“Not
to us, O Lord, not to us, but to your name give glory, for the sake
of your steadfast love and your faithfulness! You who fear the Lord,
trust in the Lord! He is their help and their shield.” -Psalm 115:
1, 11 (ESV) [Read Psalm 115]
Psalms
115-118 were sung by Jews after the Passover Meal. Psalm 115 may
well have been the psalm sung by Jesus and his disciples after they
finished the meal which we know as “The Last Supper” (see Mark
14:26). Psalm 115 is a magnificent psalm of praise that can be
outlined as follows:
-
God Reigns (vv. 1-3)
-
God Lives (vv. 4-8)
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God Gives (vv. 9-15)
-
God Deserves Our Praise (vv. 16-18)
All
people who know the Lord can exult and give praise. “Alleluia!
For the Lord God omnipotent reigns!” (Revelation 19:6, NKJV). He
reigns as sovereign God of the universe. Because of the Lord’s
steadfast love and faithfulness and his ever-continuous reign, we who
fear—stand in awe—of Him praise and magnify Him.
God
Almighty is above any idol and worthy of worship. Scholars remind us
that after the Babylonian captivity, the Israelites no longer went
after idols. In the seventy-year exile there, they saw firsthand the
fallacy of idol worship. As we sometimes say, that “cured” then
of their sin of going after idols. The poetic device of
anthromorphism—of giving human characteristics to things not
human—was used to describe the fallacy of idols. They have mouths
but do not speak. They have eyes but do not see. They have ears but
do not hear. They have noses but do not smell; hands but have no
power to help; feet but the idols could not walk; they had to be
carried from place to place. The sad thought is that we become like
what we worship. Those who worship idols become insensate like them.
By contrast, worshiping our God who lives enables us to have ears
that hear his Word, eyes that see needs we can fill in Jesus’ name,
hands that are eager to do His work. Even our worship rises as
“sweet incense” and our gifts “as a fragrant offering, a
sacrifice acceptable and pleasing to God” (Philippians 4:18).
Trust
is the theme of the third section (vv. 9-15) of Psalm 115. As we
trust in him, His blessings are poured out upon us. Even in the hard
times, we grow stronger because of our dependence upon Him and our
unfailing trust in Him. Because He is the maker of heaven and earth,
we should worship Him—not His creation—and certainly not what we
think we have “created” for ourselves. Take verse 15 for what it
says and promises: “May you be blessed by the lord who made heaven
and earth.”
The
psalmist saw only the living praising the Lord, but we as Christians
look forward to praise forever in the courts of our God. Psalm
115:17 could subtly refer to those who worship “dead” idols as
being themselves dead and therefore unable and unworthy to praise
God. One of the principal points made by this psalm is the vivid
contrast between those who worship the living God and those who
worship dead idols, or the gods they make for themselves. But praise
be to God, “we will bless the Lord from this time forth and
forevermore.” Amen! - Ethelene Dyer Jones 04.24.2016