Psalm 111

True worship is to see God’s works and praise Him for them, to see the truth of God’s Word and praise Him for it, and, then, to go out and apply what you have seen and what you have read. Is this your daily activity of worship (Romans 12.1-2)?

Psalm 111
This is a well-constructed acrostic psalm meant to draw us into praising God. The Hebrew alphabet is presented in each line as presented in the English. The acrostic is presented with two letters for each of the first eight verses with the final two verses having three letters each, which make the twenty-two letters of the Hebrew alphabet. Again, try doing this with the English alphabet and you will see how difficult it is to present a cohesive truth with an acrostic. Great and marvelous is He who reigns.

  • Verse 1-Praise God! We are called to praise God when we are with those who praise Him and when we are among those who may or may not praise Him. Regardless of our station in life, we must praise the Lord.
  • Verses 2-9-Why we should praise God. He is great, glorious, wonderful, gracious, compassionate, provider, powerful, true, upright, holy, redeemer, just to name a few from this psalm.
  • Verse 10-Praise God! When we stand in awe of Him, revere Him, we are beginning to see what wisdom truly is for He is wisdom.

True worship is to see God’s works and praise Him for them, to see the truth of God’s Word and praise Him for it, and, then, to go out and apply what you have seen and what you have read. Is this your daily activity of worship (Romans 12.1-2)?

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Holy is the Lord by Chris Tomlin

Psalm 127

What we do with our time, finances, and efforts determine the direction of our life and of our family (both present and future). If your time, finances, and effort are based on your desires, your strength, and your understanding, the final outcome may be good but it won’t be great. What are you doing today in light of God’s work and God’s purpose for you?

Psalm 127

This is our first psalm of Solomon or of David for Solomon. He provides wise insight into a home blessed by God. This chapter is also reminiscent of the book of Ecclesiastes.

  • Verses 1-2-If God is not the foundation of the household it will not become that for which God created the family. If you desire more on the family, please post your request. Workaholics are not meant for God’s work. When we do His work, allow Him to create His family, His life in us, we find that His work is not a burden and His work is productive (Matthew 11.29-30). Verse two provides us insight into the makings of the body. God created the body so that it repairs itself while we sleep. Solomon tells us that God provides for us during our sleep. This can be read as God being at work in our work as we rest and it can also be seen as God working in us to rebuild and strengthen us as we rest. Either picture is wonderful.

These verses should be a warning to those who are in school and cram the night before to complete a project that should have been completed over time. A job done for His glory is done as we are physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually healthy. It does not come in a frenzy.

Zechariah 4.6 directs our attention to this truth. We cannot accomplish greatness apart from Him who is great.

Do your job, your house, your finances take away from the time spent with God, family, and friends? If so, you are building your house on the sand. Jesus reminds us in John 15.5 that we can do nothing apart from Him. What are you trying to do without His strength and understanding?

  • Verses 3-5-We are called to a great responsibility as parents. God has given us a great and precious gift in our children. If we do not submit our lives to the Lord, and give this example daily to our children, they will not submit to the Lord. Our labor is in vain when we choose our own path. Solomon tells us it leads to destruction.

What we do with our time, finances, and efforts determine the direction of our life and of our family (both present and future). If your time, finances, and effort are based on your desires, your strength, and your understanding, the final outcome may be good but it won’t be great. What are you doing today in light of God’s work and God’s purpose for you?

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Psalm 145

We should understand that praising God is not determined by whether we feel like praising Him no more than forgiving another or loving another is based on a feeling. Each one of these is based on a conscious choice to do so. We must choose to praise, forgive, and love despite what we feel or our circumstances.

Psalm 145

In this semi-acrostic psalm (it is missing the letter “nun”), we are called to praise God. We are called to make known His fame to the generation of people to follow. David entreats us to tell of God’s greatness and goodness (1-7), grace and kingdom (8-14), and desire to hear and answer our prayers (15-21). Do people understand this about God as they see your life and hear your words? After reading verse one, we should understand that praising God is not determined by whether we feel like praising Him no more than forgiving another or loving another is based on a feeling. Each one of these is based on a conscious choice to do so. We must choose to praise, forgive, and love despite what we feel or our circumstances.

After reading through this psalm, you should see God as “active, compassionate, faithful, generous, good, gracious, great, judge, king, loving, majestic, near, powerful, righteous, and watchful” (Elwell, 1995). With God being these, it is only natural that the psalm uses nine separate terms for our response: extol, bless, praise, declare, meditate, speak, utter, sing, and make known. Are you doing this?

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Psalm 144

Do you ask God to help you through the day, trust His Word during the day, and praise Him daily for what He had done in and through you during the day?

Psalm 144

Although this psalm is composed of pieces from other psalms, it is a well-structured battle psalm. Psalms 8, 18, 33, 102, 103, and 104 appear in this psalm. Verses one and two can be found in Psalm 18.2, 34, and 36-37. Verse three is found in Psalm 8.4. Verse four can be found in Psalm 102.11. Verses 5-8 are found in Psalm 18.9, 14-16, and 44-45. Verse nine is found in Psalm 33.2-3. Verse 10 is found in Psalm 18.50.

David asks God to train him before he goes into battle (1-4), to help him through the battle (5-8), and he praises God after the battle (9-15). Is this your daily habit? Do you ask God to help you through the day, trust His Word during the day, and praise Him daily for what He had done in and through you during the day?

Psalm 143

Have we come before God realizing that without Him we are wicked and that in Him He makes us righteous and worthy? Have we considered how Satan will devour us and then ask God to strengthen us as we seek forgiveness? Why not do it now?

Psalm 143

God is faithful to His promises (Matthew 5.37 and 2 Corinthians 1.20) and to His righteousness, as verse one informs us. Based on this alone, no one should go a moment without prayer (1 Thessalonians 5.17). Based on this alone, no one should think that justice will look over sin as was promised. David knew this, as do we. God will judge sin. On Christ our sin was placed. He became our sin that we might become that which we lacked–His righteousness. This is the great trade given at the cross. This is what David needed as he faced the truth of verse two.

We don’t have physical enemies pursuing us these days, for the most part. However, we do have a spiritual enemy who is seeking to devour us daily. After all, our battle is not with flesh and blood but with powers and principalities (Ephesians 6.12). David saw his deliverance from his enemies deeply connected with forgiveness of sin. We need to see this for our lives too. Satan will devour us when we allow unconfessed sin to continue to fester in our lives. He will destroy because our sin takes us out of fellowship with God. Forgiveness, the cleansing of 1 John 1.9 which is based on God’s faithfulness and righteousness, restores that fellowship.

David cries out for God to hear is prayer (1-6), to answer his prayer (7-9), to teach him (10), and to restore or revive him (11-12).

Have we come before God realizing that without Him we are wicked and that in Him He makes us righteous and worthy? Have we considered how Satan will devour us and then ask God to strengthen us as we seek forgiveness? Why not do it now?

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Psalm 139

Although we are in Christ and have been sealed with the Spirit for eternity, we still need to check our own desires and heart. Do we allow sin to creep into our heart? Take a moment and pray David’s prayer at the end of this psalm: “Search me, O God, and see if there is any wicked way in me.” If so, repent; and walk in His ways.

Psalm 139

God is omniscient, omnipresent, and omnipotent according to this psalm. David paints a memorable picture of God and His relationship with us based on His attributes. This twenty-four-verse psalm divides easily into four stanzas.

  • Verses 1-6-God’s omniscience is displayed. The writer of Hebrews and Matthew saw this as true (Matthew 9.4 and Hebrews 4.13). God knows everything. He knows what we do and what we think. This should overwhelm us as it did David. God knows all about us and still chooses to love us.
  • Verses 7-12-God’s omnipresence is displayed. There is no place in this universe we can go that would escape the gaze of God. His eye is not merely that of the Judge and Ruler but of Shepherd and Father.
  • Verses 13-18-God’s omnipotence is displayed. Genesis one and two tell us that God created life, not from a test tube but from nothing. A baby in the womb is sacred because it is created by God. If you would like more discussion on this topic, leave a post. When we acknowledged God as the omnipotent we would have to state how precious and powerful He is, just as David did in verse seventeen.
  • Verses 19-24-These three attributes of God are played out now, not to those who acknowledge Him as God and Savior, but to those who want nothing to do with His Son. Because He is omniscient, He knows their evil intentions. Because He is omnipresent, He sees their evil activities. Because He is omnipotent, He can and will judge their wickedness. Because of God’s holiness, He rejects sin. Because those who do not come to Christ for the cleansing of their sins, reject the offer of the cleansing. Because they reject the cleansing, God must reject them.

Although we are in Christ and have been sealed with the Spirit for eternity, we still need to check our own desires and heart. Do we allow sin to creep into our heart? Take a moment and pray David’s prayer at the end of this psalm: “Search me, O God, and see if there is any wicked way in me.” If so, repent; and walk in His ways.

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Psalm 138

This world has established for itself many gods. Materialism is a god to which culture bows. Celebrity is another god to which society bows. Fortune is elevated as well. There are countless gods with which we have to deal with on a daily basis. In spite of these gods and those who worship them, we need to bow before the God of all and over all.

Psalm 138

This psalm closes with a reminder that God has a purpose and a direction for your life and the power to accomplish it. This is much like what Paul mentions in Philippians 1.6. David’s desire to live the life God created him for runs through this psalm. He embodies Paul’s words in Ephesians 2.10 and Philippians 2.12-13.

This world has established many gods for itself. Materialism is a god to which culture bows. Celebrity is another god to which society bows. Fortune is elevated as well. There are countless gods with which we have to deal with on a daily basis. In spite of these gods and those who worship them, we need to bow before the God of all and over all.

Psalm 131

So, the question for us is where do we place our confidence? Is it in us, mankind, our things, or in God?

Psalm 131

Jesus said in Matthew 5.5, “Blessed are the meek for they shall inherit the earth.” He would later tell us in Matthew 18.3, “Unless you change and become like children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven” (NRSV). Paul would remind us of the same ideal in Romans 12.16 and 1 Corinthians 14.20. We are to have an attitude of childlike faith in this world of evil. When we look to ourselves as entities without need of help from another, we make ourselves god. Think about your life today. In what areas are you taking upon yourself and not bringing before godly counsel (Proverbs 15.22)and to God in prayer? This is, then, an area where you are making yourself into god. When we attempt to be gods, we stop God from operating in our life and things become frustrating, we become anxious, and we have no help (Philippians 4.4-9, cf. James 4.6). When we live in humility before Him, having the mind of Christ (Philippians 2.5-8), we find contentment (2 Corinthians 12). This is because our hope, our trust, our life, is in God. This is the essence of this short three-verse psalm. It directs our attention to our need for humility, our reliance or trust in God, and our only source of hope, which is solely found in God. Remember, hope is not wishful thinking but the full assurance that what God has said is and will forever be trustworthy.

Verse one implies that David had not always been humble before God (think of our recent studies in 1 Chronicles with the census). David sought refuge in his military strength and not in God’s omnipotence. David humbly submits his heart, eyes, and actions to God. He wants to live his life according to Romans 12.1-2 and 1 John 2.5-17. A. W. Tozer understood this when he wrote in “The Pursuit of God”: “Never forget that it is a privilege to wonder, to stand in delighted silence before the Supreme Mystery and whisper, ‘O Lord God, thou knowest.’”

Verse two mentions weaning. Weaning is resisted by the child because it longs for the closeness of the mother. However, without weaning there is no growth. We need to begin to feed ourselves and not rely on the milk of another to feed us.  Hebrews 5.11-14 presents this truth quite well.

So, the question for us is where do we place our confidence? Is it in us, mankind, our things, or in God?

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1 Chronicles 29

If we were to follow verse fourteen (10-22), our families, churches, and nation would be turned around in terms of responsibility particularly in finances. If we acknowledge that we are stewards of God’s gracious gifts and what we give to Him is actually His to begin with, which is an act of mercy on His part, we would give freely as He has given freely.

1 Chronicles 29

If we were to follow verse fourteen (10-22), our families, churches, and nation would be turned around in terms of responsibility particularly in finances. If we acknowledge that we are stewards of God’s gracious gifts and what we give to Him is actually His to begin with, which is an act of mercy on His part, we would give freely as He has given freely.

Pray verses 10-22 in your own words.

David dies in 1 Chronicles; however, we will look back at his last days when we study the book of 1 Kings and the first anointing of Solomon as king. Long live the king.

1 Chronicles 28

Verse nine is a call for all of us to serve God with all our heart and mind. It is also our call to know what God has called us to do and for us to live our lives and act on that calling (10).

1 Chronicles 28

The detailed plans given to Solomon by David were given by God (19). God has also given us detailed plans for our life. Have you been reading it? As David reminded Solomon that God has a purpose and a plan for his life (20), we are reminded that He has a plan and a purpose for our life (Ephesians 2.8-10).

Verse nine is a call for all of us to serve God with all our heart and mind. It is also our call to know what God has called us to do and for us to live our lives and act on that calling (10).