(Part of an ongoing series of the 48 psalms recommended for study during times of "feeling down," from pastor-counselor David Seamands' book "Healing for Damaged Emotions.")
A classic Peanuts cartoon shows Lucy harassing Linus. He groans, “Aaugh!” and rips his shirt apart.
In the final panel, he declares, “Thou hast caused me to rend my garment!” I’d
call that “expressing anger” with, ah, destructive enthusiasm. Psalm 116 has
one verse that could be described as “anger”—“all men are liars” (v. 11) but
the rest of it hinges on a word close to “rend,” but with a different meaning: “render,” to give back or restore.
RESCUED
God probably hears many prayers that begin, “Things are a
mess and getting worse. Help!” But here, instead of woe, the psalmist begins
with wonder and praise:
I love the Lord, for
he heard my voice; he heard my cry for mercy,
Because he turned his
ear to me, I will call on him as long as I live.(vv. 1-2)
Pagan faiths don’t have such access to God. They hope their god(s) is(are) in a hearing
mood when they do their sacrifices and routines. Our God doesn’t have office
hours. He’s 24/7, anywhere.
The psalmist then relates a situation where his life was in
danger. “The cords of death entangled me,” a metaphor also used in David’s
Psalm 18:4, graphically depicts a desperate situation. But the psalmist’s
reaction was to call “on the name of the LORD,” and he experienced God’s
compassion in his great need. Significantly, he called himself “the
simplehearted” (v. 6). Our inscrutable God is accessible to us, the
“simplehearted”!
RENDERED
News media sometimes relate how a stranger saved someone in
a dangerous situation. The “rescued” wants to express deep gratitude to the
“rescuer,” but has no name or contact information. The psalmist, however, knew
just Who to thank for his “rescue.” In his
time and culture there was a religious rite called the “fellowship offering” of
meat, bread and wine to render thankfulness to God . (Explained in Leviticus
3, 7:11-21, it’s also called “thank offering” or “sacrifice of thanksgiving.”) Besides
sacrificing an animal as a token of the person’s gratitude, the priest would
pour out a portion of wine to symbolize a life poured out to God (the “cup of
salvation,” v. 13). Part of this food offering was set aside for the person and
his family to eat—truly a “thanksgiving” meal (without a turkey!).
RELEASED
For me, the most precious verse in this psalm is this:
Precious in the sight
of the LORD is the death of his saints. (v. 13)
I will never forget my dad sitting by my mother’s hospital
bed in her last comatose hours before dying of cancer at age 59. Weary from his
“last watch,” he opened a Bible and read this psalm aloud to her, not knowing
if she could even hear. His voice broke at this verse. Such a hard, wrenching
moment—yet it was “precious” in that this Christian woman would soon know
“the other side” of being with the Lord.
I’ve heard it said that a believer’s death is “not an
accident but an appointment.” Psalm 139:16 says God has ordained all our days.
Psalm 39:4-5 recognizes the fleeting character of life. Psalm 90:12 speaks of
our numbered days. Our lifespan is in God’s hands.
What should be our response? To declare, as verse 1 says, “I
love the Lord.” Life on this planet will never be perfect until God turns
everything upside down at the end of time and brings forth the new heavens and
new earth. But, for now, He bids us look around and recognize His hand of grace
and help.
The last line of this psalm is significant: “Halle
lujah” (Hebrew for “Praise the Lord”). When life drags us down, we’re more apt
to do the Linus shirt-ripping trick (“Aaugh!”). Psalm 116 reminds: don’t rend
your garment. Render praise.