Prepared for Psalms Group meeting on 7/18/21
Psalm 37: Wisdom for Grown Ups
This is the summary of Fr. Michael’s video teaching plus some questions for our Psalms Group.
Prepared for Psalms Group meeting on 7/18/21
This is the summary of Fr. Michael’s video teaching plus some questions for our Psalms Group.
Prepared for Psalms Group, 7/11/21
This lesson is based on the first two sessions of the current Psalms study at Christ Church Plano, Truthful Speech as Common Prayer.
As Anglicans, the Psalms are at the core of our common prayer life, but it can be difficult to enter them fully as prayer when the world they emerged from is so different from our own. In order to bridge this gap, we often select psalms that are more immediately accessible and pleasant (e.g. Psalm 23) but avoid those that present difficulties to our modern sensibilities. For example, the more shocking psalms (e.g. Psalms 88 and 137) confound us with their raw emotion and curses wished upon enemies. But it is by learning to engage the entire Psalter as prayer that we will grow not only in our prayer lives but also as “fully alive” human beings, formed more and more into Christ’s likeness.
Prepared for Psalms Group, 6/20/2021
Prepared for Psalms Group, 6/13/21
Note that there are two files for this lesson–the main one, and another for reference.
Prepared for Psalms Group, May 30, 2021
Psalm 71 is a unique voice in Book 2 of the Psalms and easy to hurry past in its simplicity. It’s also part of the section of Psalms called the Elohistic Psalter (Psalms 42-83) because the word Elohim appears frequently while the word YHWH less so. Here’s the summary of Book 2 from the ESV Study Bible:
Book 2 (Psalms 42-72) From the Davidic voice of Book 1, Book 2 introduces the first Korah collection (42-49, although 43 lacks a superscription), with a single Asaph psalm at Psalm 50. A further Davidic collection is found in Psalms 51-65 and 68-69, including the bulk of the historic superscriptions (51-52; 54; 56-57; 59-60; 63). Once again lament and distress dominate the content of these prayers, which now include a communal voice (Psalm 44, 67 68). The lone psalm attributed to Solomon concludes Book 2 with the Psalms’ pinnacle of royal theology (72, cf. 45)
Psalm 71 gets “orphaned” again! In Psalm 71, an individual lament, we hear an aging person of genuine faith praying. This person’s life models what reading, praying, and living the Psalms is all about: a God-centered life hidden in YHWH Elohim, Israel’s personal King/Shepherd who is the supreme and universal God of the whole universe. That’s the stance of one who lives and prays the psalms—hiding out in the safety of YHWH Elohim.
1. Psalm 71 quotes from three other Psalms (Psalms 31, 22, and 35; all psalms “of David”). Its theme and circumstances belong with Davidic Psalms 69 and 70 (70=40:13-17) and certainly fit with David’s struggles with false accusation and frightening, undeserved assaults.
Allow God to search you and point out current unresolved difficulties in your life and /or in others your life touches.
Read Psalm 71:1-3 and 31:1-3. What is your understanding of God as a “rock of refuge…my rock and my fortress”? (refuge=habitation/dwelling, “a home in the rock’) When have you deliberately hidden in God for safety/protection or seen someone else hiding out in God?
2. Notice the different words the psalmist uses to address God. (71:1, 4-5) (LORD=YHWH=yahweh, the personal name for Israel’s God, a proper noun, see Exodus 3:13-15)
(Elohim=God=an honorific plural used to show honor to a single referent. It is a common noun, not a proper name, that refers to the universal deity who creates and rules the universe. This faithful Israelite thinks of YHWH as his Elohim, his sovereign and master, his personal God above all gods, his only God.)
How do these words for God help you understand God’s position in the psalmist’s life? In your own life?
3. What do you learn about the psalmist in 71:5-8, 71:17-18, and 20?
What do you wish you could ask this person?
71:7 tells us that he has been a “portent, a sign, a model, an example, a warning example” for many. What do you think that means? Who has been that “sign” to you and who might you be “a sign” to?
4. What are his current concerns according to 71:9-13? Read 71:1, 71:13 and 71:24. What does he believe God’s support of him will do to his enemies? How do you think that fits with Jesus’ teaching on loving enemies?
5. What does this aging psalmist experience as he is beset by troubles that apparently could bring public loss of his reputation and disappointment of his hopes for his life? (71:14-18)What seems to be his attitude and focus?
How does he explain this experience, and what part does God have in it?
What impact do you think people of faith have when they face their difficulties in humble dependence on God?
6. In his current difficulty, the psalmist turns to God, and particularly to God’s righteousness (71:2, 15, 19, 24).What do you learn about the righteousness this psalmist is counting on from his words of lament and trust in Psalm 71?
Notice how Psalm 71 starts in honest supplication and petition. As the prayer continues, his requests begin to be sprinkled with praise. (6c, 8) This “speaking well of God” is intertwined with realistic observations about his age, current difficulties, and past history of “troubles and calamities.” No sugar-coating!
As it concludes, this prayer becomes praise (71:22-24). What stands out to you about these closing expressions of praise, the reasons for them, the impact on the psalmist himself and on you as a reader/prayer/praiser?
Time and trouble shape the context of faithfulness in this psalm. The psalmist ends up commending all of his life to YHWH Elohim.
Those who pray the psalms are aware that, in spite of their own infidelities to God over the years, God has nonetheless remained faithful. Were that not the case, they would not be praying the psalms at all.
Reardon, Christ in the Psalms, p. 139
Lord, do not let advancing age increase either pride or worry in me. Instead let me grow in humility….and patience…
Kellers, Songs of Jesus, p, 162
Prepared for Psalms Group, 5/23/21
Psalm 48 is a descriptive hymn of praise that belongs to a group of psalms called songs of Zion, psalms that celebrate the city of Jerusalem and the temple as the epicenter of cosmic reality.The purpose of these Songs of Zion is to enliven our minds and hearts with thankfulness, praise and longing for the presence of God with us, as we learn to worship by worshipping.
Prepared for Psalms Group, May 16, 2021
Here’s a summary of the paper I mentioned in the last e-mail. It places Psalm 23 in the grouping of Psalms 15-24.
Prepared for Psalms Group, May 2, 2021
“No escape, no regrets, no compromise.” That’s a description of Psalm 139. Filled with good theology about God’s omniscience (139:1-6), omnipresence (139:7-12), creatorship (139:13-18), and holiness (139:19-24), these four stanzas of Psalm 139 arecomplex and intimate, and theological abstractions are “far from its heart.” In fact, you can label these stanzas, “God’s complete knowledge of me (1-6),” “God with me in every place (7-12),” “God’s sovereign ownership of every part of me (13-18),” and “God’s will that I be like him (19-24).” (Motyer, New Bible Commentary, 578)
Prepared for Psalms Group, 4/25/21
In Book 5 of Psalms, the two great sequences of psalms sung at Israel’s three Pilgrim Feasts — Passover, Pentecost and Tabernacles — reveal the authentic joy of relying on the LORD in all of life’s circumstances. The Egyptian Hallel (Psalms 113-118) and the Songs of Ascent (Psalms 120-135) echoed on the roads to Jerusalem, in the homes of the faithful, throughout the city of Jerusalem, and in the liturgy of worship in the Temple. “Hallel,” praise the highest God, reverberated for all to hear as Psalm 117, the shortest psalm and shortest chapter in the Bible, summarizes:
Praise Yahweh, all ye nations! Laud him, all ye tribes!
For his hesed is mighty over us, and the truth of Yahweh is eternal!
Praise Yahweh!
(Psalm 117, translated by Win Groseclose in his book The Egyptian Hallel Psalms, who defines “hesed” as God’s covenant faithfulness, his faithful care for his people.)
Prepared for Psalms Group, 4/18/21
In Book 5 of the Psalms, there are two great sequences of psalms which were sung at the three Pilgrim Feasts of Passover, Pentecost and Tabernacles, the Egyptian Hallel (113-118), sung especially at Passover, and the Songs of Ascents (120-134). What we can see quite clearly in both series is that the hearts of the people of God were full of joy as they celebrated the redeeming love and redemptive acts of their God. The combination of words and actions served to deepen the people’s sense of thanksgiving and renewed commitment, at least for those who were spiritually sensitive.