What Psalm is more recognizable than this? None! Thus we need to ask God to help us to meditate truly and deeply on it. Familiarity breeds contempt. It breeds a casual approach, or pride that says “I have benefited from this one many times; there is no more to learn.” May we say the obvious: none of us has EVER studied this Psalm in the life-context of this moment? We will find today fresh and unique applications of what our Lord and Shepherd provides for us.
Often our familiarity comes from what someone else
said. We have perhaps heard Psalm 23 at
nearly every funeral service we ever attended.
Or maybe it was committed to memory back in the recesses of our
childhood minds. We would do well to
ask: have you really studied this Psalm?
With this in mind we will ask you to fill in some
blanks that require at the very least thinking about each of the phrases. The point of the Psalm is that we have such a
Shepherd as Jesus, the Good Shepherd, that as sheep we never lack
anything. And may I say, by the way,
that Jesus is Israel’s Shepherd. In
Ezekiel 34:23-24 Jesus is the future Davidic Shepherd who will care for Israel. The “Good Shepherd” sermon of John 10 is
initially directed at the woeful shepherds of Israel, with Jesus saying that He
will have sheep both from the fold of Israel and the fold of the Church (Jn.
10:16). Remember Jesus is preeminent
over all; He is both King of Israel and Head of the Body.
I have filled in the first and last blanks. Please do the rest, answering the question “I
shall not want for ….” And by all means
meditate on the word! What issue in your
life today has been a source of complaint to you because you have not followed
your Shepherd? Submit yourself to the
One who has given us everything for life and godliness, in Whom we have every
spiritual blessing!
"The Lord is my Shepherd, I shall not want" for...
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