It’s the shortest of all the Psalms, a call to the Gentiles to give God praise. Enough said, right? No. Not so fast. For one thing, remember that this one of the Hillel Psalms, celebrated in Israel. It begins and ends with Praise the Lord. While directed toward the Nations it is special to Israel.
Also, notice the beautiful and simple poetical
form. Each verse is two couplets, with
parallel thoughts. In v1 the Gentiles (nations) and all you peoples are called to praise (shine a light on) and laud (commend, boast of) the God of
Israel. In v2 the cause for praise is
His merciful kindness (checed) and enduring truth (emeth). These attributes of
God that appear together so often in the Psalms that cause Israel to praise the
Lord is what also evokes praise from the Gentiles.
There’s more. Don’t miss the “us”: His
merciful kindness is great toward says, towards Israel. Why should Gentiles praise God for mercy and
truth to Israel?
·
First, remember that in the Abrahamic Covenant God
promises to bless ALL the families of the earth (Gen. 12:2-3). So of course, God’s mercy to Abraham (who with his descendants would need God’s mercy)
and enduring truth (the fulfillment
of the promise would depend on God’s faithfulness) would result in the Messiah,
the Savior, the Son of God, who would come to earth in the line of Abraham,
Isaac, Jacob, Judah and David.
·
Second, note from Romans 15:8-12 all the quotes
Paul takes from the OT to support his own call to the Gentiles to be obedient
to the faith.
o
15:9 from Psalm 18:49, the Psalm of David sung when
God delivered him from all his enemies.
So it will be with the Son of David, when He comes in victory over His
enemies. He will rule on David’s throne
in Zion; i.e. God’s mercy and truth to Israel will be accomplished through the
Messiah.
o
15:10 from Deuteronomy 32:43. The source is the end of the Song of Moses wherein it was foretold
how Israel would stray from God and be judged but in the end would be saved for
the glory of His Name. It concludes with
this call to Gentiles to praise God. As
Ezekiel said, the Gentiles would know once the whole story of Israel was
complete, the story of God’s furious wrath and His abundant mercy (Ezek.
39:21-29).
o
15:11 from Psalm 117:1 where God’s mercy and truth
to Israel is the basis for the Gentiles to be called to praise.
o
15:12 from Isaiah 11:1,10 where the Messiah is
clearly tied to Israel as the root of
Jesse who will rise to reign over the
Gentiles. And this brings us back to
where we started with Abraham: the blessing of all the nations is dependent on
God’s mercy and faithfulness in keeping His promise to Abraham. Paul, who established this fact in Romans
9-11 (11:26: so all Israel will be saved),
is here applying it to the Gentiles.
There is no reason to wait until Christ returns in triumph. NOW is the time of salvation. Now is the time for all peoples to heed the
call of Psalm 117!
No comments:
Post a Comment