The Bible Recap - Day 105 (Psalm 7, 27, 31, 34, 52) - Year 5
Episode Date: April 15, 2023SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits - Win a trip to Israel! - C...heck out WayFM’s Prayer Wall FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - 1 Samuel 21 - John 19:36 SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Okay Bible readers, it's time for our weekly check-in.
How are you doing?
What have you learned so far?
If you're behind, don't beat yourself up about it.
You're probably reading the Bible more than you would on your own.
I'm excited that you're here today and I hope we'll see you back here again tomorrow.
Yesterday we read all about David's life as a refugee and a fugitive, and today we read
several Psalms he wrote, either during or in response to that time in his life most
likely.
The first chapter we read, Psalm 7, is a lament.
David is a refugee, and he declares that God is his refuge. He may be on the run,
but he maintains his innocence, much like Job did. He invites God to let his enemies punish him
if he is guilty, and if he's innocent, then those who are falsely accusing him are the ones who
are guilty, so he's asking God to punish them. He knows that God is God of justice, and he appeals
to God on that level. Near the end, he makes some general references to the terms of God's covenant with Israel
in regard to sin and repentance, and he asked God to turn the acts of the wicked back on them
as a part of God's plan to bring restoration on the earth.
Then we move on to Psalm 27. It's also a song of lament and of confidence in God.
David calls God his light, his salvation, and his stronghold,
and it's possible that he may have even written this
while he was in the stronghold in the wilderness.
Despite having a safe place to live,
what he really wants is the nearness of God.
In verse 5, when he says,
he will conceal me under the cover of his tent.
The word tent here is the same word used
for the tent of meeting,
where God's special presence
dwelt.
Instead of dwelling in the stronghold, he wants to dwell in God's tent.
Then David says he'll offer sacrifices and shouts of joy, and those are probably the
same types of shouts of victory that Israel used when they defeated Jericho.
It seems like he's recounting God's relationship with Israel through the years, remembering who
God is, before petitioning God for help.
David believes he'll see God's goodness in this life, not just in eternity.
He has God's promise of his kingship to cling to, so he believes God even when his life
appears to be at stake.
He closes the psalm by preaching the truth to himself again, telling his
heart to be strong and courageous and wait for the Lord.
By the time we hit Psalm 31, you may have begun to see a pattern in how his laments tend
to go. He starts with praise, brings his complaints and requests, and ends with praise
again. By bookending his laments with praise, he's surrounding his needs with reminders of who God is.
In this chapter, he refers to God as a stronghold, again,
a rock of refuge.
Some commentators believe David was living at Masada
at the time he wrote this,
Masada is a huge rock in the wilderness
where King Herod with later built his desert fortress.
To this day,
it's Israel's most popular tourist attraction. It's magnificent. And by the way,
if David was there when he wrote some of these Psalms, that would explain a lot of the imagery he's
using. You may have recognized verse 5 as a verse Jesus quotes on the cross. It says,
into your hand, I commit my spirit. David trusts God with his life.
And that trust comes not only from personal experience,
but from remembering God's covenant to his people.
In verse 10, he says,
my strength fails because of my iniquity.
It's possible that David is just wondering
if he's done anything to bring this on himself,
but it's also possible that he might be mourning over the deaths he caused by lying to a Himalek in
1 Samuel 21.
Even though that lie wasn't the cause of his distress, it was a sinful response in the
midst of his distress.
Like a lot of us when we're going through a dark time, David feels like God has cut him
off.
But now he realizes he was hasty in thinking that and it was just his fear speaking.
God came to his rescue in his own time
and David ends by calling others to trust in God
when they're waiting for him to act.
Psalm 34 is our first non-lament Psalm today.
It's a Psalm of Thanksgiving.
David praises God for delivering him
and invites others to trust God too.
He reminds the listener that looking
to God delivers us from fears, not necessarily from the things we fear, but from the actual fear
itself. In verse 13, David says, keep your tongue from evil and your lips from speaking to seat.
And I kind of wonder if David's preaching to himself here in regard to the way he lied to a Himalad.
He says, God attends to the righteous,
and even though their lives won't be trouble-free
as verse 19 points out,
God is in the habit of delivering his people.
The righteous and the wicked will both have trouble
in this life, but the righteous are promised a different ending.
Verse 20 says, he keeps all his bones,
not one of them is broken.
The gospel of John points to this verse in chapter 19 as a prophecy of Christ on the cross.
It was standard in those days to break the legs of people who were crucified to expedite their
deaths, but they didn't break Jesus' legs. This prophecy was fulfilled.
Psalm 52 is our final sum of the day. David has harsh words for Saul here and possibly for Doug the
Edamite who exposed David's location to Saul. But David also emphasized God's justice and faithfulness
as opposed to his own desire for revenge. He trusts his relationship with God to be all he needs
in the midst of trouble. Today was our first day of all Psalms. There's a lot of content about God
and his character here, so watch him down at you. My God shot was in Psalm 34.5. It says, those who look to Him are
radiant and their faces shall never be ashamed. When I read that verse, you were the
first thing that came to mind. All of you out there listening and reading the Bible
alongside of me. You're all looking to Him. And I keep hearing stories about how He's
changing and expanding your understanding of Himself, I can only imagine how that's impacting your
days, that you are carrying with you a new light and hope that's brighter than it was 105
days ago. I bet there's a new radiance to you because you're fixing your eyes on him
and he's where the joy is. Today's podcast is brought to you by WayFM. They understand life can fill
overwhelming and lonely sometimes, so to help you feel known, loved, and prayed for,
they've created a space where you can receive prayer and pray for others.
They call it the prayer wall. Check it out at wayfm.com-forward-flash--prey or click the link in the show notes.