Ordinary "buttes" like this one in central Washington would leave
me breathless to climb. That's why Psalm46 and its image of
mountains falling into the sea is so powerful! |
(An ongoing series on the 48 psalms listed as "recommended reading" for times of depression, from counselor/pastor David Seamands' book Healing for Damaged Emotions.)
Whenever I run across the word “therefore” in scripture,
I’ve learned to pause and ask, “What is it there
for?” Typically this adjective means “consequently, for that reason, because of
that, to that end.” In Psalm 46, it links God’s sufficiency as our refuge,
strength, and help when our world is falling apart.
God is our refuge and
strength, an ever-present help in trouble.
Therefore we will not
fear, though the earth give way
And the mountains fall
into the heart of the sea,
Though its waters roar
and foam
And the mountains
quake with its surging. (vv. 1-3)
For years while reading this psalm, I’d find myself humming
the tune to Martin Luther’s hymn, “A Mighty Fortress,” based on it. He had
composed it while his own life was in danger from religious leaders. When
Luther felt discouraged or depressed, he’d ask his co-worker Philipp
Melanchthon to sing this hymn with him. Its sturdy, confident lyrics (so blunt
and strong in the original German) would lift him spiritually.
IT’S STILL RELEVANT
Fast-forward five centuries from Luther. Four passenger planes hijacked
by terrorists plunge into landmark high-rise business buildings in New York, the Pentagon
in the nation’s capital, and a farm field, missing its presumed target of the
White House. Nearly 3,000 are killed, 6,000 injured. Damage estimates are ten billion dollars. Stunned by this sick
enemy attack, a reeling nation looked to an aging spiritual leader, Billy
Graham, then 83. From the podium at the National Cathedral three days after the
Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, he brought the timeless message of Psalm 46. His points:
*This event was a reminder of the mystery and reality of
evil. God is not the author of evil.
*This event showed us our need for each other.
*This event can give a message of hope for the present and
the future as it shows our nation how much we need a spiritual renewal and hope
for this life, and the life to come, in Heaven for those who believe in Christ.
HISTORY REPEATED
The history woven into Psalm 46 most likely is when the Assyrians
lay siege against Jerusalem
during the reign of Hezekiah (725-696 B.C.). Verse 4 (“a river whose streams
make glad the city of God”) probably infers
Hezekiah’s public works project of an underground channel that brought water
under Jerusalem’s
walls (2 Kings 20:20). That pool inside the city sustained it during a long
siege. The end of verse 5, “God will help her at break of day,” sounds like 2
Kings 19:35-36, when, overnight, a mysterious illness (“the angel of the Lord,”
v. 35) killed thousands of enemy soldiers. The enemy king lived, but he
high-tailed it out of there for safety at his palace in Assyria.
Imagine having today’s on-the-spot news coverage of such events! Yet in the
midst of these scary, bewildering threats to Jerusalem, God was there.
REFUGE AND STRENGTH
Therefore…as the
psalm’s refrain reminds us, “The Lord Almighty is with us; the God of Jacob is
our fortress.” Jacob was the rascal who
deceived his twin Esau out of the birthright.
He was the schemer who deserved retribution and punishment. But God saw bigger things for Jacob and broke
his stubborn spirit. He was renamed “Israel,” prince.
Verse 1 says God is our refuge
and strength. The concluding
verse says the “LORD Almighty is with us.”
What better hope for when we’re under spiritual attack—or even the real
physical attack masterminded by the forces of evil? Verse 10 reinforces that
message for scary and depressing times: “Be still, and know that I am God.” Therefore,
when I’m troubled, scared, or depressed, He
is my refuge and strength, my
ever present help in trouble, the only true place of safety.
Interested in another
study I did on Psalm 46? Go to my blog for April 25, 2014:
http://jeannezornes.blogspot.com/2014/04/making-psense-of-psalms-psalm-46.html
http://jeannezornes.blogspot.com/2014/04/making-psense-of-psalms-psalm-46.html
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