The Morning Plea for Mercy - Psalm 5:1-8
Notes
Transcript
Psalm 5
The Morning Plea for Mercy
2019-06-09
Call to God for help with your concerns for the day
In the town of Ashland, in southern Oregon, there is a set of water fountains just outside of Lithia Park. If
you’re ever there on a hot summer day, I’d encourage you to pay a visit. But not to drink. I’d encourage you to
stand nearby and watch. Watch as unsuspecting tourists go to the fountains and drink. Watch as the water
touches their lips, and see the look of surprise and disgust as they realize the water tastes disgusting. The hope
for refreshment is quickly curbed.
Scripture Passage: Psalm 5:1-12
We too often turn to the wrong places for refreshment. In our passage of study this morning, we see David
setting out a wonderful example of looking to the right place for refreshment, encouragement, and direction. He
looks to the Lord. Call to God for help with your concerns for the day.
Calling, Preparing, and Watching (vv.1-3)
1. vv.1-2 “Give ear to my words, O LORD…consider…give attention…” 2. v.3 “O LORD, in the morning you hear my voice; in the morning I prepare a sacrifice for you and watch.” David was intentional and methodical in his approach to prayer. To prepare an animal sacrifice required
order, handling the animal and presenting it a certain way. Just read Leviticus 1. David approached his
offering of prayer with the same intentionality.
1. How does the saying go, “To fail to prepare is to prepare to…”? So let’s just stop here and ask the
question - are you failing at prayer? I don’t mean are you not praying like you want to pray. I think
every true believer would say they’re not where they would like to be in their prayer life. But are you
failing at prayer? Do days go by where you are prayer-less, except for a quick rote prayer before a
meal? When hard news comes or difficulties arise, is your response to call to God, or to turn into
yourself? I think we’d be greatly aided to do as David does, and prepare our prayer.
2. David doesn’t only prepare his prayer, but he also watches. This means that after his prayer has been
lifted up, he waits and watches and looks for how God will answer the prayer. I think one of the reasons
we fail to prepare in prayer is because we fail to watch for the answers to prayer. When we fail to watch
for God to answer, we fail to recognize God’s working, and so are discouraged in prayer.
Transition: As David sets out in his morning prayer, he not only calls to God, but he also remembers the God
to which he prays. Coming into the presence of God he is overwhelmed by the holiness and perfection of God.
Remembering (vv.4-6)
1. v.4 “For you are not a God who delights in wickedness…” - As we approach God in prayer, isn’t it right that
we would recognize and meditate on the holiness of God? The more I read through and meditated on this
psalm, the more I became convinced that David didn’t have his enemies directly in view in vv.4-6. This isn’t
a statement about his enemies (he gets to that in vv.9-10), but a statement about his God and the vast
difference between God’s holiness and man’s wickedness.
1. Notice David’s increasing awareness of God’s holiness and God’s increasing response to sin. From not
delighting to not dwelling to not standing to hating to destroying to abhorring.
1. Do you think you’d be helped by beginning your day considering the holiness of God? I think too
often we have a less severe estimation of the sinfulness of sin because we have a lower estimation
of the holiness of God. It’s only when we’ve handled the perfect standard that we are no longer
amused by imitations.
Bowing and Beseeching (vv.7-8)
1. v.7 “But I, through the abundance of your steadfast love, will enter your house.” - Having considered the
holiness of God, David realizes there’s a problem. God is holy, and David is not. How can he commune
with God? Only through the abundance of God’s steadfast love.
1. Luke 18:9-14 The parable Jesus told about the Pharisee and the tax collector.
2. Exodus 34:6–7 “The Lord passed before him and proclaimed, ‘The Lord, the Lord, a God merciful and
gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness, keeping steadfast love for
thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, but who will by no means clear the guilty,
visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children and the children’s children, to the third and the fourth
generation.’”
3. Psalm 136 God’s work in all of history has been the expression of his steadfast love.
4. David would enter into the presence of the Lord, into the house and holy temple, the dwelling place of
God, through the steadfast love of God. Interestingly, there was no actual physical temple when David
wrote this. Hebrews 9:11-15 Christ entered into the holy place to offer his blood for our atonement, so
that we may receive the promised eternal inheritance.
2. v.8 “Lead me, O LORD, in your righteousness because of my enemies; make your way straight before me.”
- Here we get to the first real petition in this psalm. David’s request is that God would lead him in
righteousness, that the right path would be laid out before him, smooth and level to walk on.
Transition: David’s petition for help because of his enemies then brings him to pray specifically concerning his
enemies.
Proclaiming (vv.9-10)
1. v.9 “For there is no truth in their mouth; their inmost self is destruction; their throat is an open grave; they
flatter with their tongue.” - This is a description of who they are and what they do. Death, destruction, and
deceit.
1. flatter - they speak smooth words, slippery words
2. Davids’ enemies, instead of calling out to God with their mouths, are sinning against God with their
mouths.
2. v.10 “Make them bear their guilt, O God; let them fall by their own counsels; because of the abundance of
their transgressions cast them out, for they have rebelled against you.”
1. Certainly they were David’s enemies, but David isn’t seeking vengeance. David recognizes that they
have rebelled against God (v.10), so he prays that God’s righteous judgment would come down.
2. Andrew Bonar wrote, “not in any spirit of revenge; not from want of tender love to souls, but from intense
earnestness of concern for the glory of his God. We consider this explanation to be the real key that
opens all the difficult passages in this book, where curses seem to be called for on the head of the
ungodly.” This, then, is David proclaiming what will come of his enemies, who are his enemies because
they are first and foremost God’s enemies. They have set themselves in rebellion against God, so they
can only expect the judgment of God.
Transition: David then ends this psalm with a glad gospel reminder. God’s enemies can expect judgement, but
those who seek refuge in God can expect blessing.
Rejoicing (vv.11-12)
1. v.11 “But let all who take refuge in you rejoice; let them ever sing for joy, and spread your protection over
them, that those who love your name may exult in you.” - Here is the difference. The enemies of God are
obstinate and rebellious. But David, and those like him, have taken refuge in God. They have traded
rebellion against God for refuge in God.
1. David’s prayer is that those who love God’s name may exult in him. To love God’s name is to love God,
to love his ways and his works. This is David’s morning plea, that in God’s steadfast love he would be
able to walk under the protection of God, in love for God, and exultation in God.
2. v.12 “For you bless the righteous, O LORD; you cover him with favor as with a shield.” - David knows the
faithfulness and goodness of God, that he blesses the righteous. And the recognition of God’s favor serves
as a shield of protection for all those who delight in God.
1. This shield was a large, standing shield that would give defense against whatever the enemy would
assault with.
2. Isn’t this a great way to go out into your day, protected with the shield of God’s favor? This is yours!
Teenagers, think about when you are able to drive, and you’re given the keys for the day. Favor! Would
you trade the car keys for a tricycle? No! To do so would be to give up something so much better for
something so inferior. That’s the way God’s favor works.
1. 1 John 2:15 “Do not love the world or the things in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of
the Father is not in him.”
Conclusion: Church, let us cultivate in our lives this morning plea to God for mercy. Lay your concerns and needs
before him at the very outset of your day. Prepare the morning sacrifice, and watch how God will answer.
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Table Talk
June 9, 2019
GOD’S TRUTH
Call to God for help with your
concerns for the day
Family Discussion
1. Have you ever received something you’ve
been really excited about? What was it?
What made you so excited about it?
2. Do you know what the word “inferior”
means? Would you have considered
trading that item you were so excited
about for an item that was inferior?
3. Read Psalm 5:12. David says the
righteous are covered with favor as with
a shield.
4. What are some of the ways God has
shown favor to you in the last 7 days?
Share a few of these ways around the
table.
5. What does the apostle paul say about the
shield of faith? What does a shield do?
6. How does recognizing the favor of God
act as a shield against the devil’s
flaming darts?
Key Verse
“O Lord, in the morning you hear my
voice; in the morning I prepare a
sacrifice for you and watch.”
Psalm 5:3 ESV
TABLE READING
Lead your kids into God’s
Word...
3. Psalm 5:12
5. Ephesians 6:16
for the older readers to study further, i’d
recommend reading thomas chalmers’
writing titled, “the expulsive power of a
new affection”. it can be found online for
free.
Scripture Memory: Psalm 1:3-4
“And these words that I command you today shall be on your heart. You
shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when
you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down,
and when you rise. You shall bind them as a sign on your hand, and they
shall be as frontlets between your eyes. You shall write them on the
doorposts of your house and on your gates.” - Deuteronomy 6:6-9 (ESV)