Psalm 30:1-3
"I will extol you,O Lord, for you have drawn me upand have not let my foes rejoice over me.O Lord my God, I cried to you for help,and you have healed me.O Lord, you have brought up my soul from Sheol;you restored me to life from among those who go down to the pit." (ESV)
Comments:
King David
had cried out to God to pick him up, rescue him from his foes and deliver
him up from the grave. God had answered and David testified that the Lord had “drawn
him up.” Further, David admits that his
strength and success before the time of trouble were also due to the Lord
preserving him, though he had begun to think that his success was because of
his own strength. As a result, David saw the time of testing as a gift for it
revealed to him his dependence on the Lord (v. 6-7). He saw the Lord not as normally angry
but as One who showed a lifetime of favor. Even moments of discipline are an act of
love and favor to those who are taught by them.
Ironically,
this psalm was to be sung at the dedication of the temple, after David was
dead. Perhaps in this light, it is a plea for the resurrection… the ultimate “Daddy,
Up!”
Parents can usually
remember times when their children were very young and scared and needed to be picked
up and comforted. Perhaps we can remember times when we had to snatch them up
into our arms to protect them from a very real danger to their lives—lifting
them above sneaker waves, out of swimming pools, away from poisonous
snakes, broken glass, snarling dogs, wood stoves and campfires are a few that
come to mind. Most of these situations have happened down through the
generations in my own family. What have you faced in yours?
Despite the
failures of our biological parents, we have a Heavenly Father who does not
fail, and is neither mean nor demeaning. He is a Father who doesn’t mock us for our
weaknesses but is always working for our good. He is with us no matter what we
face. His love changes us, but it doesn’t stop there. He has sent us to
continue his mission as his hands and feet on the earth.
There are
people around the world who face much worse things than the dangers I listed.
There are also many children who had no loving parent to lift them to safety in
such moments and there are some moments when even a loving parent has no power
to rescue their child. There are far too many children who have been abandoned
or abused by a parent, many are even sold into economic or sexual slavery. What
an unthinkable idea to most of us…and yet it is all too real, especially for
young women. Such situations make clear the
depravity of a darkened mankind. It is in the darkest times that the light can shine brightest, but will we?
At Christmas
(as I write this post), perhaps we have heard the haunting lyrics of O Come, O Come Emmanuel which depicts
the darkness and prayerful longing into which Christ came as heaven’s answer.
Or perhaps we wrestle with the contemporary cruelty of people to each other and
the apparent lack of “peace on earth” as the author of I heard the Bells on Christmas Day did. The lyrics to this carol were
written by the great American poet H.W. Longfellow, in 1863, after his wife died in a fire
and his son was seriously injured fighting for the Union (in the Civil War).
The song climaxes with these verses,
And in despair I bowed my head;
"There is no peace on earth," I said;
"There is no peace on earth," I said;
"For hate is strong,
And mocks the song
Of peace on earth, good-will to
men!"
Then pealed the bells more loud and
deep:
"God is not dead, nor doth He sleep;
"God is not dead, nor doth He sleep;
The Wrong shall fail,
The Right prevail,
With peace on earth, good-will to
men."
Longfellow's conclusion is right, but it doesn't happen automatically. So how can
we participate in the Father’s work of deliverance? As one who believes in a
miracle-working God, it is my tendency to pray and expect a miracle rather than
get personally involved in being part of the answer. There is nothing wrong with
praying and expecting a miracle…however, he may want me to be part of the
miracle that he plans to work. In which case, I need to assume that the first
miracle that results from my prayer is that of the Lord changing my heart to
help the oppressed...to advocate with them in their plight.
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