaning, “brother of folly” if it is not a scribal attempt to hide an original name including a Canaanite god such as Ahibaal. See Jerubbaal. David's counselor who joined Absalom's revolt against King David (2 Samuel 15:12). David prayed that his counsel might be turned to foolishness (2 Samuel 15:31) and commissioned the faithful Hushai to help Zadok and Abiathar, the priests, counteract the counsel of Ahithophel. Ahithophel led Absalom to show his rebellion was for real by taking over his father's concubines (2 Samuel 16:15-23). Ahithophel's counsel was famous as being equal to the word of God (2 Samuel 16:23). Hushai, however, persuaded Absalom not to follow Ahithophel's military advice (2 Samuel 17:1), this being God's work (2 Samuel 17:14). Disgraced, Ahithophel returned home to Giloh, put his house in order, and hanged himself (2 Samuel 17:23). He may have been the grandfather of Bathsheba, David's partner in sin and wife (2 Samuel 11:3; 2 Samuel 23:34).[1]

            Perhaps Psalm 55 will give us some insight into the spiritual warfare we deal with, when we are betrayed by a friend.  The psalmist writes:
 
 1 Listen to my prayer, O God,
   do not ignore my plea;
 2 hear me and answer me.
My thoughts trouble me and I am distraught 

            The NIV that I have used here does not do justice to David’s feelings.  The King James Version says, “I mourn in my complaint, and make a noise.”  The New King James Version reads, “I am restless in my complaint, and moan noisily,” while Young’s renders it, “I mourn in my meditation, and make a noise,”  The Hebrew word for this noise is “huwm.”  Perhaps it would not be an unfair translation to say, “In my meditation, all I can do is hum.”  You’ve probably been there before, when your prayers turn to groanings because of your grief.  What was creating such grief in David’s spirit?  Verse 3 says he is in this state…


 3 because of what my enemy is saying,
   because of the threats of the wicked;
for they bring down suffering on me
   and assail me in their anger. 

            It’s important to take responsibility for our own thoughts.  Jesus emphasized the importance of a pure thought life when He said, “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God (Matthew 5:8).  The entire Sermon on the Mount seems to be about the believer’s inner life, and emphasizes that attitude really does matter.  Attitude reflects the choices a person makes in his head, to focus on one thing or another.  When someone chooses to focus on the positive, then good things overflow in her life.  When a person chooses to focus on the negative, then evil things overflow in his life. 

            There are, however, times when thoughts just show up on their own.  They seem to come from a source outside ourselves.  The Spirit of God can speak to us in this way, surprising and blessing us by divine love.  The enemy of our souls can also speak directly to our spirits, filling our hearts with wickedness and fear.  David ‘s next words show that he has been spiritually attacked with thoughts and attitudes that have come from outside himself:

 4 My heart is in anguish within me;
   the terrors of death have fallen on me.
5 Fear and trembling have beset me;
   horror has overwhelmed me. 

            I suggest to you that when evil thoughts appear unbidden, they may be an attack of the enemy.  Though we don’t often like to admit it, evil imaginings seem to “pop up,” seemingly on their own.  I knew one very sane woman loved her infant very much.  She told me that when he was at his colicky worst, sometimes she imagined herself doing violence to him.  She would never actually harm her child, but violent thoughts seemed to arise out of nowhere.  It wasn’t her—the thoughts seemed to come from outside her. 

            What did she do?  She employed the tactic that all believers need to learn.  We find this in 2 Corinthians 10:5, which says, “We demolish arguments and every pretension that sets itself up against the knowledge of God, and we take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ.”  Calling on the name of Jesus, she took her thoughts captive and turned instead to positive, prayerful, and faithful thoughts.  David does the same thing when he says:


6
I said, “Oh, that I had the wings of a dove!
   I would fly away and be at rest.
7 I would flee far away
   and stay in the desert;
8 I would hurry to my place of shelter,
   far from the tempest and storm.” 

            In verse 8, David calls this trouble, “the tempest and storm,” or (better) “windy tempest [and] storm.”  The word for “windy” is ruach, which can also be translated as “spirit.”  So David is talking about a “spirit-storm.”  Often, the negative emotions and thoughts that come our way feel like a demonically inspired spirit-storm, and David wants to escape it all.

            With these words, David has “gone to a happy place.”  In the Bible, the dove is associated with the Holy Spirit.  David indicates here that he wants the Spirit to carry him away so that he can be at rest.  He would flee far away and stay in the “desert.”  This word is better translated as “pasture.”  David mentally returns to the peace and calm of his shepherding days, when God made him lie down in green pastures, led him beside still waters, and restored his soul.  So many psalms refer to God as a hiding place and a shelter from the storm, that we cannot read verse 8 without realizing that David’s desire is to find his refuge in God Himself.

            In our previous study of Psalm 48, we learned that the believer is the Temple of God.  By extension, the believer is also analogous to Jerusalem, Zion, and other words used in the Psalms to describe the holy place of God.  Keep in mind that when David was writing his poetry, he was writing about real people, places, and events.  He was writing about his betrayal by Ahithophel.  But believers today can make the Psalms deeply personal by reading his sentiments a symbolic of their inner lives.  Verses 9-11 talk about violence in “the city,” which the believer can interpret as an internal conflict within their own souls.

 9 Lord, confuse the wicked, confound their words,
   for I see violence and strife in the city.
10 Day and night they prowl about on its walls;
   malice and abuse are within it.
11 Destructive forces are at work in the city;
   threats and lies never leave its streets. 

            At this point, I’d like to pause to make a radical suggestion.  Often, Hebrew people would anthropomorphize God, describing the “eyes of the Lord” or the “hand of God.”  Other figurative language describes God as a “consuming fire,” or calls the earth, “God’s footstool.”  For a moment I invite you to think creatively with me, imagining some of the words in verses 4-5, 9-11 as a bit more than what they seem to be on the surface.  All it requires are a few capital letters.

            Verse 4 refers to the “terrors of death” that have fallen on the psalmist.  Why not read this as a proper noun—“Terrors of Death?”  In verse 5, “fear and trembling have beset me; horror has overwhelmed me.”  If we take these concepts and capitalize them into proper names, then “Fear and Trembling have beset me, Horror has overwhelmed me.”  By doing this, we can see these emotions for what they truly are—the servants of Satan.  The New Living Translation renders 1 Samuel 16:14 as, “Now the Spirit of the LORD had left Saul, and the LORD sent a tormenting spirit that filled him with depression and fear.”  Certainly, sometimes (at least), emotions that plague God’s people can have spiritual reality behind them—demonic personalities that have your destruction as their main goal.  Could they have names like Terror of Death, Fear, Trembling, and Horror?  What else would demons be named?

            In verse 9, Violence and Strife are also in the city, prowling on its walls.  Malice is also there, with his friend Abuse.  These are Satan’s special forces operatives—his “Destructive Forces.”  A demon named Threats has joined their ranks, along with another called Lies.  This naming of demons may sound strange to you, but it is not unheard of in Hebrew literature.  Leviticus 16:6-8 mentions a demon named Azazel.  Isaiah 34:8-14 says, “"The land shall become burning pitch Thorns shall grow over its strongholds It shall be the haunt of jackals yea there shall the night hag alight and find for herself a resting place." What is the “night hag?”  The Hebrew word is liyliyth.  The English equivalent is “Lilith,” who is a demon of Hebrew folklore.[2]  The commonly-used translation, “screech owl” doesn’t do the Hebrew justice.  Certainly names like “Satan,” “Apollyon,” and “Abaddon” are familiar to us, but what about the demon names that are hidden in the text of Psalm 91:5-6, “You will not be afraid of the Terror by Night, or of the Arrow-That-Flies-by-Day; Of the Pestilence-That-Stalks-in-Darkness, or of the Destruction-That-Lays-Waste-at-Noon.”  Here, the capital letters are mine, but these words given as names are substantiated in demology.[3]

            Whether the reader interprets these as literal names of actual demons is not as important to me as the reader’s understanding that terror of death, fear, trembling, horror, violence, and strife—these things are demonic, and their source is the Evil One.  When these influences, whether literal demons or metaphorical concepts, crawl through the cities of our souls, they leave destruction in their path.  The believer is justified in praying against such enemies, “Lord, confuse the wicked, confound their words (verse 9).”

            In the next verses, David expresses his despair that his betrayer was once his friend and advisor. 

 12 If an enemy were insulting me,
   I could endure it;
if a foe were rising against me,
   I could hide.
13 But it is you, a man like myself,
   my companion, my close friend,
14 with whom I once enjoyed sweet fellowship
   at the house of God,
as we walked about
   among the worshipers…
20 My companion attacks his friends;
   he violates his covenant.
21 His talk is smooth as butter,
   yet war is in his heart;
his words are more soothing than oil,
   yet they are drawn swords. 

            I believe that David understands the difference between the physical man who betrayed him, and the powers and principalities that were behind him.  Ephesians 6:12 says, “For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms.”  He shifts from discussing his “friend,” to talking about his “enemies.”  His understanding that these enemies are demons rather than human is indicated by his belief that they are able to “go down alive to the realm of the dead,” (v. 15) because that place of evil seems to be their natural habitation.

                                15 Let death take my enemies by surprise;
   let them go down alive to the realm of the dead,
   for evil finds lodging among them.

How can David get victory in his life?  How can he experience God’s blessing again, even though friends have turned to enemies and spiritual foes have rallied against him?  How can you experience victory in the spiritual warfare that engages you?  The next verses give the answer:

 16 As for me, I call to God,
   and the LORD saves me.
17 Evening, morning and
noon
   I cry out in distress,
   and he hears my voice.
18 He rescues me unharmed
   from the battle waged against me,
   even though many oppose me.
19 God, who is enthroned from of old,
   who does not change—
he will hear them and humble them,
   because they have no fear of God…
  22 Cast your cares on the LORD
   and he will sustain you;
he will never let
   the righteous be shaken.
23 But you, God, will bring down the wicked
   into the pit of decay;
the bloodthirsty and deceitful
   will not live out half their days.
   But as for me, I trust in you. 

Call out to God, who hears your distress.  He will hear you and rescue you unharmed from the battle that wages against you.  Remember that God is enthroned from of old, meaning that he doesn’t change.  He is not afraid of defeat, because defeat is impossible for him.  Those who have no fear of God will learn to fear him, and will be humbled.

Verses 16-17 talk about prayer—the secret weapon.  David remembers that he doesn’t defeat the enemies within by his own might or by his own power, but by the Spirit of God.  “I call to God, and the LORD saves me” are the words he uses, giving credit where credit is due.  David names three times per day, evening, and morning, and noon, that he goes to God in prayer.  How often do you pray?  Do you have established prayer times, regularly scheduled appointments with God?  When you make and keep these appointed times, you strengthen your prayer life and ensure victory in spiritual warfare.            

In verse 22, the psalmist shifts from talking about his own situation, to exhorting the reader (you) about your own battles.  “Cast your cares on the Lord and he will sustain you; he will never let the righteous be shaken.”  God will bring down the bloodthirsty and deceitful (whether we’re talking about people or demonic enemies, the principle still applies) and thrown them into the pit of decay. 

“But as form me, I trust in you.”  Now there’s a line you can hold onto!  Cast your cares on him, and he will sustain you.  David ends his psalm on spiritual warfare on a positive note, reminding the reader that God has already won the victory.  Though battles rage against God’s people, “he will never let the righteous be shaken.”

When it comes to spiritual warfare, the “enemy within” can mean three different things.  First, it could mean the human being that has offended, hurt, or betrayed you—a person you were once close to, a person within your own inner circle.  Or, the “enemy within” can be forces of spiritual wickedness that seek to control your life, demonic adversaries that want you defeated.  Or, the “enemy within” can be your own sinful thoughts and ungodly attitude.  In any case, David’s words bring victory.  Find hope in them today:

16 As for me, I call to God,
   and the LORD saves me.
17 Evening, morning and
noon
   I cry out in distress,
   and he hears my voice.
18 He rescues me unharmed
   from the battle waged against me,
   even though many oppose me.



[1] http://www.studylight.org/dic/hbd/view.cgi?number=T196.  February 12, 2012

[2] LILITH (Isa. 34:14; ultimately from Sumerian lil, "air," not Heb. layl(ah), "night") was originally a succubus, believed to cohabit with mortals, but in the Arslan Tash incantation…she is identified with the child-stealing demon, a character she retains in later folklore. The tradition that the name means "screech-owl" (in so many translations) reflects a very ancient association of birds, especially owls, with the demonic. (The Jewish Virtual Library http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/judaica/ejud_0002_0005_0_05094.html.  February 12, 2012)

[3] DEVER ("Pestilence") is the other demonic herald who marches with YHWH to battle (Hab. 3:5). Dever is also mentioned in Psalms 91:5–6: "Thou shalt not be afraid for the Terror (Paḥad) by night; Nor for the Arrow (Ḥeẓ) that flieth by day; Nor for the Pestilence (Dever) that walketh in the darkness; Nor for the Destruction (Ketev) that wasteth at noonday." Not only Dever but also the other words italicized above have been plausibly identified as names of demons. The "Arrow" is a familiar symbol in folklore, for disease or sudden pain, and Ketev (Qetev; cf. Deut. 32:24; Isa. 28:2; Hos. 13:14) is in this instance the personification of overpowering noonday heat, known also to Greek and Roman demonology.  (The Jewish Virtual Library.  http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/judaica/ejud_0002_0005_0_05094.html.  February 12, 2012)

Friday, January 27, 2012

Where is God When We Lose the Battle?


Psalm 44

 

            Inherent in warfare is the idea that there are winners and there are losers.  One of the most frustrating things in war is when both sides reach a stalemate.  In the trench warfare of the American Civil War and World War I, many soldiers wrote that they would sooner accept defeat than remain in a deadlock.  No one wanted to continue trading death for death, neither winning nor losing, moving back and forth to conquer a couple of miles of muddy ground.

            Sometimes the Christian life feels like a stalemate.  Some days you win the spiritual battles of temptation, or you see victory in the lives of the loved ones you’re supporting in prayer.  Other days, it seems like you’re losing ground.  At times you’re walking in God’s blessing, and then something happens that makes you feel utterly defeated.  Many believers wonder what makes the difference between win, lose, and draw.

            Like Job’s friends[1], the author of Psalm 44 seems to believe that if things are going well then God is favoring you, but if you’re suffering, God must have removed His favor.  If you’re blessed, it’s certainly because you have been faithful, but if you’ve been defeagted, you must deserve it in some way.  Yet this runs contrary to Jesus’ words in Matthew 5:45, that God “makes His run to rise on the evil and the good.”  He underscores this by saying, “Blessed are those who have been persecuted for the sake of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. ‘Blessed are you when people insult you and persecute you, and falsely say all kinds of evil against you because of Me. Rejoice and be glad, for your reward in heaven is great; for in the same way they persecuted the prophets who were before you (Matthew 5:10-12).”  In many other passages, Jesus indicates that sometimes the righteous suffer, and sometimes the wicked seem to prosper.  But the psalmist doesn’t see it that way.

            Psalm 44 is a cry for God’s help.  Verses 1-3 recall the way God was always faithful to the psalmist’s ancestors.

1We have heard with our ears, O God;
our fathers have told us
what you did in their days,
in days long ago.
2With your hand you drove out the nations
and planted our fathers;
you crushed the peoples
and made our fathers flourish.
3It was not by their sword that they won the land,
nor did their arm bring them victory;
it was your right hand, your arm,
and the light of your face, for you loved them. 

            The psalmist remembers the days of God’s favor, when enemies were driven out by God’s hand.  He attests to God’s greatness, stating that it was not by human power that enemies were defeated.  Instead, it was God’s power that won their battles for them.

            In verses 4-8, the psalmist recognizes God’s sovereignty.
 
4You are my King and my God,
who decrees victories for Jacob.
5Through you we push back our enemies;
through your name we trample our foes.
6I do not trust in my bow,
my sword does not bring me victory;
7but you give us victory over our enemies,
you put our adversaries to shame.
8In God we make our boast all day long,
and we will praise your name forever.       Selah

 
            Verse 4 points out that all victories are by the decree of God, and not because of human action.  In verse 5, it is God who pushes enemies back, and it is through the Name of God that we trample on our foes.[2]  Note that verse 5 has God pushing back enemies in the present tense, and God’s people trampling foes in the present tense.  Verse 6 continues with the psalmist not trusting his bow in the present tense and his sword not bring present victory.  Verse 7 draws out the theme, with God giving victory and putting adversaries to shame—all the in the present tense.  God is God of the present, giving present victory in the battles of life.  Because of this (verse 8) we make our boast all day long, in present-tense, continual action.  This continues even into the future, for “we will praise your name forever.”  (And don’t forget to ponder this at the end of verse 8—selah.  Perhaps if we pondered this longer, we’d never need to go on to the rest of the psalm, for we’d have a better understanding.)

            Beginning with verse 9, we see a change in the psalmist’s attitude.  Where there used to be a sense of victory, all of a sudden, now that the story of his life has changed, his outlook has also shifted.  Military defeat has got him living in spiritual defeat.  Rather than remembering God’s faithfulness in the past, he wallows in self-pity.  Instead of glorifying God for His present deliverance and worshiping God and trusting God for the future, the psalmist allows the current troubles to cloud his faith.  Believers who engage in spiritual warfare need to remember that God is always faithful—in the good times and in the bad.  If Satan can keep you in a defeatist attitude, he has already won.  So the following verses are an example of how not to think, when things get tough.

9But now you have rejected and humbled us;
you no longer go out with our armies.
10You made us retreat before the enemy,
and our adversaries have plundered us.
11You gave us up to be devoured like sheep
and have scattered us among the nations.
12You sold your people for a pittance,
gaining nothing from their sale.
13You have made us a reproach to our neighbors,
the scorn and derision of those around us.
14You have made us a byword among the nations;
the peoples shake their heads at us.
15My disgrace is before me all day long,
and my face is covered with shame
16at the taunts of those who reproach and revile me,
because of the enemy, who is bent on revenge. 

            It’s natural to feel that God has abandoned you when things get tough.  Even Jesus felt abandoned when He hung on the cross, saying, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me (Mark 15:34)?”[3]  We have to understand verse 9, not as a statement of fact, but as a statement that this is how the psalmist feels.  God does not reject His people.  Psalm 94:1 says, For the LORD will not abandon His people, nor will He forsake His inheritance.”

            In verse 10, the psalmist goes on to blame God for their retreat and for being plundered.  Verse 11 has God giving them up for devouring and scattering.  In verse 12 the psalmist accuses God of selling them into slavery, and bemoans the fact that God didn’t even get a good price for His people.  God bears the blame for the reproach, scorn, and derision the people feel in verses 13-16.  Surely the psalmist has not only lost a physical battle, but he is losing the spiritual battle as well.

            Often it’s difficult for the spiritual warrior to understand why painful things are happening to them, when they perceive that they have done nothing wrong to deserve it.  The psalmist indicates this kind of confusion in verses 17-22.

17All this happened to us,
though we had not forgotten you
or been false to your covenant.
18Our hearts had not turned back;
our feet had not strayed from your path.
19But you crushed us and made us a haunt for jackals
and covered us over with deep darkness.
20If we had forgotten the name of our God
or spread out our hands to a foreign god,
21would not God have discovered it,
since he knows the secrets of the heart?
22Yet for your sake we face death all day long;
we are considered as sheep to be slaughtered. 

            It would make sense for God to judge violently if the people had been rebellious, but since the psalmist perceives the people to have been faithful, he can’t understand this.  Two answers may be important here.

            First, just because the psalmist doesn’t perceive the people’s sin, that doesn’t mean that they haven’t sinned.  In Joshua 7, Israel’s armies experienced defeat in battle, and they couldn’t understand why.  Eventually, God pointed to the reason:  One man’s sin had caused the nation’s defeat.  By human reasoning, Israel’s leaders would never have figured out that mystery.  It took the Spirit of God to reveal the truth.  Just because you don’t understand the reason God’s judgment falls, that doesn’t mean you aren’t experiencing God’s wrath.

            Second, we need to understand that sometimes painful things happen.  There’s nothing you can do about them, and you don’t need to figure out the reason why.  You may never understand why you’re suffering, but you can trust that God is working His purposes out.  Romans 8:28 says, “And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.  In Romans 8:37, Paul in fact quotes Psalm 44:22, saying, “For your sake we face death all day long; we are considered as sheep to be slaughtered.”  But then he addresses the attitude of those who complain like this, contradicting the attitude of the psalmist.  “No,” he says.  “In all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.


            Not long ago, I watched an interviewer try to back a celebrity preacher into a corner with the age-old question about suffering in the world:  There are three possibilities about God’s nature.  Either God is good and all-powerful, but doesn’t see the suffering in the world, and is therefore not omniscient; or the good God sees suffering and is powerless to do anything about it and therefore isn’t omnipotent; or God does both sees the suffering in the world, is able to do something about it, and yet does nothing about it, and is therefore not good.  “Which one is it?” asked the interviewer.  But the celebrity preacher refused to take the bait, quickly changing the subject.  In verses 23-26, the psalmist chooses to believe that God is good and that God is omnipotent, yet challenges God’s omniscience.  He believes that God is asleep.

23Awake, O Lord! Why do you sleep?
Rouse yourself! Do not reject us forever.
24Why do you hide your face
and forget our misery and oppression?
25We are brought down to the dust;
our bodies cling to the ground.
26Rise up and help us;
redeem us because of your unfailing love.

            The psalmist believes that if God would simply rouse Himself, lift His face from the celestial pillow, and see that we are brought down to the dust, then God would rise up to help us.  Verse 26 attests to the idea that God is able to help.  God’s unfailing love reflects divine goodness.  So the solution is simply for God to “rise up” from His slumber, breaking God’s sleepy ignorance, and for God to help.  This perspective can’t be further from the truth.  It is simply the way the psalmist feels, much like Jesus saying that He feels like God has abandoned Him when in fact God has not.  Psalm 121:3-4 says, “He who watches over you will not slumber; indeed, he who watches over Israel will neither slumber nor sleep," 

             In my opinion, the evangelist made a mistake in evading the question.  The interviewer made the mistake of assuming that everything that is painful must also be bad.  In fact, God uses painful things in our life to bring good things about.  Paul gives radical encouragement in Romans 5:3-5 when he says, “And not only this, but we also exult in our tribulations, knowing that tribulation brings about perseverance; and perseverance, proven character; and proven character, hope; and hope does not disappoint, because the love of God has been poured out within our hearts through the Holy Spirit who was given to us.

            The Christian life is warfare.  Some of the warfare is external.  We struggle with sickness, accidents, relationship conflicts, praying for the struggles of our loved ones, and many other things.  But most of our spiritual warfare is internal.  We face temptations to sin, spiritual depression, mental exhaustion, difficult decisions, doctrinal confusion, perplexing emotions, and a host of other soul-level enemies that wage war against us.  Sometimes we win these battles, and sometimes we lose.  Instead of blaming God for our troubles, we need to pray Psalm 44 as if it ends after the selah at the end of verse 8.  Selah means “pause and reflect.”  If you’re a Christian, then you need to pause and reflect on all that God has done for you in the past, so you can have faith that He will sustain you today and into the future.  Then you will be able to pray with the psalmist, “In God we make our boast all day long, and we will praise your name forever (44:8).”






[1] For more on this, read the entire Biblical book of Job.
[2] See the Name of God, “Yah” in Psalm 68:1-4. 
[3] Many claim that in this verse, Jesus is stating fact, rather than feeling.  They often quote the first part of Habakkuk 1:13 (KJV), which says, “You are of purer eyes than to behold evil, and can not look on iniquity.”  They say, “See, God had to turn His face away from Jesus, so in this instant, God did abandon Him.  They say this because they don’t want to believe that Jesus ever said anything that was factually inaccurate.  But Jesus was not in error when He said this.  He factually felt abandoned at this moment, and He was saying what He really felt.  Proponents of the view that God cannot look on evil should read the rest of Habakkuk 1:13, which says, “Why do you look upon them that deal treacherously, and hold your tongue when the wicked devours the man that is more righteous than he?”  Obviously, the psalmist knows that God can see the evil that’s going on.  His problem is trying to understand why God does nothing about it.  The truth is that God does see evil, and does do something about it.   Genesis 6:5-8 says, “Then the LORD saw that the wickedness of man was great on the earth, and that every intent of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.  The LORD was sorry that He had made man on the earth, and He was grieved in His heart. The LORD said, “I will blot out man whom I have created from the face of the land, from man to animals to creeping things and to birds of the sky; for I am sorry that I have made them.” But Noah found favor in the eyes of the LORD.”  God sees sin.  God judges sin.  But God also offers grace.