Musings on
Psalm 119
He: Verses
33 – 40
Teach me, O Lord, the way of your
statutes;
and I will keep it to the end.
The Way of God’s statutes is, of course, our Lord
Jesus Christ. He is the Word, the Logos, of God; as we follow Jesus we guard
and keep God’s Word. We may know the Bible without knowing Jesus Christ (John
5:39 – 40). We may know the Bible as a member of any number of religious
traditions, but until we encounter Jesus Christ in the Scriptures we are
numbered with the religious leaders of John 5:39 – 40, or we are like those in
2 Timothy 3:7 who are “always learning and never able to come to the knowledge
of the truth.”
As Paul makes clear in 1 Corinthians Chapter Two, only
God can teach us His Word. Our Father teaches us horizontally and vertically;
we hear from Him both ways as He communicates to us directly and as He
communicates to us through other members of the Body of Christ – we ought to
seek harmony and confirmation in our understanding of God Word.
We can trust our Lord Jesus to keep us so that we may
keep His Word to the end of life in this world and into the age to come. We
cannot keep God’s Word by ourselves, but only as we abide in the Vine (John
15). All that we do must be done as we abide in Christ – He must be our Way of
Life; without Him, outside of Him, we can do nothing that is of any worth.
Give me understanding, that I may keep
your law
and observe it with my whole heart.
We ask God to teach us, and we ask Him to give us
understanding in what He teaches us. It is one thing to recite a verse or a
paragraph or even an entire chapter of the Bible. It is another thing to
understand it. We often sing hymns we do not understand. We read Scriptures
that we do not understand. When we view the Scriptures we do not “see” their
interconnectedness, we view many small pieces without “seeing” that they all
combine to present a comprehensive portrait of God and His purposes. We are
often like children playing with bricks at a construction site, not knowing that
those bricks are to be joined together to produce a home in which people will
live. We stack a few bricks together and think we have produced an
award-winning structure, when all the time God’s wants us to build His Temple. We
mistake our stack of bricks for a palace – God has so much more for us in His
Son.
Lead me in the path of your
commandments,
for I delight in it.
Teach us, give us understanding, and now “lead” us in
the Path of your commandments – again, Jesus is the Path, the Way. Jesus promises
us that the Holy Spirit will lead us into all truth (John 16:12 – 15). Jesus
greatly desires to reveal Himself and His ways to us through the Holy Spirit,
are we coming to Him expectantly? Are we anticipating the revelation of Jesus
Christ through His Word and the Holy Spirit? “All things that the Father has
are mine; therefore I said that he [the Holy Spirit] takes of mine and will
disclose it to you” (John 16:15). Is this our experience? Our Father wants to
give to us, do we want to receive?
Incline my heart to your testimonies,
and not to selfish gain!
We need to be taught by God, we need the Holy Spirit
to give us understanding in what we are taught, we need to be led by the Holy
Spirit (Romans 8:14) into Christ, and we desperately need the grace and mercy
of God to incline our hearts to His testimonies and away from self-centered
lives. Our hearts and souls are bent inward, they are made crooked by sin and
self-deceit, what we consider gain is loss, and what we consider loss is gain. The
way of self-denial and of Christ-confession is the Way of the Cross; the Cross
is the Way of Life.
Turn my eyes from looking at worthless
things;
and give me life in your ways.
Not only do we need our hearts inclined toward God, we
need our eyes turned away from worthless things. Jesus says, “The eye is the
lamp of the body; so then if your eye is clear (or healthy), your whole body
will be filled with light. But if your eye is bad, your whole body will be full
of darkness…” (Matthew 6:22 – 23). Then Jesus says in the next verse, “No one
can serve two masters…You cannot serve God and wealth.” We are be “Looking unto
Jesus” (Hebrews 12:2), our eyes are to be on Christ and His Word as we are
transformed into His likeness (2 Cor. 3:18; 1 John 3:1-3). The ways of this age
can bring nothing but death, the ways of our Father give us life in His Son.
Confirm to your servant your promise,
that you may be feared.
Hebrews 11:33 tells us that our fathers and mothers of
faith “obtained promises”. This speaks to us of our intimate relationship with
God; an intimacy that includes the Parent making promises to the child.
In 2 Corinthians 1:20 – 22 Paul writes, “For all the
promises of God find their Yes in him [Christ Jesus]. That is why it is through
him that we utter our Amen to God for his glory. And it is God who establishes
us with you in Christ, and has anointed us, and who has also put his seal on us
and given us his Spirit in our hearts as a guarantee.”
In Christ not only does God say “Yes” to His promises,
all His promises point to Christ, reveal Christ, and have their substance in
Christ. God’s promises are to establish us in Jesus Christ, to root us deeply
in Him. The seal of the Spirit of God is the Promise of the Father given to us
by the ascended Christ Jesus (Acts 2:33).
How does God confirm His promise? He does so through
His Son, the witness of the Holy Spirit, and His Word (Hebrews 6:17 – 20;
Romans 8:15 – 16; 1 John 3:23 – 24; 4:13). As the writer of Hebrews tells us
(Hebrews 6:17), we are “heirs of the promise”. This promise is eternal life in
Jesus Christ, this is the Promise above all promises – koinonia with God,
living in the Trinity, by the Trinity, through the Trinity.
God is “other” than we are, and the more intimate we
are with the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit the greater our awareness of His “otherness”
will be. The otherness and awesomeness of God leads to a holy fear and
recognition that our God is indeed the Almighty One; we fall on our faces, we
bow before Him, we worship Him – and in the midst of our holy fear we hear Him
say, “Fear not.” Only those who fear God and stand in awe in His Presence hear
Him say, “Fear not.”
Turn away the reproach that I dread,
for your rules [ordinances] are good.
What does this mean? What is this reproach? It is
linked to the ordinances of God. As Paul makes clear in Romans Chapter Three,
we have all sinned and come short of the glory of God, not one of us is
righteous, not a single person on earth. Can there be any greater reproach than
the reproach of sin? Of our unrighteousness? Of our rebellion against the holy
One?
“Now we know that whatever the law says it speaks to
those who are under the law, so that every mouth may be stopped, and the whole
world may be held accountable to God. For by works of the law no human being
will be justified in his sight, since through the law comes knowledge of sin.”
(Romans 3:19 – 20).
There is only One who can take away our reproach, and
that is our Lord Jesus Christ (Romans 3:21 – 26). As we believe in Jesus, as we
trust in Him, as we come into a relationship with Him, acknowledging our sin
and rebellion and turning from our evil ways by His grace and following Him, a
twofold miracle occurs; on the biological side we receive the very life of God
in Christ Jesus, on the forensic (legal) side we are justified in Christ and by
Christ and through Jesus Christ. God’s
Law convicts us of sin and drives us to Christ and delivers us into the hands
of grace and mercy, which are the hands of Jesus Christ – the wounded hands.
Behold, I long for your precepts;
in your righteousness give me life!
Here is a second cry, a second plea, of “give me life!”
Is this not the cry of the dead man who knows he is dead? Isn’t this the plea
of the man who knows that he is on a trajectory of death? Might not this be the
request of the woman who realizes that she lives in an atmosphere of death? In
a society that is dead and dying? God does not desire to resuscitate that which
is dying – the Cross is here that we might die to the world, the flesh, and the
devil; that we might die to ourselves and live unto God (Romans Chapter 6). We
will only find life in the righteousness of God, and that Righteousness is Jesus
Christ.
As Paul writes (1 Corinthians 1:27 – 31), “But God
chose what is foolish in the world to shame the wise; God chose what is weak in
the world to shame the strong; God chose what is low and despised in the world,
even things that are not, to bring to nothing things that are, so that no human
being might boast in the presence of God. And because of him you are in Christ
Jesus, who became to us wisdom from God, righteousness and sanctification and
redemption, so that, as it is written, “Let the one who boasts, boast in the Lord.””
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