This pier on the Columbia River symbolized for me
the emotions of being launched into unknowns
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(An ongoing series on
the 48 psalms listed as “recommended reading” for times of depression, as
listed in counselor/pastor David Seamands’ book Healing for Damaged
Emotions.)
Despair and hope thread through this duo of psalms, which scholars say should be read as one. Their link is the thrice-repeated refrain:
Despair and hope thread through this duo of psalms, which scholars say should be read as one. Their link is the thrice-repeated refrain:
Why are you downcast,
O my soul, Why so disturbed
within me within me? Put your hope in God, For I will yet praise
him, my Savior and my God. (42:5, 11; 43:5)
The phrase “been there, done that” rings through my heart
when I read these psalms. Bible teachers say the author (attributed to Korah’s
sons, who served in the tabernacle) was apparently away from his work and home,
possibly north toward Mt.
Hermon. He admits to
crying day and night (42:3), suggesting some real physical and spiritual
lows—yes, depression. He misses his
temple work, which kept him in an attitude of worship and joy (v. 4). He’s been
subjected to ridicule by people who mock, “Where is your God?” (42:3, 10). Such
people are ungodly, deceitful, wicked, his enemy (43:1-2).
It’s hard to live for God when your assaulted by so many
negatives. He chose a picturesque simile when he compared his feelings to a
deer that’s panting with thirst (42:1).
My soul thirsts for
God, for the living God. When can I go and meet with God? (42:2)
I know people who live in the past, in “glory years” when
their skills brought approval and admiration.
But life isn’t static. There are deaths, moves, job and financial changes, family
adjustments, or health crises--and if we can’t adjust to our new “normal,”
we’re candidates for depression. We can’t expect to forever “meet God” in the
old comfortable and maybe stale ways.
STUCK IN THE PAST
The writer opens his song pining for the “good old
days”—when he led worship processions in Jerusalem.
But he ends it with a vital truth: that God can be worshipped wherever we are,
in new ways as He grows us spiritually. For the psalm-writer, the new place is
finding God’s light and truth where God has placed the believer (43:3).
Circumstances change. People change. Churches change! Hopes are raised, hopes dashed. But the constant is God, who never changes
but whose character would take more than a lifetime to discover and savor.
That’s why I latch on to the little word “yet” in these two
psalms. I can rehash my troubles and questions, but at the end—in the “yet” of
life—I need to come back to praising Him, claiming Him as my joy and delight
(43:4).
It’s a verse worth writing out on a 3x5 card and putting
where you’ll see it regularly, maybe next to your computer or the bathroom
mirror:
Put your hope in God,
for I will yet praise him, my Savior and my God.
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