Categories

Psalm 43 Profile

Toni’s Title

Hoping in God’s Salvation

ESV Title

Send Out Your Light and Your Truth

Literary Type

This is an individual lament.

Laments

More than 1/3 of the Psalms fall into the category of complaints to God in situations of limitation or threat. These laments were a form of prayer and praise based on the conviction that God is concerned about people and answers the human cry in ways surpassing human expectation or understanding. Israel’s laments out of distress were a way of praising God even when he seemed absent. The faith of the psalmists is founded on the good news that God intervenes in desperate situations to help those who are distressed. The psalmists share a deep confidence that God is compassionate, concerned, hearing his people and involved with them; God is faithful and trustworthy. A lament is an outcry to God from a responsive heart. Laments came from individuals or from the community.

Examples: Psalms 3-5, 22, 27:7-14, 42, 51, 69, 90, 130, 137 and many others

NT Prayer Guide

Acts 7:54-60

Note that the verse numbering in the New Coverdale version below differs from the ESV.


43

Judica me, Deus

1 Give judgment for me, O God, and defend my cause against the ungodly people; *

O deliver me from the deceitful and the wicked.

2 For you are the God of my strength; why have you put me far from you? *

And why do I go about with heaviness, while the enemy oppresses me?

3 O send out your light and your truth, that they may lead me, *

and bring me to your holy hill, and to your dwelling;

4 That I may go to the altar of God, even to the God of my joy and gladness; *

and on the harp will I give thanks to you, O God, my God.

5 Why are you so full of heaviness, O my soul, *

and why are you so disquieted within me?

6 O put your trust in God, *

for I will yet give him thanks, who is the help of my countenance, and my God.

Categories
Psalms Group

Psalms 42-43: A Psalm of Myself in Despair and Hope

Psalms 42 and 43 are usually treated as one psalm because:

  1. Psalm 43 doesn’t have a superscription;
  2. the refrain is repeated three times in 42:5, 11, and 43:5;  
  3. the thought develops from remembrance to a specific hope
  4. the 2 poems form a typical psalm of lament with several elements of the lament form.