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Good morning and welcome to Dishman Baptist Church.
Please take your Bibles and open them with me to Psalm 138, Psalm 138.
Each year since I have been here we have taken the four weeks preceding Christmas and observed the Advent.
We’ve taken time to look at different aspects of Hope, Peace, Joy and Love.
But this year I’ve come to believe that something is missing in our advent celebration.
I observed last week that really what the Advent season reveals in each of its facets is the underlying current of God’s faithfulness to us as His children.
But what about our faith in Him?
Does Advent not also point to the faith - that admittedly is a gift of God given to believers - that each of us express in God.
That this story is true.
That it has impacted our lives and that we have been profoundly changed by it.
This morning we will continue our view of Advent through the lens of the Psalms with a look at one of David’s thanksgiving Psalms.
Faith is not normally included as one of the Advent readings but it should be.
We would not know hope unless we first had faith in a God who keeps His word.
We would not know peace unless we first had faith that God has provided a way for forgiveness to take place and that we are kept secure in His hand until the day we stand before Him.
We would not know joy unless we first had faith that the condemnation we once lived under has been fully removed from us.
Puritan John Flavel expressed this thought this way
300 Quotations for Preachers from the Puritans (All Depends on Faith)
All other graces, like birds in the nest, depend upon what faith brings in to them; take away faith, and all the graces languish and die: joy, peace, hope, patience, and all the rest, depend upon faith.JOHN FLAVEL
Without faith even the miraculous story of the Christ child born of a virgin in a little backwater suburb of Jerusalem would seem so far fetched that we would rightly be wary of following any system built on such a tale.
What we will find as we examine this Psalm though is that our faith is not some vacuous emotion that is built on whispy tales of maybe and might have.
Instead our faith is built of the sure foundation of a God who has acted in the past and continues to act on behalf of His people.
What we will find is not only a Psalm of thanksgiving for the many bounties of God but also a testimony to three critical aspects of faith in our lives - faith rewarded, faith reported and, the one yet to come, is faith ultimately revealed.
Faith Rewarded
David opens this Psalm with exuberant thankfulness to God.
God has redeemed David from some challenging situation - which one of the many that he faced during his life and reign as king is unknown.
David holds nothing back.
He confesses that He is thankful and worships God with abandon that includes his whole person.
He thanks God with all his heart.
From the very seat of his emotions David exalts the Lord.
Every fiber of his being is turned towards God in praise and this compels him allow this worship to spill over.
He lifts his voice in song of praise before the heavenly beings.
Other translations render this phrase as ‘gods’ - this could be a reference to the spiritual realm or to the kings of surrounding nations.
In Psalm 82:6 the Psalmist refers to the children of Israel as gods
The challenge and the solution are both in the close ancient identification of nations with the deities they worshipped.
In this case the word elohim could refer to the gods of the surrounding nations of to the kings of those nations - but the point is that David unabashedly raises his voice in praise of God presuming His supremacy over all usurpers whether human or spiritual.
David’s confession of God’s faithfulness by necessity rejects the claims that the faithfulness of those other deities is valid as well.
As we asserted last week - there can be only one and that is the Lord.
Not only is he emotionally invested in worship, not only is his voice lifted in worship but his body is subjected in worship as he bows towards the holy temple.
Now if this is a Psalm of David and the temple were not built until the time of Solomon how is that David claims to be bent towards the Temple?
What makes the most sense is that he is referring to the tabernacle as God’s temple and dwelling place amongst His people.
David bows to give thanks to God and praise Him for an exhibition of His constant love and truth.
The word for love here is hesed - a testimony to the patient, consistent love of God for His chosen people.
David is testifying to and thanking God for His consistent love for His people and His faithful work on their behalf.
He also thanks God for His truth - this is probably better translated as faithfulness and speaks to God’s constancy, His steadfastness or faithfulness towards His people.
What is striking is that David doesn’t recount the exact event that he is praising God for but rather the qualities of God that remain the same regardless of circumstances.
This comes from the very nature of God.
A nature that is bound up in both His name and His promise.
A literal rendering of the end of verse 2 says “You have magnified Your Word above all Your name.”
This has caused all manner of angst among commentators and efforts to try and modify the text.
How could anything be elevated above the name of God is the question that is posed - and it is a justified concern.
Except that this is not what David is doing here.
There is no separation between the name of God and the execution or the truth of His Word or promise.
The writer of Hebrews makes this clear
The validity of God’s promise was wrapped up in His name.
The truth of His words was validated by His name.
The words of God cannot be separated from or elevated above the holiness of His name.
David having called upon the Lord received an answer.
He called on the Lord out of faith and is rewarded by an answer.
What a great promise this is - even when we have to wait for it.
The reformer John Calvin said this
300 Quotations for Preachers from the Reformation (God’s Promises Require Faith)
There is no place for faith if we expect God to fulfill immediately what he promises.
It is hence the trial of faith to acquiesce in God’s word, when its accomplishment does in no way appear.JOHN CALVIN
We can have faith, based on the constant love and faithfulness of God, that when we call on Him we will have an answer.
Often the challenge is that we do not ask - either because we think God wont answer, that He hasn’t answered or that we are afraid of what His answer will be.
But the prayer offered in faith says “not my will but thine be done”.
It is the prayer offered in faith grounded in the constant love of God and His faithful character, the sure knowledge of His desire for His glory and our good that enables a response of thankfulness.
300 Quotations for Preachers (Faith Is to Prayer as Feather Is to Arrow)
Faith is to prayer what the feather is to the arrow: without it prayer will not hit the mark.J. C. RYLE
The boy’s bow and the fletchings being messed up - the arrow doesn’t fly straight and true.
300 Quotations for Preachers from the Reformation (Prayer the Chief Exercise of Faith and Hope)
To call upon God is the chief exercise of faith and hope; and it is in this way that we obtain from God every blessing.JOHN CALVIN
But I must offer a caution here - David writes this song of thanksgiving to God in response to a positive resolution to the prayers he has been offering.
We are often in the same mindset - God answers a petition and we are effusive in our thanksgiving for all that He has done.
The challenge for us is can we be just as thankful when the answer is not what we were expecting?
Sovereign Grace music has a song that poses these questions
Shall I take from Your hand Your blessings, Yet not welcome any pain?
Shall I thank You for days of sunshine yet grumble in days of rain (or snow)?
Shall I love You in times of plenty Then leave You in days of drought?
Shall I trust when I reap a harvest but when winter winds blow then doubt?
The challenge for us as Christians in these days that we live in - these days that seem so bereft of Godliness and righteousness in our world - is to remember that our faith is rewarded by every answer to prayer that God gives us - whether it is an answer that meets our satisfaction or not.
We are to, as David does, express thankfulness not for His answer but for His constant love and faithfulness and the sure knowledge that even when the answer doesn’t fit our particular definition of good that He is working through His constant love and faithfulness to us for His glory and for our good.
It is to this truth that our faith is to testify or report.
Faith Reported
David demonstrates for us here the value of personal testimony.
Having lifted his heart in thanksgiving, having extolled the Lord by singing His praises and bowing his very body in submission and worship of God, David’s testimony is evident to the nations and it has an effect.
He writes that all the kings on earth will give you thanks Lord when they hear what you have promised.
One supposition regarding this Psalm is that it was written in response to the promise of the Lord to David in 2 Samuel 7:9
If that is the case it is a bit difficult for me to understand how the kings of the nations around David would be thanking God for making David a perpetual king and one whose name is among the greatest on earth.
But this is the testimony that David gives us - that when they hear the promises that the Lord has made that they will give thanks as well.
They have been witness to David’s praise and thankfulness exhibited in the early verses of this Psalm and now lift their own verses in response to what God has done.
We encourage biblical evangelism here as we recognize that it is the Word of God that does the work of God in people’s lives through the Holy Spirit.
But I think we sometimes may err too far on the side of removing ourselves from the equation.
What I mean is this - Don’t underestimate the value of your story.
I’m sure a couple of you are tuning me out right now or that I’m ruffling some feathers by saying this.
Let me clarify what I’m not saying - I’m not saying that your story is more valuable than the Word of God in the conversion of sinners.
What I am saying is that just as David testifies to the constant love of God and His faithfulness to David through His promises - through the very life of David, through David’s story and the proofs that are offered in his life to the faithfulness of God - we should be willing to share and testify to how God has worked and exhibited His faithful love to us and in us.
There is not truth to the old canard “Preach the Gospel always, if necessary use words” - #NotStFrancisAssisi.
The Word of God tells us a completely different story.
We must speak the truth, we must share the Gospel using words and a part of that sharing is demonstrating what God has done in your life.
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