Author: Daniel Westfall
Ep.151: Psalm 66: The Poet Prays and Praises.
Hello, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray with Me”.
Psalm 66 is a hymn of thanksgiving and praise to God. It has four stanzas and each one begins with a call to praise:
– verse 1: Shout for joy to God, all the earth
– verse 5: Come and see what God has done
– verse 8: Praise our God, all peoples
– verse 16: Come and hear, all you who fear God.
“Shout for joy” the poet says, but it isn’t something we do much of these days. Part of the deep appeal of Pentecostalism and other more expressive forms of faith is that they create space for the noisier and more chaotic expressions of emotion that frequent the psalms.
Another key message from Psalm 66 is that we need to pay attention.
– We can pay attention with our memory, reciting and rejoicing in what God did for his people in the past (vv. 5-7).
– We can pay attention to our world, reflecting on and talking about what God is doing today (vv. 1-4).
– We can pay attention to our experience, telling others what God is doing for us and in us (vv. 16-20).
Let’s pray.
Shout for joy to God, all the earth
Sing the glory of his name;
Say to God, “How awesome are your deeds!
Your enemies cringe before your great power” (v. 1-2a).
Our Father, when we look at what is wrong with our world, we are tempted to think you are weak. Wars continue unabated, selfish tyrants promote their own power and glory, the poor everywhere are hungry and oppressed. And now the Covid-19 pandemic cuts a brutal swath through our healthcare systems, our economy, our comfort.
But with the poet, we lift our eyes to what is right with the world. The sun rises and sets, the moon regulates the tides, we rely on the seasons for planting and harvesting. The beauty of mountains and fields and sky is not obscured by human troubles. How awesome are your deeds, O God.
We remember and pay attention to what you have done. Long ago you parted the Red Sea so your people could pass, humiliating the rebellious Pharaoh and drowning his pursuing army. You led your people through the Jordan River to the Promised Land. Empires rise and fall at your command. Long gone is the greatness that was Babylon, Egypt, Greece, and Rome. Passing is the greatness that is America and China. You stilled the black plague and the world wars and the Spanish flu. On your timeline, God, only Christ’s kingdom will grow and flourish without end.
With the poet we pray,
Praise our God, all peoples. . .
he has preserved our lives
and kept our feet from slipping (v. 8a, 9).
Thank you, God, for saving our lives, for bringing us through sickness and danger, through busyness and joblessness, through good times and bad.
You have tested us,
You have refined us as silver,
You have brought us through fire and water
into a spacious place (v. 9, 12b).
Thank you, God, for being active in our lives, for testing us, training us, and bringing us through fire and water to a good place. In everything you work for the good of those who love you (Rom 8:28). As the pandemic restrains and haunts us and world politics confuse us, we thank you for helping us grow upward and outward into this good space in which we live.
Amen.
I’m Daniel on the channel “Pray with Me”.
Ep.150: The Annoyers. Podcast.
Ep.150: The Annoyers.
Hello, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray With Me”.
Here’s a story Luke placed immediately after the Lords’ Prayer (Luke 11:1-4).
Jesus said, “Imagine a friend comes to town late and stays at your place. But you don’t have anything to feed him, so at midnight you go to the neighbor’s, bang on the door, and shout, ‘Hey! Can you lend me some snacks? I have a visitor to feed.’”
Your friend will be totally annoyed that you destroy his sleep and wake up his kids. But, says Jesus, if you keep knocking annoyingly your friend will soon enough get up and give you all the snacks you need.
In Luke 18, Jesus tells another annoying story (Luke 18:1-8). A widow who wants justice against her adversary petitions a hard-nosed judge who doesn’t believe in God and doesn’t care about people. The judge tells her to shove off, but she doesn’t. She keeps on asking. Finally, he gets so annoyed he renders a favorable judgement, just to shut her up.
Some observations on these stories.
- First, many people believe I have skills at being annoying, rather like the householder and the widow in Jesus’ stories. But these days I try to use my skill sparingly. When I annoy people, I’m more likely to arouse anger than helpfulness. Perhaps the people in Jesus’ stories had better skills than I do.
- Second, the judge gave the woman what she wanted. I’m glad I wasn’t the defendant in that case. A judge who doesn’t care about God or people probably doesn’t care that much about the law either. When he gets into his “I just need to make this widow stop” mode, will he deliver a just judgment?
- Third, in both stories, the person who receives those untimely and persistent requests represents God. Is Jesus suggesting that God is like the man in bed, unenthusiastic about helping his neighbor? Or is God like the judge who doesn’t really care about people and justice?
These are wonderful metaphors, not because they teach us that God is easily annoyed, but because they teach us about ourselves. Prayer is the easiest thing in the world to give up on. You know the routine: you ask for something a couple times, but God isn’t listening or answering, so you conclude, “Well, that was a waste of time!” and you quit praying. That’s precisely the attitude Jesus pinpoints in these stories.
Here’s his message: “The biggest risk to prayer is giving up too soon and too easily.” His suggestion: “Don’t give up. Keep asking, even if your prayer doesn’t work. Even if you feel you’re annoying God.”
4. And finally, I observe that in both stories, the “annoyer” has an element of faith. The householder knows his neighbour well enough to believe he’ll share from his well-stocked cupboard. The widow believes that the judge will help her if she can just motivate him to act.
Let’s pray. (scene change)
Our father, we would find it helpful if you were more responsive to our prayers, if we felt we didn’t have to annoy you into action. Teach us to press on in the face of our desperate need and your persistent silence, until we understand that you will give us everything, in your time and your way.
Amen.
I’m Daniel on the channel “Pray with Me”.
Ep.149: Psalm 65: You Water the Land. Podcast.
Ep.149: Psalm 65: You Water the Land.
Hello, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray with Me”.
Psalm 65 is notable for what is absent from the psalm and what is present.
First, what is missing?
- The poet’s enemies are absent. They aren’t threatening him, they aren’t building traps or shooting arrows, they have disappeared for now!
- The poet’s desperation has also disappeared. He’s no longer stuck in a dark pit, pleading for rescue and salvation.
- The poet’s thirst and longing for God? That’s absent too. There’s no hint of his “dry and weary land where there is no water” (Ps. 63:2). This poem is full of refreshing water!
- And finally, the sense of God’s anger and rejection is absent, very different from Psalm 60 where the poet said,
You have rejected us, God. . .
you have been angry–now restore us (Psalm 60:1).
So. . .if all that is absent from Psalm 65, what is present?
The most striking presence in the poem is an atmosphere of peace and confidence, because God is redeemer and creator.
As redeemer, God:
– answers prayer
– he forgives overwhelming sin
– he gives hope to all the earth
– he welcomes people into his house
– and stills the tumult of the nations.
As creator, God:
– quiets the roaring sea of chaos
– he calls forth joy at morning and evening
– he waters the land with gentle rain
– and dresses the land with grass for the livestock and grain for the people
Let’s pray this joyful psalm.
Praise awaits you, our God, in Zion;
to you our vows will be fulfilled.
O you who answer prayer,
to you all people come (vv. 1-2).
Our God, we praise you for this work as redeemer. You are the God of answered prayers, the God who receives our good works, who welcomes all people into your presence.
When we were overwhelmed by sins
you forgave our transgressions.
We are filled with the good things of your house,
and of your holy temple (vv. 3, 4b).
Our sins and the sins of the world overwhelm us. But you forgive them all. You replace our overwhelm with joy in your house, with joy as we worship you. Our sense of despair and emptiness gives way to fullness of life under your care.
You formed the mountains by your power,
having armed yourself with strength.
You stilled the roaring of the seas,
the roaring of their waves,
and the turmoil of the nations (vv 6-7).
You are the God of creation. You flexed your muscles and raised up the mountains. You rebuked the primordial sea of chaos and stilled its angry waves. You silence the turmoil of the nations, until all the earth is quiet before you.
The whole earth is filled with awe at your wonders,
where morning dawns and evening fades,
you call forth songs of joy (v. 8).
O creator God, we see in sunrise and sunset the glory in the skies you created. We rejoice in your faithfulness as you call each day into being, then let it pass with a glorious sunset.
You care for the land and water it (v. 9a).
You drench its furrows and level its ridges,
you soften it with showers and bless its crops (v. 10).
… the hills are clothed with gladness
The meadows wear flocks like a robe,
the valleys wear grain like a garment,
they shout for joy and sing (vv. 12b-13).
Each year you continue the work of creation. You water our crops and soften the soil and make grain and flowers grow again. The hills are glad under your care, the valleys shout for joy at the robe of grain you clothe them in.
And we, your people, join all creation in glad song to you, our creator and redeemer.
Amen.
I’m Daniel on the channel “Pray with Me”.
Ep.148: Beaten, Robbed, and Left for Dead. Podcast.
Ep.148: Beaten, Robbed, and Left for Dead.
Hello, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray With Me”.
In Luke 10, Jesus told a story about a man who was robbed, beaten and left half-dead. Sounds like an author’s autobiographical first novel to me. Wasn’t Jesus attacked, beaten, robbed, and left to die?
But I get ahead of myself. When a lawyer asked Jesus how he could inherit eternal life, Jesus said, “You’re a lawyer. What does the law say?”
The lawyer replied, “It says I should love God with all my heart, soul, strength and mind, and that I should love my neighbour as myself.”
Jesus said, “Exactly right. Just do it.”
Still not satisfied, the lawyer said, “OK. But who is my neighbour?”
What a perfect opportunity for Jesus to explain the text more precisely, to provide a working definition of the word “neighbor” and to clarify exactly what the Bible meant. But Jesus blew it. Instead of doing a word study on “neighbor”, he told an obscure story about a serious mugging.
In the story, robbers attacked, beat, and left a traveller half dead. Two religious leaders saw the man and carefully stepped around him.
Then a Samaritan, from a nation typically unfriendly to Jews, came by. He bandaged the man’s wounds, loaded him on his donkey, deposited him at an inn, and gave the innkeeper instructions and money to care for the man.
Jesus asked the lawyer, “Which of the three was a neighbor to the man who was mugged?”
A more astute lawyer would have replied, “I can’t answer the question, because it makes assumptions I disagree with.” But the lawyer in Jesus’ story replied, “The neighbour was the one who demonstrated mercy.”
I make three observations about Jesus’ story:
1. Ask most modern preachers about the text “Love your neighbor”, and they’ll define the original Hebrew word using biblical, literary, and cultural context. But Jesus didn’t do that. He told a story that said rather pointedly, “You don’t need to study more. You just need to do it. ”
2. There’s another way to look at the parable, where we are the victim, religious leaders are heartless bystanders, and Jesus is the Good Samaritan who saves us. Jesus’ message to the lawyer becomes his message to us: Follow me by rescuing the poor, the wounded and the robbed.
3. Another reading of the parable observes that the most important man ever who was beaten, robbed, and left-for-dead is Jesus himself. Our duty is not to ignore him like the religious leaders did, but to let go of our pride and respectability and to throw in our lot with the dying Christ. In identifying with his suffering we are saved.
Let’s pray.
Jesus, you were beaten and robbed and crucified. We choose not to walk past your cross on the other side of the road, pretending we don’t know you, ignoring your hurt and humiliation. We choose not to hide the ugliness of your death behind pretty explanations and carefully worded theology. Instead, we kneel at the cross, letting your pain wash over us and through us, receiving the gifts you give us there.
Amen.
I’m Daniel on the channel “Pray with Me”.
Ep.147: Psalm 64: Hunting the Hunters. Podcast.
Ep.147: Psalm 64: Hunting the Hunters.
Hello, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray with Me”.
Psalm 64 describes the poet’s enemies as hunters and warriors. For example:
– They sharpen their tongues like swords (v. 2).
– They aim cruel words like deadly arrows (v. 2).
– They hide in a blind and shoot at their victims (v. 4).
– Their minds and hearts are cunning as they aim at the righteous (v. 6).
Little do they know that God is also a hunter!
– He will shoot them with his arrows (v. 7).
– He will strike them down (v. 7).
– He will turn their sharpened tongues and cruel words back on them, destroying them with their own weapons (v. 8).
Let’s pray.
Our father, with the poet we say,
Hide us from the conspiracy of the wicked,
from the plots of evildoers (v. 2).
We try not to be overly dramatic, Lord, but we like that word “conspiracy”. Often we feel we are victims of conspiracy. We know we should pray, but it’s more interesting to catch up on coronavirus news. We want to make better use of our time, but play too many computer games. We want to exercise more and eat less, but we hear the ice cream and the chocolate calling our name. What is this a conspiracy that corrupts us? Are we oblivious to some malevolent influence that causes our failure?
Our father, in this business of life we reject conspiracy theories. Instead we arm ourselves against our soul’s great enemies: the world, the flesh, and the devil. With the poet in Psalm 64, we invite you, our God to hunt and destroy these enemies of our soul.
Our first enemy is the flesh. We confess that our appetites are out of control. We prefer food and comfort to work and discipline, we choose lethargy over exercise, we choose conspiracy theories over personal responsibility. When we look after our own interests, we are strong-willed and diligent. But in our service for you, Lord, we are weak-willed and complacent. Search and destroy the enemy within, strengthen our ability to make good choices and our discipline to follow through.
Our second enemy is the world. Not the physical world that you created, God, but the world of human culture and philosophy that shapes our values and feeds our desires. This world offers us money, sex, entertainment, food, shopping, travel, sports, not as good gifts from you, God, but as ends in themselves. And we use them to hide from you, to numb our pain, to avoid difficult choices, to escape reality. O God, expose the places where human culture is our enemy. Teach us to value the giver more than the gifts, to love the creator more than things created. Destroy the world’s power over us, tame all things that attract us until we love you with our whole heart, and until we love the world for you sake.
Our third enemy is the devil, who Paul says schemes against us. Shall we conclude that we fail because “the devil made me do it?” Rather, with Paul. we put on the armour of God to protect us. There is a battle that rages within us as the good spirit and the evil spirit influence our thoughts and behaviours, as we feel impulses to true love and obsessions with evil. Cleanse us from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit (2 Cor. 7:1). Help us to embrace the good and resist the evil.
Our father, we invite you who search our mind and spirit to hunt these hunters who hunt us. Strike them down in their cunning evil. Then with the poet we will:
Rejoice in you
and take refuge in you
and praise your name (v. 10).
Amen.
I’m Daniel on the channel “Pray with Me”.