·
V1-3: Testimony.
There is first a reminder of the great works of God in the past, the
testimony of older saints.
·
V4-8: Confession. The writer has no hesitation in affirming that
God has not changed. He is still our “boast”;
His name is to be praised. This stanza
is well worth the discipline to commit it to memory.
·
V9-12: Complaint. The “complaint” section is somewhat
lengthy. And at first it is not hard to
see the problem. The current situation
in Israel is that God has “cast off” His people to the point of being scattered
among the nations. The prophecies of the
Pentateuch (e.g. Deut. 28,32) indicate the Nation’s disobedience has finally
brought God to the place of severe judgment.
·
V13-16: Complaint. The result of the “scattering” is that they
are the reproach of their neighbors.
·
V17-22: Complaint. This stanza reveals another important issue
in the historical “context”. In the
midst of the sinful nation there is a righteous remnant, and they are the ones
lifting this prayer. Paul’s use of v22
in Rom. 8:36 helps us understand what is happening. In Rom. 8 Paul says that terrible afflictions
come on the righteous people of God; and yet they are never separated from His
love! So here in the Psalmists situation
the righteous are suffering affliction because of their being part of the wicked
nation. But they plead their
integrity.
·
V23-26: Petition. Out of this confidence, that God remembers
the righteous and makes a distinction in judgment between the just and the
unjust (2 Peter 2:9), the saints pray that God will be their help. They rightfully ask God to mercifully come to
their aid, something He actually delights to do.
Perhaps we can imagine some similarities here
to the intercession of Abraham for Lot and the people of Sodom (Gen. 18). You may remember that he almost bargained
with God to the point where God said that for the sake ten righteous people He
would not destroy the city. He pled for
the city for the sake of the godly people who lived there.
Again, remember the intercession of our Lord
Himself. He too prays for the righteous
who live in the wicked world (John 17:13-19).
As Romans 8 indicates, the intercession of Christ (v34) is one of the
fundamental reasons that nothing shall separate us from Him!
Let us learn and commit ourselves to this
privilege of intercession. We have a
standing before God that allows us to pray in the name of Christ for those
around us. We have a faith that is built
on the great work of salvation performed by our God in Christ. Let us strongly pray for the world in which
we live and testify.
And let us not be afraid to be “sheep for the
slaughter” in the cause of Christ. Nothing
can separate us from His love. And
beyond that, “we are more than conquerors through Him who loves us” (Rom.
8:37). May these afflictions be stepping
stones to the greater exaltation of Christ.
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