It’s not hard to examine where our hearts are. Am I complaining?
Am I becoming disappointed with God?
Am I bitter or angry?
Have my needs or wants replaced God’s best interests?
Is my heart truly glorifying God through the event?
Psalm 21
1 O Lord, in
your strength the king rejoices,
and in your salvation
how greatly he exults!
2 You have given
him his heart's desire
and have not withheld the
request of his lips. Selah
3 For you meet
him with rich blessings;
you set a crown
of fine gold upon his head.
4 He asked life of
you; you gave it to him,
length of days forever and
ever.
5 His glory is
great through your salvation;
splendor and majesty you
bestow on him.
6 For you make him
most blessed forever;
you make him glad with
the joy of your presence.
7 For the king trusts
in the Lord,
and through the steadfast
love of the Most High he shall not be moved.
8 Your hand
will find out all your enemies;
your right hand will find
out those who hate you.
9 You will make them
as a blazing oven
when you appear.
The Lord will
swallow them up in his wrath,
and fire will consume
them.
10 You will
destroy their descendants from the earth,
and their offspring from
among the children of man.
11 Though they plan
evil against you,
though they devise
mischief, they will not succeed.
12 For you will put
them to flight;
you will aim at their
faces with your bows.
13 Be exalted,
O Lord, in your strength!
We will sing and praise
your power.
After meditating upon Psalm
20, where David was preparing for battle, here we find David rejoicing about
the Lord’s provision and help during the battle itself.
At the end of his battle, David rejoices in
the victory and does not forget that his strength and salvation were the work
of the Lord. He reminds himself that these were clear answers to his prayer. It
was God who blessed him and gave him the position he had. Every day of life was
a gift from God. God had provided wonderful results, but David’s foremost
blessing was the relationship he had with his God.
It was so clear for David
that his blessing was being provided by the Most High God. He was loved by the
eternal, unmovable, and faithful God, and he rejoiced in the stability this wonderful
truth gave to his life.
David had no doubts that
God was aware of the evil ones; He was not surprised by their schemes, and had
the wisdom and power to provide the victory. It’s evident that David did not
look at the evil as a personal affront, but realized that his enemies were
primarily offending God and doing evil against Him.
Are you seeing a pattern
in these verses? They were not about David and his comfort. All evil was
offending God, and it was God’s responsibility to deal with it. David knew that
he could trust Him and that God would be glorified through it.
Far too often, evil people
and evil events cause Self to capture the center of my attention. I am not
concerned that they are offending God. I am not aware that God is completely aware
and providentially dealing with them. I certainly forget that God has higher
purposes than to provide comfort and ease to my life. I certainly lose sight
that God’s ultimate goal is for His majesty to be glorified.
Men’s tendency is to
elevate ourselves very quickly to the focus of every event. It becomes about us,
while God becomes the one that has to provide for us, as if we deserve special
attention and we are the center of the event.
It’s not hard to examine
where our hearts are. Am I complaining? Am I becoming disappointed with God? Am
I bitter or angry? Have my needs or wants replaced God’s best interests? Is my
heart truly glorifying God through the event?
Dear friend, I like to
remind myself that I am always an inch away from losing sight of what my place
is and what place God should have. My lack of trust and peace very quickly exposes
that I have crossed the line of reality.
These psalms are truly a
blessing, as they again and again set us back on course.
Do you wonder, like I do,
how we can thank God in all circumstances?
1 Corinthians 10:31
31 So, whether you eat or drink,
or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God.
1 Thessalonians 5:16-18
16 Rejoice always, 17 pray without
ceasing, 18 give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of
God in Christ Jesus for you.
The answer is easy: we
must put God rather than ourselves at the center of our lives! We need to be
consumed by His will, His desires, and His goals. We must submit to Him, loving
the glory that God receives by our obedience.
David ends the psalm with
these wonderful words:
13 Be exalted,
O Lord, in your strength!
We will sing and praise
your power.
David never doubted the
power of God; he had learned that God used it for His glory and not to meet man’s
desires. May we learn to have this same frame of mind, as we purpose to live by
His grace, aware of God’s power, and motivated by our desire for His glory!
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