Month: February 2019
Ep.027: Psalm 5: Good Morning God
Hi. I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray with Me”.
Psalm 4 was an evening prayer. Today’s prayer, Psalm 5, is a morning prayer. It starts with three verses of introduction, followed by 9 verses of alternating suggestions for how God should deal with the wicked and how he deals with the righteous.
It starts, “Give ear to my words O Lord . . . Listen to my cry for help . . . In the morning I lay my requests before you and wait in expectation.” This is the morning rhythm of prayer. Waking, we tell God what is on our mind for the day. Perhaps we feel weak and we dread the assault of our enemies, or perhaps today is filled with hope and promise. Checking in with God in the morning prepares us to wait expectantly for him through the day. God might show up at any time, but we won’t notice if we aren’t attentive.
Following the introduction, the psalmist describes his enemies and suggests how God should deal with them. “The arrogant cannot stand in your presence, you hate all who do wrong, you destroy those who tell lies.” And later in the psalm, “Declare them guilty, O God. Let their intrigues be their downfall. Banish them for their many sins.”
The psalmist also describes the righteous and tells God how to deal with us. “By your great mercy I will bow down toward your holy temple. Lead me in your righteousness . . . make a straight path before me. . . let all who take refuge in you be glad.”
Let us pray.
Our Father, in the morning our alarm wakes us rudely. We stumble to the bathroom to brush our teeth and put on makeup. And we turn our thoughts to you, because we need your presence today to protect us from our enemies, to give us favor and success in our endeavors. We will wait expectantly for you. Help us recognize your presence when you visit us. Help us hear your voice when you speak to us.
We ask you to destroy our enemies, God.
- Destroy the enemy within, the voice that says we are worthless and unworthy, the fear that paralyzes, the brooding introspection that depresses, the arrogance that criticizes friends and colleagues, the malice that repeats gossiping stories.
- Silence the enemies we meet today — family members who shame us, coworkers who are rude and dismissive, clerks who are sullen and disrespectful.
- Banish the arrogant voices in our culture. May all lying, self-promoting politicians be trapped by their intrigues. May all advertisers who promote mediocre products promising infinite happiness come to an unhappy end. May all entertainers who create meaningless drivel be filled with their own empty words.
But may all who take refuge in you, Lord, be glad. In the winding and confusing journey of life, make a straight path for us. When we don’t know where to turn, guide is into wise choices, faithful relationships, true vocations, and holy community. Amen.
I’m Daniel on the channel “Pray with Me”.
Ep.026: Snake on a Stick. Podcast.
Ep.026: Snake on a Stick
Hi, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray With Me.”
As Moses was leading the Israelites to the promised land, the desert lacked many conveniences they were accustomed to. In today’s story, the people are complaining again to God and Moses. They said, “Why have you brought us up out of Egypt to die in the wilderness? There is no bread! There is no water! And we detest this miserable food!’”
Clearly, God and Moses haven’t studied management theory on “How to Meet and Exceed Customer Expectations.” If their monthly survey of the people asked, “How likely are you to recommend this experience to your friends and family?” the people would give them a net promoter score of zero.
But God wasn’t trying to increase his approval ratings. His goal was to teach the people to quit complaining. So he sent poisonous snakes into the crowd and people started dying. This got their attention, so they said to Moses, “We sinned when we spoke against the Lord and against you. Pray that the Lord will take the snakes away from us.” So Moses prayed for the people.
God gave Moses a solution. Put a bronze snake up on a pole in the middle of the crowd. Anyone who lis bitten can look at the bronze snake and live.
Odd, isn’t it? Create an image of a poisonous snake, post it in a public place, and look at it and live? I would have thought a better solution would be to get rid of the snakes.
Here are three quick comments on this passage
1. Most of us want our lives to be comfortable, well-fed, and and well-watered. Maybe even a glass of wine occasionally. And we think that God, if there is a God, should commit himself to making our world a better place — surely he could alleviate war and hunger and injustice. But that’s not the program God has designed for our world. Life is a desert journey. Is this really what we signed up for?
2. Second, the solution is not to complain. In an Agatha Raisin novel by E. M. Beaton, Agatha’s neighbour complains to her about everything that is wrong with the Cotswold village in which they live and the people who live there. The author says, “Mrs Hardy’s words seeped like poison into [Agatha’s] brain” (M. C. Beaton, “Agatha Raisin and the Murderous Marriage.” New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1997.)
Complaining is like that. We create our own snakes that poison our view and narrow our vision. God has a different plan. If we receive this desert journey as a gift, it will strip away our shallow complaints and bring us face to face with the truth.
3. And third, the solution is to face squarely the things that bite us. God’s salvation for us complainers is to look away from ourselves, to a place where we see our problems displayed and objectified. A snake on a pole or a man on a cross can expose our sins and heal the poison that infects us.
Let’s pray.
Our Father, we are habitual complainers. We have summoned the snakes that poison our bodies and destroy our relationships. We see the devastation complaining has brought. So we turn our eyes to the snake on the pole. Make us healthy and thankful. Amen.
I’m Daniel on the channel “Pray with Me”.
Ep.025: Psalm 4: Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep
Hi, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray with Me.”
Psalm 1 and 2 were an introduction to the Psalms. Psalm 3 was the first prayer — David’s prayer of loss and desperation when Absalom betrayed him. Our prayers often start in that same place of loss and desperation. But now Psalms 4 and 5 will introduce another type of prayer — prayers that are not emergency 911 calls to God, but prayers said in the regular rhythm of our lives in good times and bad.
The first rhythm the psalmist introduces is evening and morning. Psalm 4 is an evening prayer and Psalm 5 is a morning prayer. The heart of the evening prayer is to leave the finished and unfinished business of our day with God, to tell him our successes and failures, to entrust our friends and enemies to him. Then we release ourselves to the forgetfulness of sleep, knowing that God will not forget us. This is Psalm 4, our prayer today.
Let’s pray it.
“Answer me when I call to you
my righteous God.
Give me relief from my distress,
have mercy on me and hear my prayer.”
Our Father, we bring to you the things that distressed us today — news of natural and political disasters, family breakups, problems with health and employment and relationships. We ask for a night of relief from our distress. Grant us peace.
“How long will you people turn my glory into shame?
How long will you love delusions and seek false gods?
Know that the Lord has set apart his servants for himself
the Lord hears when I call to him.”
Our enemies turn our glory into shame. They despise our faith, they belittle our prayers, they disparage our good works, they find fault with our view of God. But we are your people, Lord. Thank you that you honor us as servants and listen to our prayers.
“In your anger do not sin;
when you are on your beds,
search your hearts and be silent.
Offer the sacrifices of the righteous
and trust in the Lord.”
Our anger flared up again today, but now at day’s end we search our hearts and we are silent before you. You know us, for we are your people. We know you, for you are our God. We trust you with our heart and mind and soul.
“Many are asking, “Who will show us any good?”
Let the light of your face shine on us.
You have filled my heart with greater joy
than when their grain and new wine abound.”
We circle back to that age-old problem, “Who will show us any good?” What is good, and how can we know it? What is the good life, and how can we live it? Our answer is, “We know goodness when you smile at us, God. We feel goodness in the light of your presence. We experience goodness when you fill our hearts with joy.”
“In peace I will lie down and sleep,
for you alone, Lord,
make me dwell in safety.”
Our day, our life is in your hands. In your care, we give ourselves gladly and joyfully to sleep.
Amen
I’m Daniel on the channel “Pray with Me”.