The Bible Recap - Day 114 (Psalm 43-45, 49, 84-85, 87) - Year 3
Episode Date: April 24, 2021SHOW 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 FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: -... Deuteronoy 8:17-18 - Article: Why the Psalms Are Written "For the Choir Director" - Exodus 34:6-7 - Trips to Israel! 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!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
We covered seven Psalms today.
One of my favorite parts about Psalm 43 is how David preaches the gospel to himself.
He's struggling and he feels far from God, but he speaks from Minder's of the truth to
his own soul in verse 5.
Why are you downcast, O my soul, and why are you in turmoil within me?
Hope in God, or I shall again praise him, my salvation, and my God."
David tells his heart and mind what to do.
This is exactly the kind of thing Moses told the Israelites to do in tough times.
To remember who God is and what he has done.
David is putting Moses' words into practice hundreds of years later.
In Psalm 44, we see that David is even relying on the things God has done for his ancestors,
not just himself personally, as a source of praise.
He remembers that God is the one who grants victory, not a man's strong arm or sword
or bow, especially since
sometimes Israel didn't even take weapons to war at all.
Remember back when Moses warned the Israelites against three kinds of sinful thinking?
One was fearful thought, and two were prideful thoughts.
In Deuteronomy 8, Moses addressed the second kind of prideful thought by saying, be
wearless, you say in your heart, my power and the might of my hand have gotten me this will.
You shall remember the Lord your God for it is He who gives you power to get will,
that He may confirm His covenant that He swore to your fathers as it is this day."
Again, David is doing exactly what Moses encouraged them to do. He's walking in humility and it
leads him to praise God. But right now David
is confused because God doesn't seem to be currently granting the kind of victory he
did in the past. From David's vantage point, it seems like God has not kept up his end
of the covenant. So David's taking that concern to God himself. He has no idea what kind
of sin might be prompting God's silence on their behalf, and he asked God to come to their rescue.
We don't get any indication if David's claim is right or wrong, whether there's sin to be repented of among the people or not.
But the fact that this is written to be a corporate song is an interesting thing, because then, when the people are singing it,
it might prompt some individual reflection, which in turn might prompt some repentance from any end confesses
sins among the people.
By the way, the reason we know this song was written to be sung corporately is because
it has that little phrase at the top that says, to the choir master.
Personal songs usually say something like, of David or of ASAP.
If you want more info on all this, we'll link to a short article in the show notes.
And if you haven't been reading those little lines at the top, check them out.
It's really interesting to read a song in light of its intended voice and audience.
For instance, Psalm 45 was written for a wedding.
The king's wedding, to be precise.
This one wasn't written by David, but it's probably about David, or at least about one
of his descendants.
Even in the context of a wedding,
the song still opens with praise of God.
Unlike Psalm 45, which is for two specific people,
Psalm 49 is addressed to everyone,
all the peoples of the earth.
The Psalmist has one message for everyone,
rich and poor, low and high, wise and foolish,
and the message is this, You're going to die.
It's basically a call to remember what matters in life, because that will drive out fear.
In verse 5, he says, why should I fear in times of trouble? He points out that God has
ransomed his soul, so in the face of worldly oppression or even death,
he can rejoice. And while Psalm 49 ends by focusing on death, Psalm 84 brings things back to focus on life, specifically the life of God's servant. The psalmist says he never feels more at home than in God's
house. When he's away from it, he feels weak, but when he's there, he feels alive.
When He's away from it, He feels weak. But when He's there, He feels alive.
Verses 5 through 7 talk about strength.
Verse 5 says,
Blessed are those whose strength is in you.
And verse 7 continues,
They go from strength to strength.
There's a hint here that the overall context
of verses 5 through 7 indicates something
along the lines of,
They go from you to you.
I love that. It's like there's no other place to go but to the Lord.
He's our home and he's our strength.
The psalmist values nearness to God above everything else,
and he's even willing to serve in humble positions just to draw near to God.
Psalm 85 is a corporate lament.
It points to God's past faithfulness and asks him to bless Israel again.
One of the standout features of this psalm is how much it calls on the character of God and the name of God.
When God told Moses his name back at Exodus 34,
a lot of the words he used to describe himself are the same words sprinkled throughout this poem.
He forgives iniquity and sin, like in verse 2.
He shows steadfast love and faithfulness, like in verse 7 and 10.
He doesn't clear the guilty, like in verses 4 and 5.
And the ending has some really beautiful imagery.
Israel promises to let their faithfulness rise up from the ground
and trust that God's righteousness will look down from the sky,
and those two things will meet each other in a holy kiss.
And we ended with the weird and wonderful Psalm 87,
which is where my God shot showed up today.
It's easy to read this Psalm and miss what it's hinting at.
This Psalm isn't just praising Zion or Jerusalem.
It's obvious that God loves
Jerusalem for sure, but it's pointing out something else about God here as well. The people
at lists are all Gentiles. There's Rahab, which either refers to the Canaanite prostitute
or more likely is a nickname for Egypt, then there's Babylon, a wicked city, Felistia,
their enemy, Tyra, another wicked city,
and it celebrates that those people are all welcomed in Zion. The Psalm points out Israel's
unique relationship to God, but shows that he invites other nations to make a home among his people.
And it closes with a celebration of singing and dancing in honor of the God who provides for his people and invites
outsiders to be his people.
I'm so grateful he adopts outsiders, not just insiders, because I'm a Gentile, but hey,
all my springs are in him, too, you guys, because he's where the joy is.
Do you want to see Strycher come alive in 3D?
Do you want to visit some of the places we've been reading about?
We want to take you there to the Holy Land, the land of milk and honey.
By the way, they don't call it that for nothing.
The food is amazing.
If you want to find out more about D-groups trips to Israel, visit thebibelrycap.com and click
on the Israel link.
Just fill out the interest form and we'll send you details.
You can also check for a link in today's show notes.