The Bible Recap - Day 136 (Psalm 3-4, 12-13, 28, 55) - Year 5
Episode Date: May 16, 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 - Check out Hope Media Group,... WayNation, WayFM & WayFM’s Prayer Wall FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - 2 Samuel 15:31 - John 10 - Psalm 23 - The Bible Recap Start Page 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.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
David has had a rough time lately, so his songs are going to reflect that.
We open today with Psalm 3, which he wrote when he had to flee Jerusalem because of Absalom's
attempt to steal the throne from him.
The people he used to lead are now speaking ill of his soul. They're saying he's beyond saving.
Not only is that hurtful to David personally, I'm sure, but it's also an affront to God's character.
God loves to save even the most wicked and vile. It displays his mercy and forgiveness.
David has no idea how many people Absalom has turned against him, but it's at least in
the hundreds, if not thousands, especially given all the people Absalom won over when he
was flattering people at the city gates.
So in verse 6, when David says, many thousands of people have set themselves against me all
around, this doesn't seem to be hyperbole.
Despite all that, David knows who God is.
He trusts God and asks God to rescue him.
These circumstances haven't dimmed the brightness of God's goodness to him.
In Psalm 4, we see a lot of the same themes repeated, except this song was written for corporate
worship, not personal worship, so it's less specific to David's life than Psalm 3 is.
This song expresses confidence in God and points out that the anger David feels for being
mistreated has to be submitted to God too.
That's part of what it looks like to put your trust in God.
He knows that ultimately, the nearness of God is where his peace will be found, not in
circumstances.
He finds more joy in knowing God
than all his enemies find in their prosperity and abundance.
God can't be taken away like wine and grain
and material blessings can,
so David doesn't lie awake anxious at night
about losing everything he has.
He knows that ultimately,
he has all that matters,
so he can sleep peacefully.
Some 12 talks about the utter lack
of righteous people in the world.
It seems like almost no one is faithful to God.
David is especially bothered by a few things.
The lies people tell, the pride and arrogance of the people,
and the way they ignore the plight of the poor and needy.
God distances himself from liars and proud people,
but mistreatment of the poor and needy
tends to get his attention.
So David expects God to be moved to action
when people are oppressed.
He asks God to guard them from the wicked
who have risen up all around them.
Psalm 13 gives us another example
of how these songs are an expression of feeling,
but that these feelings don't always align
with the truth about God.
In this song, David accuses God of forgetting him.
David feels forgotten, but God hasn't forgotten him.
David longs for the opportunity to feel God's nearness to seek God's counsel.
He feels desperate to have to be his own counselor.
As someone who tends to lean on my own understanding, this serves as a good challenge to me.
Then David ends with a reminder to his soul that hope is coming.
He knows God is trustworthy, and he's going to praise God for what he's already done
while he waits to see what God will do next.
Some of the same ideas about God's silence and deafness appear in Psalm 28 as well.
David says that when God is distant, it feels like he's dying.
That's what he's referring to in verse one when he says,
if you be silent to me,
I become like those who go down to the pit.
The pit is another way of referencing the grave
or the realm of the dead,
much like how the word shield is used.
In addition to wanting the nearness of God again,
David really, really wants the wicked to be punished.
Our final song is Psalm 55,
and so much of it seems well suited
to the scenario David finds himself in.
Being betrayed by his son and his mentor
and many of his people as well.
He's fled his palace and his city,
his son is attempting a coup,
and he can't say for certain whether or not
there's a bounty on his head.
He wants to run
or fly, actually, away from it all. He prays an interesting prayer in verse 9,
destroy O Lord, divide their tongues. This reminds me of two things. First, it reminds me of the tower
of Babel, where God divided their tongues. He caused everyone to speak a different language,
and it caused confusion, and they couldn't complete their mission. Second, it reminds me of David's prayer from yesterday
in 2 Samuel 15, where he asked God to turn the council of a hithafel to foolishness. He wanted
God to either give a hithafel bad advice to share with David's enemies, or to make his good advice
unfruitful. This request for God to divide their tongues
is ultimately a prayer for his enemies plans to fail.
The hardest part about all this for David
is that his enemies are people he considered friends.
We've probably all been there.
Jesus certainly knows what that's like.
He had Judas so he couldn't commiserate.
David trusts God to humble his enemies
and he reminds himself in the meantime
to trust God with the outcome.
Today, my God shot was in 28.9,
where David said,
be there shepherd and carry them forever.
Jesus called himself the good shepherd in John 10,
and Psalm 23 says,
the Lord is my shepherd.
I love this picture.
It's fitting that we would be compared to sheep.
They do have a lot of external enemies
like thieves and wolves,
but their most dangerous enemy,
the enemy who is always present is themselves.
The sheep is always with the sheep,
and sheep can't be trusted.
They're foolish animals who have terrible eyesight
and a short memory span.
And the only way the sheep is safe from his outside enemies
and himself is if the shepherd is carrying him.
David knows this, he was a shepherd.
He knows what sheep are like.
Be their shepherd and carry them forever.
That's like praying, protect them from their external enemies
and protect them from themselves too.
I bet David knows a lot about this.
As tough as it was to go to battle against a giant
or have King Saul trying to kill him,
the worst things that have happened to him
were the things he initiated.
Be their shepherd and carry them forever.
Our good shepherd, he's where the joy is. [♪ music playing, music playing,. So, if you haven't invited someone to read the Bible with
you yet, today is a great day. And when you do invite them, can I offer you a pro tip? Have your
friends start at the start. It may be easier for them to jump in where we currently are,
but we really want them to understand the whole story from the start, not the middle.
That's why we do this chronologically, so we can follow the whole storyline.
The plot is important.
So whether they plan on reading through the whole Bible or the New Testament, encourage
them to start at the beginning of that section.
We've lined up all the details for them on the start page of our website, thebibereacap.com,
or click the link in the show notes.
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