Psalm 110: Messiah is King and Priest

The Son of David is the Lord who was given the seat at the right hand of God Almighty for the purpose of ruling over the enemies of God and His people. This one person, who is both God and human, has absolute authority over all the enemies who seek to destroy my life. Sin, Death, and Devil will continue to harass, tempt, and torment me until they are driven out of existence from the Eternal State at Messiah’s Second Coming. In the meantime (“until then”) my Savior and Lord is ruling and controlling them for me and for the good of His people.

This same King Messiah is also my High Priest forever, doing two things for me: 1) He is continually presenting Himself as the sacrificial Lamb claiming before God and proclaiming to Satan my grace-given and blood-bought innocence, and 2) He is continually interceding on my behalf and praying my prayer needs before Almighty God the Father.

My Friend and Shepherd is my King and Priest. I could not possibly have any greater assurance that my prayers for His Presence, kingdom, and will, for daily needs, forgiveness, overcoming, and deliverance will be answered. Jesus rules!

 

 

 

 

 

Psalm 109: Prayer Against a Slanderous Enemy

Imprecation, curse, slander, and accusation is the primary role of the Enemy, the Satan, the Accuser. No believer will escape this relentless attack from the Evil One; for this reason we pray daily: “Deliver us from the evil one.”

Our recourse is to take refuge in the Lord who delivers us through the Cross. We come under the covering of the blood of Christ and overcome. God delivers the decisive blow of violent defeat over all enemies at the Empty Tomb.

Our prayer is that the Lord will save me by His mercy since he is ever faithful; he will save me, this poor man, from those that condemn my soul. The enemies who speak evil against me will be ashamed, that is, defeated, and covered with their own confusion.

This Psalm makes sense when we see verses 6-19 as a quotation of the curses of the enemy upon me, rather than my curses upon the enemy. Then the Lord will take up these curses and turn them back on the curser. Therefore, be careful: if I ask God to damn, that curse may come back; if I ask God to forgive, that blessing will return, I am forgiven.

 

 

Psalm 108: Trust God’s Love for Victory

My heart is fixed: I will definitely praise the Lord early and often; I will praise Him with music and gusto; I will praise Him whether I am among believers or unbelievers. I will praise the Lord because His love, His faithfulness, and His glory is so big and grand the whole earth cannot contain them. Love, faithfulness and glory reaches to the heavens and beyond. The love of Christ is so high and deep and broad and wide that we can’t comprehend it or believe it; so ask Him to show you.

Once I have the proper perspective on the size of God’s Love I confidently ask for His help from trouble caused by my enemies. My spiritual enemies are trying to take away my peace (they actually can’t) by my surrendering it through unbelief. They seek to steal my joy of living (they actually can’t) by drawing my attention away from Jesus alone.

Man’s help is vain: “all the king’s horses and all the king’s men couldn’t put me together again.” But with the Lord we will do valiantly: it is He who will tread down our enemies. Praise Him for his love: it restores peace and joy.

 

 

 

 

Psalm 107: God’ Love Saves from Sin and Death

The faithful love of God redeems from Devil, delivers from Sin, and saves from Death; mercy endures forever, the three enemies do not. The eternal love of the Lord rescues from death, caused by sin; this salvation is described in four metaphors, within this pattern: crisis of dying, prayer for help, salvation by God, call to praise.

First, God brings us from the desert of imminent death, the world, into the inhabited city of God’s Kingdom.

Second, He sets us free from the prison of sin and death, sentenced there for rebellion, into the freedom of life and light.

Third, He heals us from sicknesses, reminding of and approaching death, restoring life and health.

Fourth, He stills the storms of the sea of life, with its ups and downs and dangers, by bringing us into the safe haven of his eternal presence.

The Lord wounds and heals, kills and makes alive, allows weal and woe; all of life is under His control, no piece of life is unnoticed. And more, we ask and He gives the wisdom to observe the hand of God and to understand the steadfast love, the lovingkindness, of the Lord in everything.

Psalm 106: Repentance of People and of God

The confession of the sins of the people over a period of time makes a long list. The Sin List is a recounting of the history of Israel from the Salvation from Egypt to the Exile in Babylon. The rebellion, the idolatry, the unbelief is staggering and startling in its depth and scope. But then, a confession of the sins of our own lifetimes could just as revealing. We also confess our sins and sincerely repent of them.

The purpose of this laundry list is to beg the mercy of God and ask for salvation and deliverance from exile; once again. The implicit hope is that the Lord will see how sorry we are and take pity. This is a false hope because, while sincere repentance is necessary, it is not the sincerity or sorrow or the penitence itself that moves God to forgiveness and salvation; it is the compassion and lovingkindness of God himself. For us, it is the blood of Jesus that causes Him to forgive and save.

“He repented according to the multitude of his mercies.” It is always “for the sake of Christ” and not because of our repentance that God repents. In this way the great Enemy, Sin, is overcome.

 

 

 

 

Psalm 105: Covenant Promises Kept

God keeps His promises; he made a covenant and he was faithful to fulfill it. This Psalm recounts that history. The covenant with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob was to give Land, Offspring and Blessing to the nations. The covenant is fulfilled in spades in Jesus Christ in the NT.

The emphasis in this Psalm is on the Land that was promised to God’s people. The Lord took care of the Patriarchs, sent Joseph, then Moses, gave judgments, did miracles, took the Promised Land. God did all that so that you on your part would “keep his laws.”

The fulfillment of Promised Land goes through and comes out in the NT as: eternal life, inheritance of heaven, forgiveness of sins and salvation, the kingdom of God ruling in the hearts of believers, resurrection, Paradise, new heaven and new earth, and such.

In order to keep covenant the Lord had to bring judgment, overcome, and drive out the Enemy (the gods of Egypt and the heathen gods of Canaan). So also judgment had to come upon Sin, Death and Devil in gentleness on the cross and in violence at the tomb. So also judgment comes in daily repentance and faith. Now: Keep His Laws, by the power of the Gospel.

 

 

 

 

 

Psalm 104: The Glories of Creator and Provider

The wonder and glory of God’s creation, provision, preservation, and sustenance of all living things on a beautifully organized and controlled earth inspires awe and praise from its inhabitants.

The poetic account of Creation praises God for taking and maintaining control of the earth for the peaceful and enjoyable habitation of all living things. First, the Creator brought order out of chaos by pushing back and confining the dangerous and unruly waters in one place called ocean. Then He turned water into a life-giving blessing of rain and springs and streams for the continued susrenance of life on earth.

This action is a picture of the continued care of our Lord daily turning impending chaos in our lives into order and stability: God can make something out of nothing, and He can bring good things out of a bad situation.

After all the beautiful descriptions of God’s creative care one blot shows up: Sin. Sin has entered Paradise and he still seeks to destroy the good life God gives. Sin finally must be taken care of and gotten rid of. And that’s the rest of the story: the Cross and the Tomb and the Judgment Day. So, Hallelujah!

 

 

 

 

Psalm 103: God is Really Very Good

God is good! Really! He is far better than we humans imagine or can adequately express, although Psalm 103 does as good a job as any words written anywhere. He is truly worthy of all the praise we can muster. In fact, we must expand the praise of the Lord to involve the invisible and innumerable mighty angels of heaven.

God’s character deserves great praise: He is full of kindness, mercy, compassion, grace, forgiveness, and faithful love. God’s deeds deserve great praise: He has forgiven our sins, healed our diseases, rescued us from death, granted abundant spiritual and material blessings, executed justice when we were weak and powerless, delivered us completely from the guilt and punishment of our sin, and even mitigated the consequences of sins.

God’s goodness and mercy, and His awesome love and forgiveness, have overcome and driven out our spiritual enemies: disease and death, sin and misery. My life is eternally and greatly blessed when my spiritual enemies are not constantly bugging and tormenting me. My only response is to thank and praise, serve and obey. He has given me eternity to praise, but I don’t want to waste a present minute not blessing the Lord. Soul, do it!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Psalm 102: A Prayer in Trouble and Distress

When the believer is suffering wasting disease and impending death, despairing loneliness, emotional turmoil, spiritual distress, and threatening enemies he turns to God in prayer begging to be heard and answered quickly.

Part of the appeal includes a description of his terrible condition, his gloating enemies and his mourning for sin. A part of that descriptive appeal includes the complaint that God his Creator is eternal, not subject to death or to change, and he is not eternal and about to die prematurely. His God is merciful and He will keep His promises to restore His people, so he prays that the Lord would restore him, too.

Part of the appeal is simply to the character of the Eternal God: He makes promises, He answers prayer, He hears the cries of the destitute and dying, He overcomes enemies, and He will create new people who will praise Him in future days. Let Him record for the next generation the salvation He brought today.

We don’t need to remind Him of our need and of His character, but we have the privilege of enjoying our faith relationship with an unseen but ever present Lord. We need the prayer response to His grace to remind ourselves.

Psalm 101: Promises of a Faithful King

The king sings of God’s judgment and mercy and vows that he will rule and live as an example of God’s character. He makes promises to conduct his life and his court according to high ethical and moral standards.

We also make promises, vows and resolutions to live rightly and avoid sin. When repenting before God or others we make such promises not to do it again. We will remove and avoid temptations to sin. Vows made as part of penitence are good things. The problem arises when we fail again and again to keep them; then we despair and don’t promise again so that we don’t fail again.

Failed vows and promises lead many addicts and just plain sinners to give up on God and fall away. But we must remain persistent in daily repentance and faith and forgiveness, and repeating the vows.

Sin is too big and bad an enemy, too terrible a force and so life-destroying, to just give in. We keep asking for forgiveness and we keep asking, seeking and knocking for help in overcoming: “Oh, when will you come to me?” God keeps His promises, and He can help us keep ours.