All
This first section
gets its theme from verse eight: “At all times….” This is not a
new idea for this verse, merely continues the theme found previously in v.5-7,
For God alone, O my
soul, wait in silence,
for
my hope is from him.
He only is my rock and my salvation,
my fortress; I shall not be shaken.
On God rests my salvation and my glory;
my mighty rock, my refuge is God.
While the psalmist clarified
in v. 5-7 that his stance was emphatic in terms of who he trusted, what verse eight
adds is an exhortation to the reader/hearer to do the same by the use of a time
element.
Trust in him at all times, O
people;
pour out your heart before him;
God is a refuge for us. Selah
One theologian
draws an important lesson from this “at all times” statement.
“The time reference perhaps takes up the fact that for anyone there are times when it is tempting not to trust, and those are the moments when it is most important to do so; that is how things are at this moment for the psalmist.”[1]
The psalmist, who was previously silent, now advised the reader to “pour out your heart before him.” Are the ideas of the soul waiting in silence (vv 1, 5) and pouring out our hearts (v. 8) at odds with each other? No, I don’t think so. Our soul can wait in the silence of trust and confidence in the God who loves us, speaking no complaint or inner insult, and at the same time be entirely open in communicating honestly with God. Ironically, pouring out our hearts to him is the only guarantee that none of the contents will be lost! Pouring out is a wonderful word picture of trusting everything into God’s hands. Instead of scheming within our thoughts and cursing others emotionally, we are encouraged to pour out our hearts to the Lord. Such prayer is cathartic and lifegiving.
After stating his
faith is in God alone and encouraging the people to trust God, not just some of
the time, but “at all times,” we shift to verse nine’s hot take on the
worth of those participants in an economic class system.
Less Than You Think
Verse 9 serves as a transition between trusting in God at all times and not trusting in the ways of the wicked (v.10). It accomplishes this transition by pointing out how unworthy social classes are, whether they are high or low. In ancient cultures, worth was often expressed in terms of weightiness, and the imagery of scales was frequently used to describe value or its absence.
Behold, the
nations are like a drop from a bucket,
and are
accounted as the dust on the scales;
behold, he
takes up the coastlands like fine dust…
All the nations are as nothing before him,
they are
accounted by him as less than nothing and emptiness.
(Isa. 40:15,17)
Here in Psalm 62, those of lower
classes are said to have the weight/worth of a mere breath, which is to say they are
not weighty, they are without substance, they have little worth in themselves…
except what God breathed into them. Surprisingly, the upper class, “Those of
high estate,” are even less weighty than the “breath” of the lower class.
Since a breath weighs nothing on a scale, being less than a breath is like an
ancient attempt to describe a negative number! Moreover, since worship is tied
to one’s weightiness, saying one has less than zero weight would be a major
slam. St. Paul used a similar expression in 2 Corinthians 12:11, read it and see if you can do the math! When we think that our value and worth are found in all the power and possessions of this world that we can grab, then we are fooling ourselves."As the dust on the scales"
Photo: Greg K Dueker
“Absalom may have advanced
in wealth and power as he steals the Kingdom, but in the scales of God, he is a
mere nothing.”[3]
If people have no substantial weightiness, why would we put our trust in them to anchor our lives in turbulent times?
Nothing
Put no trust in extortion;
set no vain hopes on robbery;
if riches increase, set not your heart on them. (v. 10)
In contrast to
verse eight’s exhortation to trust God at all times, verse ten
commands the people to put nothing into the trust of violent and
dishonest schemes (i.e., extortion, robbery) or the wealth of the world. Wealth
can be taken away or destroyed, and extortion and robbery will both be judged.
They are not a promising investment strategy!
It matters who or
what we trust. And the character of what/whom we trust will also shape what
that trust looks like.
The word translated as extortion or oppression (Heb. ‘ōsheq) in “concerned with acts of abuse of power or authority, the burdening, trampling, and crushing of those lower in station” (TWOT, 705). Are there things that we have come to depend upon that are the result of an abuse of power? Such an oppressive abuse of power is further described by the word translated by the English word “robbery,” which is not as graphic as the original Hebrew (gazēl) suggests. It describes something plundered and has “in its meaning the violence that goes beyond mere stealing or taking another’s belongings but includes robbing by force, tearing off” (TWOT, 158). It is an often torturous and painful way to take something from another. While we don’t literally function in such violent ways, I suggest that some of the virtual treatment of others in various forms of media should be called into question. As followers of Christ, we know for certain that he would never treat the downtrodden like that. If we do, then we can be sure that we are not following Christ. As John wrote to 1st Century Christians,
If anyone says, “I love God,” and hates his brother, he is a liar; for he who does not love his brother whom he has seen cannot love God whom he has not seen. And this commandment we have from him: whoever loves God must also love his brother. (1 John 4:20-21)
Running the Numbers and Settling Up
In verse eleven,
the psalmist begins “counting” the lessons he had learned when God spoke. “Once…twice”
is a Hebraism found in Wisdom and Prophetic literature (e.g., Prov.
30:15,18,21,29; Amos 1:3,6,9,11). The results should be taken together. In this
case, both power and steadfast love belong to God (v.12).
The power of God
is tied to the steadfast love of God! He will not use power contrary to his
love. Neither should we. “The Lord will render to a man according to his
work.” The psalmist ends on a note that reminds us that real power is
not in the abuses of class, oppression/extortion, or in brutally cruel
robbery, which the wicked may perpetrate because they can. Real power is found
in the steadfast love of God, which cannot be chained.
Which path will we follow?