One of the great pastor-teachers of Westminster
Chapel in London, Martyn Lloyd-Jones, wrote a book entitled Spiritual Depression: It’s Causes and Cures. We highly recommend it as one of the most
helpful books ever written aside from the Bible. It is a thoroughly exegetical (i.e. a deep
study of Scripture) consideration of a subject that the Bible actually meets
head-on. The subject of depression is
very real to people, and all too often treated with drugs of some sort without
ever truly considering the Bible’s provision for a cure. I mention this book as a further study of the
subject that is presented in this Psalm.
Psalm 77 has a simple plan. In vs1-9 the Psalmist expresses the depth of
his discomfort. In v10 there is a determined
commitment by the Psalmist to change his mental focus to the great works of God
in the past (vs10-15), especially the great works of God involved at the Red Sea
in the time of the Exodus.
·
77:1-9:
One issue in depression is the recognition that our problem is not
unique. We tend to think that no one
knows how we feel, how difficult our situation or how impossible the solution
to our problem. This is a denial of God before
Whom all things are open and naked and
a denial of His word which is a discerner
of the thoughts and intents of the heart (Heb. 4:12-13). God fully understands our depression as is
seen in these verses. My soul refused to be comforted
(v2). I am so troubled that I cannot speak (v7). Has His
promise failed forevermore (v8)? You
may be asking questions such as this.
Remember that you are not the first to do so.
·
77:10-20:
The solution to depression is
usually not the solving of some problem. It is rather the determined choice to think
differently, to focus on the goodness of God.
Psalm 73:17, Lam. 3:19-21, 2 Cor. 4:16-18 and Col. 3:1-2 are other
illustrations of Godly men determining to think differently even though the
situation had not changed. The Psalmist
commits himself: I will remember (v10-11), I will meditate on (v12). And the specific focus, on the time when God
led His people like a flock by the hand
of Moses and Aaron (v20), is not just a trick to divert attention from the
negative. It is quite relevant. He remembers that God’s way was in the sea. God led Israel in a path that put them in an
impossible situation, with the impassible sea on one side and the Egyptian army
on the other. And God’s footsteps were not known (v19). In other words the path was not marked out in
advance. They had to wait until God
miraculously gave them a path through the sea.
One thought from God
needs to be emphasized for us. Your way of God is in the sanctuary (or in holiness, v13). God is always leading us in the way that only
makes sense when we commune with Him in His sanctuary, the place where He
dwells. We do not need to know the next
step. We need to trust in the One who in
His goodness is always leading us in the path of holiness.
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