Showing posts with label Davidic Covenant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Davidic Covenant. Show all posts

Friday, July 18, 2014

Psalm 132:1-18


... in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.  Amen.  Through the prayers of our holy Fathers, Lord Jesus Christ our God, have mercy on us and save us.  Amen.  Glory to You, our God, Glory to You.

O Heavenly King, the Comforter, the Spirit of truth, You are everywhere and fill all things, Treasury of blessings, and Giver of life: come and abide in us, and cleanse us from every impurity, and save our souls, O Good One.

Holy God, Holy Mighty, Holy Immortal, have mercy on us (three times).

Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost, as it is now, was in the beginning, and ever shall be, world without end.  Amen.

Psalm 132:1-18[1]

A Song of Ascent.

Lord, remember David, [and] all his afflictions.  How he swore to the Lord, vowed to the Mighty of Jacob, “Surely I will not come to the tabernacle of my house, or go up to my bed.  I will not give sleep to my eyes, slumber to my eyelids, until I find a place for the Lord, a dwelling for the Mighty of Jacob.”

Lo, we heard of it at Ephrathah[2].  We found it in the fields of the wood.  We will go to His tabernacles.  We will worship at His footstool.  Arise, Lord, to Your rest; You, and the Ark of Your strength.

Let Your priests be clothed with righteousness.  Let Your saints shout for joy.  For Your servant David’s sake, turn not away the face of Your Christ.  The Lord has sworn [in] truth to David.  He will not turn from it.

“Of the fruit of your body I will seat on your throne.  If your children will keep My covenant, My testimony that I shall teach[3] them, their children shall also sit on your throne forever.”

For the Lord has chosen Zion.  He has desired [it] for His dwelling.  This [is] My rest forever.  Here will I dwell: for I have desired it.  I will abundantly bless her provision.  I will satisfy her poor with bread.  I will also clothe her priests with salvation.  Her saints shall shout aloud for joy.  There will I make the horn of David bud.  I have ordained a lamp for My Christ.  I will clothe His enemies with shame.  His crown shall flourish on Him.”[4]



[1] Psalm 89 also records the Davidic Covenant in great detail: there, in the context of defeat; here, in the context of consummation and victory.
David begins with the determination to build the Temple of Yahweh in Jerusalem, the place for the Shekinah to dwell.  However Yahweh rejected David’s vow, giving the privilege to Solomon.  David had to settle for a temporary tent (2 Samuel 7).
David is a prophet (Acts 2:30-31).  Here he looks ahead to the birth of Jesus in Bethlehem.  Yes, Solomon will be a type of the Glory of God, and the Shekinah will come to dwell in the First Temple.  However, Jesus is the true Shekinah, who will take His seat on the Ark, on the mercy seat, on Pentecost, 33 AD.
It is the great Pentecost event that calls forth the birth of The Church.  When is the kingdom borne?  When her King is seated on His throne, the Ark.  Thus the Apostles and all the believers are clothed with the Holy Ghost in fire, and begin to work miracles.  The earthly kingdom of David failed in misery in 586 BC.  Nevertheless, God’s promises stand forever, and God had not yet uttered His last Word on the matter.
Now David concludes with the salient points from God’s promise to him, and gives a more detailed explanation of it.
[2] Bethlehem, the place of fruitfulness, where Jesus was born
[3] God’s teaching is faithful; it never fails nor falters.  On the other hand, the audience is often wilfully deaf.
[4] If you have been blessed or helped by any of these meditations, please repost, share, or use any of them as you wish.  No rights are reserved.  They are designed and intended for your free participation.  They were freely received, and are freely given.  No other permission is required for their use.

Thursday, May 1, 2014

Psalm 89:1-52


... in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.  Amen.  Through the prayers of our holy Fathers, Lord Jesus Christ our God, have mercy on us and save us.  Amen.  Glory to You, our God, Glory to You.

O Heavenly King, the Comforter, the Spirit of truth, You are everywhere and fill all things, Treasury of blessings, and Giver of life: come and abide in us, and cleanse us from every impurity, and save our souls, O Good One.

Holy God, Holy Mighty, Holy Immortal, have mercy on us (three times).

Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost, as it is now, was in the beginning, and ever shall be, world without end.  Amen.

Psalm 89:1-52[1]

Maschil of Ethan the Ezrahite.

I will sing of the mercies of the Lord forever.  With my mouth I will make known Your faithfulness to all generations: for I have said, “Mercy shall be built up forever.  You shall establish Your faithfulness in the very heavens.”

I have made a covenant with My chosen.  I have sworn to David My servant.  Your seed I will establish forever, and build up Your throne to all generations.  Consider.

The heavens shall praise Your wonders, Lord.  Your faithfulness also in the congregation of the saints: for who in the heaven can be compared to the Lord?  [Who] among the sons of the mighty can be likened to the Lord?  God is greatly to be feared in the assembly of the saints, to be had in reverence of all about Him.  Lord God of hosts, Who [is] a strong Lord like You?  Your faithfulness [is] round about You?  You rule the raging of the sea.  When the waves of it arise, You still them.  You have broken Rahab in pieces, as one who is slain.  You have scattered Your enemies with Your strong arm.  The heavens [are] Yours.  The earth also [is] Yours.  The world and its fullness, You have founded them.  The north and the south, You have created them.  Tabor and Hermon shall rejoice in Your name.  You have a mighty arm.  Strong is Your hand.  High is Your right hand.  Justice and judgment [are] the dwelling of Your throne.  Mercy and truth shall go before Your face.

Blessed [is] the people[2] who know the joyful sound.  They shall walk, Lord, in the light of Your countenance.  In Your name they shall rejoice all the day.  In Your righteousness they shall be exalted: for You [are] the Glory of their strength.  In Your favor, our horn shall be exalted: for the Lord [is] our defense.  The Holy One of Israel [is] our king.

Then You spoke in a vision to Your Holy One, and said,

“I have laid help on [one who is] mighty.  I have exalted [one] chosen from the people.  I have found David My servant.  With My holy oil have I Christened him.  With whom My hand shall be established.  My arm also shall strengthen him.  The enemy shall not demand from him; Nor the son of wickedness afflict him.  I will beat down his foes before his face, and plague those who hate him.  But My faithfulness and My mercy [shall be] with him.  His horn shall be exalted in My name.  I will set his hand also in the sea, and his right hand in the rivers.  He shall cry to Me, ‘You [are] my Father, my God, and the rock of my salvation.’  Also I will make him [My] firstborn, higher than the kings of the earth.  I will keep My mercy for him forever.  My covenant shall stand fast with him.  His seed also will I make [endure] forever, and his throne as the days of heaven.  If his children forsake My law, and walk not in My judgments; if they break My statutes, and keep not My commandments; then will I visit their transgression with the rod, and their iniquity with stripes.  Nevertheless, I will not utterly take My lovingkindness from him, nor suffer My faithfulness to fail.  I will not break My covenant, nor alter the thing that is gone from My lips.  Once I have sworn by My holiness, I will not lie to David.  His seed shall endure forever, and his throne as the sun before Me.  It shall be established forever as the moon, and [as] a faithful witness in heaven.”  Consider.

But You have cast off and abhorred.  You have been offended with Your Christ.  You have made void the covenant of Your servant.  You have profaned his crown [by casting it] to the ground.  You have broken down all his hedges.  You have brought his strong holds to ruin.  All that pass by the way spoil him.  He is a reproach to his neighbors.  You have set up the right hand of his adversaries.  You have made all his enemies rejoice.  You have also turned the edge of his sword, and have not made him stand in the battle.  You have made his glory cease, and cast his throne down to the ground.  You have shortened the days of his youth.  You have covered him with shame.  Consider.

How long, Lord?  Will You hide Yourself forever?  Shall Your fury burn like fire?  Remember how short my time is.  Why have You made all men in vain?  What man [is he who] lives, and shall not see death?  Shall he deliver his soul from the hand of the grave?  Consider.

Lord, where [are] Your former lovingkindnesses, [which] You swore to David in Your truth?  Remember, Lord, the reproach of Your servants; [the reproach of] all the mighty people; wherewith Your enemies have reproached, Lord; wherewith they have reproached the footsteps of Your Christ.

Blessed [be] the Lord forever.  Amen.  Amen.[3]



[1] Whereas Psalm 88 expresses the bitterest lament; Psalm 89 delivers an outright complaint.  Not many men would dare to rebuke God, or haul Him into court for failure to perform, but Ethan does exactly that, this is the force of Psalm 89.  If we are honest in our prayers, we often feel that God has let us down, that His answers are taking longer than they need to, that we are going to die before we know God’s will.  Ethan did die, hundreds of years before the answer to his complaint was delivered: but I have no doubt that he was satisfied with God’s final answer.
Even though Ethan delivers a complaint, he does not speak rashly, he begins with an opening statement affirming Yahweh’s unbroken faithfulness.  It is this statement that lays the foundation of his complaint, which is that God has acted unfaithfully, out of character with His perfectly faithful nature.
There is a second part to Ethan’s opening address: namely, that Yahweh has made an eternal promise to David, which cannot possibly be broken.  This second part will establish the specific grounds for God’s failure to perform.  At this point, everyone in the courtroom is in complete agreement with Ethan’s well-chosen words.
Now Ethan lays out a detailed description of God’s character and nature.  This is not an abstract theological discussion of God’s aseity and ubiquity.  Nor is it an apophatic approach to God.  This is a declaration of reality associated with historic acts.  The reference to Rahab may be associated with the Exodus.  God is seen to be good and great because of the wonderful things He does, like creation, the flood, leading the Exodus, giving the law, bringing entrance to the promised land, and establishing the dynasty of David.  Jesus will touch upon these very issues as He establishes Himself as the fulfillment of this Psalm.  Particularly obvious is the stilling of the sea which was accomplished twice on Galilee.  The salient points are that God is faithful, incomparable, strong, active in rule, creator of all, just, merciful, and honest.
The people chosen by such a God are richly blessed.  This is a popular phrase to quote, yanking it out of its context of complaint.  This forms extenuating circumstances, it will explain what God’s failure has done to His people.  Ethan is building his case that “the joyful sound” is no longer heard in the land.  The Shekinah is absent, so is the king, and they are an enslaved people, dependent upon aliens in every way and dominated by them.
Now Ethan cites as evidence all the details of the Davidic Covenant, all the things that God promised to do in establishing David’s eternal dynasty.  There are those who will grasp at this covenant to establish a Divine Right of kings: but no such right exists.  Others lay claim to a national Manifest Destiny: but no such destiny exists.  The only Divine Right of kings is that given exclusively to David.  The only Manifest Destiny is that given to The Church to fill this world with the Father’s Glory by patient evangelism, not by force.  The promise to David is eternal.  It has provisions for punishment of those heirs who act sinfully.  It has provisions for the destruction of that which is sinfully built.  It has no provision whatsoever for termination.
Ethan delivers his complaint.  Yahweh, You broke Your own promise.  You terminated the Davidic Covenant.  You have not done what You said You would do.  This is an equally apt description of Western Civilization today.  “Where is the sign of [Your] coming (Matthew 24:3; 2 Peter 3:4)?”  The churches are empty, the law is in disregard, the Bible has no authority; people everywhere live in unbelief and wantonness, inventing new rules for themselves, rules that suit their own lusts.  The complaint is delivered firmly and forcefully in the accusative You.  You, God, It’s all your fault.  You have let us down, when we needed You the most.
Ethan delivers his concluding argument in two parts delivered to Yahweh, Who is both Judge and Jury in this court.  How long will this go on, Yahweh?  Is life nothing but vanity?  Is death it…?
In part two, Ethan asks, What happened to all of David’s glory?  Where did it all go?  It has seemingly evaporated before our very eyes.  Ethan prefigures Christ with “I bear in my bosom.”  Evidently, Ethan has suffered his share of verbal abuse, heartache, and possibly even beatings over this.  We must also suffer.
Even in complaint, Ethan concludes with respect, he is confronting the King of the Universe, “Blessed [be] the Lord forever.”  Somehow, Ethan knows that there is more to the story, but he is frustrated and vexed because he cannot see it: his forefathers were able to see the Glory of God plainly for hundreds of years, and now it is gone.  Ethan cannot understand what is going on, but he does understand with Whom he speaks.  We don’t need to understand God, to know Him.  We must know Him (not about Him), to begin to understand Him.
[2] Note that Yahweh chooses His people (Romans 8:33); whereas idolaters choose and manufacture their idols from chunks of metal, from clay, from rocks, from sticks, and from thin air.  The choice is not up to us.  We may only chose God because He has already chosen us.  What has God chosen for redemption?  The whole human race.  Why are all not redeemed?  Because some simply refuse the gift of God’s eternal love.
[3] If you have been blessed or helped by any of these meditations in Psalms, please repost, share, or use any of them as you wish.
These meditations are not controlled by Creative Commons or other licenses, such as: copyright, CC, BY, SA, NC, or ND.  They are designed and intended for your free participation.  They were freely received, and are freely given.  No other permission is required for their use.

Sunday, March 16, 2014

Psalm 21:1-13


... in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.  Amen.  Through the prayers of our holy Fathers, Lord Jesus Christ our God, have mercy on us and save us.  Amen.  Glory to You, our God, Glory to You.

O Heavenly King, the Comforter, the Spirit of truth, You are everywhere and fill all things, Treasury of blessings, and Giver of life: come and abide in us, and cleanse us from every impurity, and save our souls, O Good One.

Holy God, Holy Mighty, Holy Immortal, have mercy on us (three times).

Psalm 21:1-13[1]

To the Chief Musician, A Psalm of David.

The king shall joy in Your strength, Lord.  In Your salvation how greatly shall he rejoice!  You have given him his heart’s desire, and have not withheld the request of his lips.  Consider: for You met him with the blessings of goodness.  You set a crown of pure gold on his head.  He asked life of You, You gave him, length of days forever and ever.  His glory [is] great in Your salvation.  Honor and majesty, You have laid on him: for You have made him most blessed forever.  You have made him exceeding glad with Your countenance: for the king trusts in the Lord, Through the mercy of the Most High he shall not be moved.

Your hand shall find out all Your enemies.  Your right hand shall find out those who hate You.  You shall make them as a fiery oven in the time of Your anger.  The Lord shall swallow them up in His fury.  Fire shall devour them.

Their fruit[2] You shall destroy from the earth, and their seed[3] from among the children of men: for they intended evil against You.  They imagined a mischievous device, [which] they are not able [to perform].  Therefore You shall make them turn their back,[4] You shall make ready [Your arrows] on Your strings against their face.

Be exalted, Lord, in Your own strength.  We will sing and praise Your power.

________

If you have been blessed or helped by any of these meditations in Psalms, please repost or share all of them.



[1] We have called this publicly sung Psalm, a Psalm for Palm Sunday, because it reminds is of Jesus’ Triumphal Entry as the king of Israel, and because it immediately precedes the Psalms of Crucifixion (22), Death (23), and Resurrection in Glory (24).  David rejoices in the Davidic Covenant, which guarantees to him and eternal King and kingdom.  This king is Jesus.  The promises to David are worthy of his trust because the mercies of Most High Yahweh are immovable.  David’s glory is the gift from God’s Glory.
God’s relationship with those who hate Him is entirely different: they will be found out and devoured in eternal fire.  This eternal fire is reserved for the Devil and his evil angels.  However, those who persist in attaching their lives to demons will share their fate, a fate that God never intended for them.
The wicked and their fruit must be separated from the lovers of God.  The fine dividing line is not between the doers of good, and the doers of evil; but, between those who hate, and those who love God.  The wicked are not able to carry out their nefarious plot.  While Jesus is making His pre-coronation entry procession, they are scheming about ways to murder Him.  Their plot is foiled because death is not strong enough to contain Him.  He raises from the dead, and takes His seat on David’s throne (Acts 2:30-31).
For this very reason, for the fulfilment of the Davidic Covenant, we celebrate Yahweh’s exaltation; we praise and sing His strength and power.
[2] Not their children, angels do not have children: the wicked plots they fail to hatch through the manipulation of weak men, are the fruit involved here.
[3] Those who are willingly seduced by demons.
[4] They shall turn and run from the face of God.