For years I have posted verses from the Psalms and a brief comment on Facebook and now am turning them into a blog. It is my conviction that the Psalms, as found in the Bible, are an example for us of honest communication with God. The psalmists express a wide range of emotions, circumstances, and requests. God is not afraid of our questions, doubts, or concerns. Join me as we learn from the Psalms to process our emotions through the character of God, and see him more clearly.

Saturday, May 10, 2014

Psalm 8: "Humble Glory?"

Psalm 8:5-6
"Yet you have made him a little lower than the heavenly beings
    and crowned him with glory and honor.
You have given him dominion over the works of your hands;
    you have put all things under his feet..."




Comments:
I have commented on v. 1 and v. 3-4 three times each, so here is something different. (Note: Although psalms should generally be taken as a whole unit, after reading the whole psalm I will generally just comment on a couple of verses.)
Man is the apex of God’s creation and has been “crowned him with glory and honor” but we too often think that glory is ours to seek and grasp, as I began my poem, Humble Glory,

Born to share glory, not seek it.
Yet sniffing, climbing, grasping, fighting, expecting,
We hunt along a different path
Twisted we claim it, kill it,
Poisoned by pride…

Just as the Bible speaks of the spirit of antichrist (1 John 4:3), I have found its fraternal twin, which I call anti-glory. After mankind turned away from a dependent relationship with the Glorious and fell into sin, he sought to replace that lost glory through his own efforts or images (Romans 1:23; Philippians 3:19). But this imitation glory—this vainglory—leaves a bitter aftertaste. Dr. Ron Frost uses Augustine’s relational metaphor to describe the tragic consequences of that first temptation to be like God,
"It is the adultery of the heart, the lust for human glory, the idolatry of greed, and the careless self-absorption of pride that Jesus condemns. The behavioral dimensions of sin are merely barometric indications of the hurricane of death that destroyed and destroys hearts through their desire to be like God."[1]

The serpent lied. We are not God and never could be divine, except through humble participation in Christ’s love. As IBottom of Form later poetically described (again from Humble Glory),
Glory is given not grasped,
Belonging to God—Father, Son, Spirit—
Shared in his Trinitarian community of love.
Yet he invites us in as family, to eat once again
What we once lost by taking.

The psalmist here worships the Lord fully, recognizing that any humble glory he had, any dominion he exercised was what had been given him by God. I am no king nor psalmist, but I have a share in the glory of the King…because he died for me!





[1] Paul L. Metzger, ed. Trinitarian Soundings in Systematic Theology (New York: T & T Clark, 2005), 105.  

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