This Psalm is clearly written in some relation to the previous.
v1-2: Vindicate me and defend my cause
v3-4: Send out Your light and Your truth
v5: Why are you cast down, O my soul?
Vindicate me and defend my cause
It seems to carry on from the previous Psalm, in asking God to uphold the writer against the deceitful and unjust man. He confirms God as his refuge, and wonders why he is mourning under the oppression of his enemy.
Send out Your light and Your truth
The second section is a call to God to establish His kingdom. The author understands that God's glory will be manifest someday - and on that day the wrongs will be made right, and his suffering end - and that his suffering will only truly end when God's kingdom has been established. This is significant for us!
It tells us that in the same way, we look forward to Jesus' second coming as that is the establishment of His kingdom and the end of our present sufferings. It is the hope we hold to and eagerly wait for.
Our hope is in God's light and God's truth, and nothing less.
Why are you cast down, O my soul?
The repetition of these lines seem to make this a rhetorical question (did they have rhetoric back in OT days?) Clearly, as our hope is in God's light and God's truth, there is no reason - and we shall hope in God, for we shall again praise Him, our salvation and our God.
v1-2: Vindicate me and defend my cause
v3-4: Send out Your light and Your truth
v5: Why are you cast down, O my soul?
Vindicate me and defend my cause
It seems to carry on from the previous Psalm, in asking God to uphold the writer against the deceitful and unjust man. He confirms God as his refuge, and wonders why he is mourning under the oppression of his enemy.
Send out Your light and Your truth
The second section is a call to God to establish His kingdom. The author understands that God's glory will be manifest someday - and on that day the wrongs will be made right, and his suffering end - and that his suffering will only truly end when God's kingdom has been established. This is significant for us!
It tells us that in the same way, we look forward to Jesus' second coming as that is the establishment of His kingdom and the end of our present sufferings. It is the hope we hold to and eagerly wait for.
Our hope is in God's light and God's truth, and nothing less.
Why are you cast down, O my soul?
The repetition of these lines seem to make this a rhetorical question (did they have rhetoric back in OT days?) Clearly, as our hope is in God's light and God's truth, there is no reason - and we shall hope in God, for we shall again praise Him, our salvation and our God.
Comments
Post a Comment