Tag: Prayer
Ep.442: Psalm 9: Big Problems, Small God?
Hello, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray With Me”.
Do you find God doesn’t answer when you pray? Doesn’t reward you when you work hard? Leaves you lonely when you look for community?
Psalm 9 helps us change gears from “Oh, woe is me” to “Praise God who knows and cares.”
The psalm begins:
I will give thanks to you, Lord, with all my heart.
I will sing praises to your name, O Most High (v 1-2).
Great beginning. Cue some worship music, sing a happy hymn, tell God you’re thankful.
The psalm continues:
You have rebuked the nations and destroyed the wicked,
blotting out their name forever.
Endless ruin has overtaken my enemies,
even the memory of them has perished (v 5-6).
God watches over the earth and the nations, noticing the evil and the good. He will crush your enemies forever.
What enemies, you ask? The psalmist’s enemies were kings and nations that provoked war. But my war is a battle for my mind and heart. God promises to heal the diseases that infect my body, the moods that afflict my mind, the disturbances that affect my relationships, the demons that drive me insane. I look forward to the day when endless ruin will overtake these enemies, when even the memory of them perishes.
The psalm continues:
The Lord is a refuge for the oppressed,
a stronghold in times of trouble.
Those who know your name trust in you.
You never forsake those who seek you (v 9-10).
If I brood on my loneliness, vulnerability, and helplessness, I get depressed. The psalmist offers a more helpful picture of my life: God is my refuge and stronghold. He is a castle I can run to, lifting the drawbridge and dropping the metal gate to keep out my enemies.
God guards the walls of my life and shoots arrows at my enemies.
Let’s pray.
O father, with the psalmist we pray:
Arise, Lord, don’t let mortals triumph.
Judge the nations.
Strike them with terror,
let them know their mortality (v 19-20).
Teach us to let go of our fears for the present and future, to stop obsessing on our spiritual experience. Teach us to worship you and thank you, when we feel you are present and when we feel you are absent.
You are God, God of the world.
You are the judge of nations.
You are eternal, everlasting.
We come to you, like serfs running to a castle of refuge, like pilgrims seeking the safety of a hostel, like children to a father’s loving embrace.
You, God, will never forget the needy;
the hope of the afflicted will not perish (v 18).
We surf an internet of lies and deceit. We feel darkness that calls us to despair. We see violence that defies hope. Yet, we believe you see, we know you care. In your time you will act on our behalf, establishing goodness and justice.
We choose to be glad and rejoice in you.
We sing the praises of your name, O most high. (v 2).
Amen
I’m Daniel, on the channel “Pray with Me”.
YouTube channel: Pray with Me – YouTube
Ep.441: Psalm 8: Human? Podcast.
Ep.441: Psalm 8: Human?
Hello, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray With Me”.
Psalm 8 asks God,
What are humans that you notice them,
mortals that you care for them? (v 4).
A good question. What are humans? Just another animal, or are we different?
Anthropologists used to define us as animals with language. But dolphins and bonobo apes have language too. We used to be the animal that used tools, but now we know that crows, sea otters, orangutans, and elephants use tools too. We used to be the animal with culture, but Jane Goodall observed chimpanzees learning and passing knowledge to others.
So what does make us different?
Not body size. Ostriches, crocodiles, and elephants are bigger than us. We have better science than the other animals, but dark matter and quantum entanglement expose the limits of our understanding. Our brains do more complex thinking and long term planning than our animal friends, but that hasn’t stopped us from waging war and destroying the earth.
Listen to the psalmist’s view of humans. He says,
You made them a little lower than God,
you crowned them with glory and honor,
you made them stewards of the earth (v 5-6).
We are unique because God created us in his image, asking us to care for the world and the animals, and for each other.
It’s not being at the top of the food chain that makes us special. It’s that we’re on assignment to care for the food chain and the earth.
Let’s pray.
O God, how majestic is your name in all the earth (v 1).
You made the universe, with trillions of stars.
And in the universe you hid a small sunny star that heats a wee green planet where creatures made of dust live out their lives.
Amazingly, you call yourself creator and father to these dusty creatures, shepherding our lives, teaching us to care for the world you gave us.
We do not understand life, but we live it in the vastness of the universe, and in the seasons of our little planet, and on sabbath days of rest we take to honor you.
O God, how majestic is your name in all the earth.
Amen
I’m Daniel, on the channel “Pray with Me”.
YouTube channel: Pray with Me – YouTube
Ep.440: Psalm 7: Justice. Podcast.
Ep.440: Psalm 7: Justice.
Ep. 440. Psalm 7. Justice.
Hello, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray With Me”.
Psalm 7 pictures justice as a hole and a boomerang. It says,
Whoever digs a hole
falls into it.
The trouble they cause recoils on them,
their violence comes down on their own heads (v. 15-16).
If you throw evil into the wide world, it will boomerang back on you. If you dig a hole, you fall in. This is not legal justice where you lawyer up and launch a lawsuit. You reap what you sow, you get caught in the trap you lay.
You live a violent life? Expect violence to find you.
How did the psalmist arrive at this picture of justice? And what does God have to do with it?
Start at the beginning of the psalm. Danger threatens the psalmist, so he prays,
O Lord, I take refuge in you;
save me from all who pursue me,
or they will tear me apart like a lion,
and rip me to pieces with no one to rescue me (v 1-2).
Then the psalmist introduces his take on justice.
O Lord, if there is guilt on my hands–
if I have repaid friends with evil,
or enemies by stealing from them,
then let my enemy . . . trample my life to the ground (v 3-5).
I’m willing to get what I deserve, he says. Scrutinize my life, judge my actions. They prove me innocent! No grounds for a lawsuit against me. I plead not guilty.
Then the psalmist invites God to investigate his enemies. They are pregnant with evil, they conceive trouble, and give birth to disillusionment (v 14). They are the ones digging pits to trap him, planning violence against him.
So the psalmist prays:
Vindicate me, Lord, according to my righteousness.
Stop the violence of the wicked
and make the righteous secure (v. 9).
Let’s pray.
O father, Jesus teaches us to confess our sins, but this psalm teaches us to stand on our righteousness.
You are the God who probes minds and hearts (v 9). Evaluate our lives and our behavior.
We work for your kingdom on earth.
We shape our lives by your laws.
We measure our actions by your word.
We live at peace.
Now turn your inquiry on our enemies. Those who bomb the earth, who pervert with bribes, whose rage ruins relationships, who hoard your good gifts. Those who make laws to shield the rich and exploit the poor.
O God, may they reap what they sow. May they tumble into the pits they dig. May they gather a harvest of the violence they inflict on others. Let the wealth they have stolen be stolen from them.
Bring justice on earth. The justice of consequences, and the justice of law.
With the psalmist we say,
We give you thanks because of your righteousness,
We sing praises to your name, O Most High (v. 17).
Amen
I’m Daniel, on the channel “Pray with Me”.
YouTube channel: Pray with Me – YouTube
Ep.439: Psalm 6: Terrified. Podcast.
Ep.439: Psalm 6: Terrified.
Hello, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray With Me”.
Terrified. That’s how the psalmist feels in Psalm 6. God terrifies him. His sickness terrifies him. The thought of dying terrifies him. So how does he pray through his fears?
Feeling God’s anger, he prays:
Don’t rebuke me when you’re angry,
Don’t discipline me when you’re in a rage (v 1).
Sick in body and mind, the psalmist weeps through the night and prays:
My bones are in agony,
my soul in deep anguish.
I am worn out from groaning.
All night I flood my bed with weeping,
and drench my couch with tears (v 2-6).
Terrified of death, the psalmist points out that if he dies he won’t be much use to God:
The dead don’t proclaim your name,
Who praises you from the grave? (v. 5).
Thomas Hobbes described life outside of society as a life of “continual fear and danger of violent death,” a life “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short” (Leviathan, i. xiii. 9).
That’s how the author of Psalm 6 felt about his life.
Hobbe’s solution was for humans to live in society, to have a social contract for a civilized government that would provide a secure life.
The psalmist is not so philosophical. He takes his “solitary, poor, short” life to God.
Feeling God’s anger, he asks for mercy instead of wrath.
Feeling God has sent sickness, he prays for healing.
Feeling there is no end to trouble, he pleads with God, “How long, O Lord, how long?”
Let’s pray.
O Father, with the psalmist, we pray,
You have heard my weeping.
You have heard my cry for mercy.
You accept my prayer.
All my enemies will be overwhelmed,
They will turn back suddenly and be put to shame (v. 8-10).
You have replaced our terror with your presence.
We come to you, and discover that you are not angry.
We ask for healing, and we feel your love.
We bring desperate and confused minds to you, and you quiet us.
We bring ruined and despairing lives to you asking, “How long, O Lord, how long?” and you answer that you are preparing a future and a hope for us.
So we move from terror to confidence, from despair to hope, from doubt to faith.
You have heard our prayer, and that is enough.
Amen.
I’m Daniel, on the channel “Pray with Me”.
YouTube channel: Pray with Me – YouTube
Ep.438: Psalm 5: Wakeup Prayer. Podcast.
Ep.438: Psalm 5: Wakeup Prayer.
Hello, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray With Me”.
What gets you going in the morning?
Psalm 5 is a prayer with four movements to wake us up and get the day started.
The first movement directs our attention to God:
Listen to my words, Lord,
consider my lament.
Hear my cry for help,
my king and my God,
for to you I pray (v 1-2).
The psalmists tells God to listen. Is he trying to get God’s attention? Or . . . maybe he’s preparing himself to listen to God. Opening your heart to God, speaking your mind, and telling him your troubles are the first steps in morning prayer.
The next movement I see in Psalm 5 is confidence that God does listen. He may be silent and invisible, but the psalmist says,
In the morning, Lord, you hear my voice,
in the morning I lay my requests before you
and wait expectantly (v 3).
People have many reasons for praying.
Some pray to express themselves.
Some to impress others.
For some, it’s a habit; others pray out of need.
But the psalmist prays because he knows someone is listening. My king and my God, he says, you hear me, and I wait expectantly for your answer. That’s a better way to start the day than surfing the net, checking the news, or lamenting yesterday’s hockey scores.
The third movement in Psalm 5 is character development. The psalmist asks, “What kind of person are you becoming? Will you make progress today?”
First, he describes failed character development. God is not pleased with wickedness, he does not welcome evil, he does not encourage arrogance, he hates wrongdoing, destroys liars, and detests the bloodthirsty and deceitful. (v 4-6).
Some list! God knows the internet. He’s read the blogs and seen the videos filled with arrogance, wrongdoing, lies, and violence. God is displeased with these creators. Don’t let them be your mentors or your motivation for springing out of bed.
The psalm continues with a list of character traits God approves:
I, by your great love,
come into your house;
in reverence I bow down
toward your holy temple.
Lead me in your righteousness
because of my enemies,
Make your way straight before me (v 7-8).
God’s website gives life hacks for reverence, holiness, righteousness, and straight paths that can start our morning and shape our day.
Let’s pray.
O Lord, with the psalmist I pray,
Listen to what I say,
Hear my cry for help (v 1-2).
And somehow I find confidence that you do listen.
In the morning you hear my voice.
In the morning I lay my requests before you and wait expectantly (v 3).
I survey my world filled with people who are wicked, arrogant, unbelieving, and bloodthirsty. Help me not to learn their tricks or follow their example.
I survey the world you build in and around me . . . a place of holiness, reverence, faithfulness, and love.
Help me to see the house you are building, to become the kind of person who can live there. Take my crooked paths and make them straight.
Amen.
I’m Daniel, on the channel “Pray with Me”.
YouTube channel: Pray with Me – YouTube