Category: Uncategorised

  • Squadrons and Troops of Angels at Christmas.

    NMM_NMMG_BHC2607-001This afternoon I shared in a Zoom meeting of the Aberdeen Theological Circle. We were sharing our favourite Christmas Carol or poem. It was a thoroughly enjoyable mix of theology, spirituality, liturgy, testimony, music (several unaccompanied solos, one in German another in plain chant) showing such a variety of what matters to each of us as essential to our experience of Christmas.
    One of the highlights was the discussion about the controversial practice of updating, dumbing down, pc editing and other liberties taken with other people's literary legacies!
     
    The case in point was "Behold the great Creator makes Himself a house of clay." One of the verses changed to suit modern tastes is verse 3. Below is the original followed by the modern improvement.
     
    This wonder struck the world amazed,
    It shook the starry frame;
    Squadrons of spirits stood and gazed,
    Then down in troops they came.
     
    This wonder all the world amazed,
    it shook the starry frame;
    the hosts of heaven stood to gaze,
    and bless the Saviour's name.
     
    Now of course there is uneasiness about the military imagery of squadrons and troops. But the author, Thomas Pestel (1585-1659) was a minor 17th Century poet, and one of the chaplains to King Charles I. No love was lost between him and the Puritan upstarts, and indeed in 1646 he was sequestrated from his living by the Westminster Assembly! In those conflicted decades, military terminology had its own familiar and rhetorical force. But need we use the same militarised imagery now? Hmmm.
     
    Pestel's last verse expresses a weariness of conflict that is almost Isaianic in its hopeful longing:
    Join then, all hearts that are not stone,
    And all our voices prove,
    To celebrate this Holy One,
    The God of peace and love.
  • TFTD Dec 2-8: Isaiah the Advent Prophet.

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    Monday

    Isaiah 9.2 “The people walking in darkness have seen a great light; on those living in the land of the shadow of death, a light has dawned.”

    There are different kinds of darkness within which we sometimes have to walk. Many of them can feel like living in a land overshadowed by despair, anxiety, grief or loneliness. These bring an accompanying loss of motivation and appetite for life. Often life in our world these days is like walking in darkness, living under deep shadows of foreboding and uncertainty. Advent interrupts our pessimism. Isaiah declares the coming of the light of God’s coming! Against a horizon of despair, hope dawns, as God says “Let there be light!” God is on the move and hope is rising.

    Tuesday

    Isaiah 9.6a “For to us a child is born, to us a son is given, and the government will be on his shoulders.”

    I can’t read these words without hearing them set to Handel’s music with its outspokenly joyous chorus! It’s an irresistible Advent earworm! These words were first spoken to broken hearted people who could see no good future. Government was Empire, and Empire was about force, control and loss of freedom. The sign of the new born child was God’s promise of a different future. This Advent, when you celebrate the birth of the Christ child, and open yourself again to the gift of God’s Son, do so looking forward to the coming of God’s Kingdom, in God’s good time.

    Wednesday

    Isaiah 9.6b “And he will be called, Wonderful Counsellor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.”

    The Advent story is full of name giving. Matthew who quotes the prophets dozens of times, writes at the very start “You will call his name Jesus” and “they will call him Emmanuel.” Together with Isaiah’s fourfold descriptor of the Son who is given, all these names expand the horizons of our hopes and the range of our imagination. Jesus is the personification of wise planning, purposeful power, protective care, and lasting peace. The rule of Jesus is not aimed at self-promotion, but saving his people, being the presence of God amongst our humanity. Why not use this verse as a one line praise-prayer throughout Advent.

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    Thursday

    Isaiah 9.6b “And he will be called, Wonderful Counsellor…,

    “Great God of wonders, all thy ways / are matchless godlike, and divine.” God’s plans are wonderful in their detail, scale and in God’s power to make them happen. Isaiah more than once says God’s words will accomplish the purpose for which they are sent. Even more so God’s saving purpose in sending his Son, the Word made flesh. This is the wonder of wonders, God’s strategic plan for salvation, redemption and renewal of his covenant through Jesus, who is Immanuel, God with us.

    Friday 

    Isaiah 9.6b “And he will be called, Mighty God…,

    Isaiah 9 was written in the dark days of the crushing power of Assyria. What Israel needed was a new king who would deliver them. Isaiah’s words of comfort are like an arrow into the future when hundreds of years later, in Bethlehem, a child is born and a son is given. Against the might of Herod, Pilate, Caesar, and all other kingdoms, God came, not in annihilating power, but in the purposive persistence and mercy of the mighty God, who saves and forgives human sins, who redeems and renews a people for himself. His rule and reign are assured because the government will be upon the shoulders of God and of his Christ, whose name is Jesus, Immanuel.

    Saturday

    Isaiah 9.6b “And his name will be called Everlasting Father…”       

    In the Old Testament the father is the one who holds full authority and is to be respected by the whole household. The father is also the one who guards, supports and provides for all who are under his care. It isn’t hard to see why Isaiah chooses that image to speak of God’s protective care for his people. In the coming of Jesus the world will see, once and for all, the Fatherhood of God, the full authority of the Redeemer over the powers that be, and the protective care of all who come in trust and obedience to live under the kingship of Christ. Advent is for always, and Immanuel is God with us, here and now, and “even to the end of the age.” Those are the very last words of Matthew’s gospel!

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    Sunday

    Isaiah 9.6b “His name shall be called Prince of Peace…”

    With Assyria’s military machine in full swing against them, Israel had no chance. Isaiah spoke to their panic, and contradicted those resigned voices of despair. Never discount the Advent of God! The coming of Immanuel for Christians is the reality of God come amongst us in Jesus. The final revelation of God is the Word become flesh, the living embodiment of God’s grace and truth, full of glory. Not the glory of military might, whether Assyrian, Roman, or empires of any other age, including our own. This Advent we celebrate Christ incarnate, crucified, risen, and ascended, the Prince of Peace, the peacemaker par excellence. “On earth peace to all the people, on whom God’s favour rests.” For that we wait, and pray, and hope, this Advent.    

    (The window photo is from a good friend's window overlooking the firth of Clyde. The green wreath is the very fine colouring work of my friend Ben.) 

  • Advent and Book Endings 1. The Quest for the Historical Jesus, Albert Schweitzer.

    "He comes to us as One unknown, without a name, as of old, by the lakeside, He came to those men who knew Him not. He speaks to us the same words: "Follow thou me!" and sets us to the tasks which He has to fulfil for our time. He commands. And to those who obey Him, whether they be wise or simple, He will reveal himself in the toils, the conflicts, the sufferings which they shall pass through in His fellowship, and, as an ineffable mystery, they shall learn in their own experience Who He is.”

    The Quest of the Historical Jesus, Albert Schweitzer, (A. C. Black. London: 1911) Page 401

    DownloadThis is such a poignant conclusion. At the end of one of the most thorough, painstaking, and frankly at times tedious books ever written on Jesus, these beautiful words. Hesitant, revealing remarkable intellectual humility, yet the person who wrote this was one of the greatest organists of his generation, a respected professor of philosophy and science, later a medical doctor working in remote parts of French Equatorial Africa, a Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, and much else.

    New Testament scholarship has moved on in the century and more since the publication of Schweitzer's Quest. The fourth Quest of the Historical Jesus is currently underway, examining the evidential value of the Gospel of John and its relations to the other Gospels and early Christian documents.

    As a first reading in Advent, Schweitzer's words pull us back to those moments in our lives when we too heard the call of Jesus, when we were met by God in ways we still barely comprehend. Sure, Schweitzer's great book has equally great false steps here and there. But the passion of his quest, his belief that Christ moves amongst us as a compelling and commanding presence, still rings true to the experience of many who still come across his words at the end of his most famous book. 

    My reading of Schweitzer, both his writings (only some of which I have read), and his life as it is told in various biographies, is of a man overloaded with gifts and the great sense of personal responsibility they brought. More than many, (and many of his critics) he exemplified obedience to the categorical imperative of the call of God with radical thoroughness. His medical work was in response to his understanding of Jesus' call to him personally, to leave all and follow Him.

    Schweitzer's final sentences of his genuinely epochal book are as much personal testimony as evangelistic pointer to others. When I read them at the start of Advent 2024, I too hear again the echo of that first summons, and the invitation to follow him in the fellowship of that ineffable mystery in which we learn, in our own experience, who He is. 

  • Advent, Books and the Sense of an Ending.

    St andrews botanicsDuring Advent I’m planning a series of daily posts. I’ve done this before for Advent towards Christmas, and Lent towards Easter. This series has the unpromising and admittedly odd title “Advent and Book Endings”!

    The last paragraph, or the final few sentences of a book can often be the culmination of what a writer has been trying to say, argue, suggest, or explain. Whether it’s the final verses in a collection of poems, concluding thoughts of a long scholarly thesis, the resolution of a novel, the parting shots in an argument about theology, history, ethics, or whatever; conclusions matter, and the final words of what an author wants to convey to the reader are seldom superfluous.

    Over the years I’ve learned to pay attention to how a writer finishes. Several such endings are famous, and if I’ve read the book I’ll include it. Otherwise this is a near random selection from the book shelves.  

    Here are the guidelines I’ve set myself.

    1. Each extract will have a brief explanation of why I’ve chosen it, and how the passage leads us into a deeper understanding of Advent as a season of waiting hopefully, longing for light as we wait in darkness.
    2. The explanation of each ending and its relation to Advent will be around 150 words. They are not essays, they are notes aimed at offering food for thought throughout the Advent season.
    3. Each is a stand-alone post, so they can be read or skipped and those interested can come and go if one every day is just too much!
    4. The aim is to encourage us in heart and mind as we are pulled into the rhythm of the liturgical season.
  • TFTD Nov 25-Dec 1: David’s Last Public Prayer. (1 Chronicles 29)

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    Monday

    1 Chronicles 29.1-9 “The task is great for this palatial structure is not for man but for the Lord God…I have provided for the temple of my God, gold, silver, bronze, onyx, turquoise and fine stones…I now give my personal treasures of gold and silver…”

    The first half of this chapter catalogues the sacrifice and generosity of David, and all the leaders and people in providing everything needed for a magnificent Temple. God is worthy of only the best we can offer. Love for God shouldn’t be constrained by our budgets, nor can worship be wholehearted if it’s part time. Service to God always involves costly giving of our personal treasure, – the gift of who we are.

    Tuesday 

    1 Chronicles 29.10-11 “Praise be to you, Lord, the God of our father Israel, from everlasting to everlasting. Yours, Lord, is the greatness and the power and the glory and the majesty and the splendour, for everything in heaven and earth is yours.”

    David the musician was a one man praise band. Praise vibrates throughout the Psalter, and here one of his recorded prayers begins and ends with praise. Praise takes the long view, down through the years tracing the faithfulness of God, the steadfast love that is from everlasting to everlasting. Whatever occurs that shakes our faith in life and ourselves, the one who changes not abides with us. Read that second sentence with its chain reaction of praise words. This is who God is. Always.

    Wednesday

    1 Chronicles 29.12 Yours, O Lord, is the kingdom; you are exalted as head over all.”

    I sometimes wonder if as Christians we actually believe this stuff! It isn’t Presidents and Prime Ministers, oligarchs or billionaires, who have the final say in the outcomes of history. David, for all his failures and flaws, knew that the throne wasn’t his, and all his achievements were underwritten by God’s purposes, faithfully worked out in the messiness of human history. The world is as unstable, scary and threatened as at any time in our own lifetime. This one line confession of faith is worth saying every day! It’s a necessary push back on the power claims of our time.

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    Thursday

    1 Chronicles 29.12-13 “Wealth and honour come from you; you are the ruler of all things. In your hands are strength and power to exalt and give strength to all. Now, our God, we give you thanks, and praise your glorious name.

    Israel’s story is filled with the interaction of the politics of God and the politics of human contriving. We don’t see the underside of God’s purposes, nor the movements of God in the affairs of powerful people, nations and corporations. David lived at a time of great geo-political change. Near the end of his life he knows that neither he nor Solomon can rely on their own political power games, military reputation or diplomatic one-upmanship. God is the real power broker, and God’s ways will always surprise those of us who think we know what’s what. Advent is coming, when we celebrate the subversive power of the Magnificat, and we recall the name Immanuel the One who has shaken all pretentious thrones ever since!

    Friday

    1 Chronicles 29.14. “But who am I, and who are my people, that we should be able to give as generously as this? Everything comes from you, and we have given you only what comes from your hand.

    That second sentence. There’s a balance between thinking nothing is down to us, and believing everything is down to us. But when it comes to the gift of life itself, that definitely isn’t our own doing. Life is God’s gift; all that makes that life richer and fuller is the outworking of God’s blessing, life’s circumstances, our own choices, the shaping of the community around us. But not everyone’s life is so predictable, blessed and enriched. Which is why we need the word that teaches us generosity: “It is more blessed to give than to receive.” God’s blessings are never intended for hoarding, but for sharing in the glad dissemination of God’s generosity.

    Saturday

    1 Chronicles 29.17 “I know, my God, that you test the heart, and are pleased with integrity.”

    Yes, David, more than most, you know that God tests the heart. Psalm 51 was written by a man who shattered his own integrity, and ruined the lives of others around him. This Chronicles prayer, near his life’s end, recalls what that whole web of evil had cost him, and so many others. And he recalled his prayer all those years ago: “Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me.” “Surely you desire truth in the inward parts…” Yes, God is pleased with integrity.

    Download

    Sunday

    1 Chronicles 29.17 “All these things I have given willingly and with honest intent.”

    That’s how you give to God, willingly and with honest intent. Perhaps that is also a telling definition of the heart at worship, willing and honest. “Eternal God and Father, you create us by your power and redeem us by your love, guide and strengthen us by your Spirit that we may give ourselves in love and service, to one another and to you, through Jesus Christ our Lord.” Amen. One of my favourite Collects!

  • Sources of Resilience in an Uncertain World.

    Sources of resilience? The phrase was used as advice to a woman who works in climate change. How to keep going in a world facing catastrophe? How to resist despair and nurture hope? Why it matters that complacency is countered by conviction, and resignation confronted by passion.
    Find sources of resilience – where?
     
    6a00d8341c6bd853ef0240a4c26693200d-320wi– in people, in creative and constructive action, in noticing, supporting and loving what is good, in finding and planting seeds of compassion in the soil of other people's lives – neighbours we know and neighbours we've never met, and never will.
     
    – in an inner life that is morally alert and compassionately thoughtful; by thinking and praying and working in the place where we are, as agents of change, understanding and collaborative in the work of bridge-building and hope construction.
     
    – in the practice of whatever faith we say we believe. My place is in the Judaeo-Christian tradition, as a follower of Jesus Christ. That has implications for how I view the physical world, as God's created order gifted into our stewardship; how I read the Bible as a revelation of that long narrative of God's love affair with Creation, and with humanity; how I think of humanity itself, each person as made in the image of God, and a world broken and shattered by human conflict, inequality, cruelty, and possessive of power; how I think of God as holy love, as righteous mercy and as loving redeemer, revealed in Christ Crucified and risen; how I seek to live in the power of the Spirit, shaped towards Christlikeness, drawn into the life of God by faith in a grace that can be trusted. And much more.
     
    All of this is so easy to write it's easy to be carried away by our own fluency into a warm and passive idealism. Nevertheless, resilience needs ideas that guide our thinking, values that shape our practice, and an imagination that doesn't give in because failure is easier to imagine than fulfilment.
     
    All of this noted down here, because someone's despair provoked a question and called out the answer – seek sources of resilience. There's more here, much more, but this will do – for a start, for now.
  • Walking in the Woods, Humming “How Great Thou Art!”

    DSC08226Sunlight invading the forest floor, trees that have stood for over 50 years, a path walked daily by all kinds of people, each with their thoughts, their anxieties, their need to be here, just here. When I walk in such places I better understand the hymn writer's rather sentimental lines:

    "When through the woods, and forest glades I wander,

    And hear the birds sing sweetly in the trees." 

    This hymn about forests and trees and birds, lofty mountain grandeur and brooks and breezes, comes close to the hymn writer's equivalent of condensed milk with that phrase, "sing sweetlyon the trees."

    And yet. When through the woods at Garlogie I wander, and hear the tree-creepers, the woodpecker, the great tits and blue tits, the chaffinch and at this time of year the geese overhead honking their way to and from Loch Skene – at such times, I too want to sing to the Creator "How great Thou art!"

    And in the photo, Sheila is watching a squadron of migrating goldcrests ground-feeding, then spiralling up into the high pines to enjoy the food necessary to continue their journey. Every year, around this time, various birds find their way to this North East corner of Scotland on their way to warmer places. And yes, we do sometimes hear them singing in the trees, though I confess I would never choose the word 'sweetly' to describe an angry chaffinch, a heid-banging woodpecker, or a full choir and orchestra of geese performing the honking chorus.

    TP1010752he hymn 'How Great Thou Art', is now an established favourite for funerals, and I can well understand why. But I doubt it's the 'forest glades' verse that eventually lifts the heart heavenwards. Stars, rolling thunder. "God, his Son not sparing," Christ coming "with shout of acclamation", these are the deeper realities that help to anchor hope upon something transcendent, on truths substantial enough to inspire hope and trust, and that bring us to that place where we have no other recourse but to "bow in adoration."

    And yet. There is something about a walk in the woods that earths us in the realities of life. Feet walking the earth, following a path shared by others, birds singing out in either song or warning, and from Garlogie the hill line showing the start of the Highlands, and the lofty mountain grandeur of a landscape that has been in the making for millions of years. And the sunlight, itself a metaphor, or a messenger, of the pervasive grace and invasive love of God, whose light is the light of life.

    All of this true enough. And so perhaps the person who translated the song can be forgiven for the lazy cliché about sweet singing, because so much else in this hymn is true to our human response to the world around us, and to the story of God's love affair with His creation. And it moves from Creation through space and time, to the coming of Jesus, his atoning death, and the hope of his coming again to bring to fulfilment the reign of God through all creation. 

    I can live with the occasional word that annoys and grates, if it's in the context of a hymn that is otherwise persuasive in its telling of the narrative of the world's creation and God's purpose of redemption in Christ. And when I walk in the woods, and hear the birds, and they remind me of this hymn, quietly, and with more humility than I would ever be capable of without yet another touch of divine grace, I hum, "How great Thou art!"

  • Learning the Importance of Integrity, Trust and Care for Our Words.

    Eliot 1Long before the avalanche of self-help books and the current fad for life coaches, there were wisdom teachers. They used Proverbs, an ancient form of meme. Here’s one of them: “A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in a setting of silver.” (Proverbs 25.11)

    Trust, community confidence, and neighbourliness depend on agreed standards of truth and sincerity in our words. Words ‘fitly spoken’ clear up misunderstandings, explain situations clearly and truthfully, and reassure, encourage or support people by communicating well. In our workplace, circles of friends, family and neighbourhood, wouldn’t it be great to be recognised as those whose words are ‘fitly spoken’?

    So it’s quite a thing when someone, who works in one of the largest UK Financial Services companies, wins an award for sincerity and integrity. The award is based on peer nominations, accompanied by written commendations. Part of the parchment reads: “This Award celebrates exceptional individuals who embrace [our] core value of ‘Sincerity’ by communicating truthfully and openly…and who are known for doing the right thing.”

    The award winner is one of my friends. I’m not surprised at the award, nor at the full inbox of personal testimonies about his positive impact on those around him. His integrity and sincerity, his words ‘fitly spoken,’ create an ethos that encourages similar behaviour in others.

    Mind you, he doesn’t think he deserves any of this He’s embarrassed by the award. Humility is another one of his strong suits! In a culture where truth is too often negotiable, by character and reputation this person makes integrity and sincerity attractive virtues. According to the ancient wisdom teacher, he is “an apple of gold in a setting of silver.”

  • TFTD Nov 18-24: The Ways of the Righteous and the Wicked.

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    Monday

    Proverbs 11.1 “The Lord abhors dishonest scales, but accurate weights are his delight.”

    Surely this isn’t about God as the Weights and Measures Ombudsman? Well, actually it is! Holiness and righteousness are not just about our private devotions, but about our standards of behaviour in public. Our love for Jesus is demonstrated by our heart’s affections and commitments; but also by performing actions and practices consistent with love for Jesus. Remember Jesus said, “If you love me you will keep my commandments.” Honesty in how we use our money is basic and persuasive evidence that we take seriously Jesus’ commandment to love our neighbours.

    Tuesday

    Proverbs 11.2 “When pride comes, then comes disgrace, but with humility comes wisdom.”

    One of the more obvious signs of pride is that the proud person is often unaware of their own arrogance! Entitlement is a built in sense of superiority to others. Paul warned. “Do not think of yourselves more highly than you ought, rather think of yourselves with sober judgement.” (Romans 12.3) Wisdom is based on how we respond to life experiences, what we learn from them, and that takes a willingness to learn, to know ourselves well enough to accept that sometimes we are wrong. Humility is shown in that readiness to listen to God, to our own heart, and to our life.

    Wednesday

    Proverbs 11.3 “The integrity of the upright guides them, but the unfaithful are destroyed by their duplicity.”

    This verse describes a collision of moral opposites. Integrity is about truthfulness and consistency of character, so that a person’s behaviour is known to be trustworthy, so reliable it becomes predictable. That’s what good character is. Duplicity is the skill of deceit, being two or even three-faced, depending on whose company we are in. Jesus said, “Let your yes be yes, and your no be no’. He was talking about an oath taken in court. But the words can also test our trustworthiness to be, and do, and speak in ways that are ‘upright’. Duplicity is destructive of trust, an acid in the soul.

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    Thursday

    Proverbs 11.4 “Wealth is worthless on the day of wrath, but righteousness delivers from death.”

    “You can’t take it with you” is one of those folk proverbs that at least recognises the limitations of money and possessions. That’s why Jesus encouraged us not to store up on earth, as if that was a permanent arrangement! Treasure in heaven is what lasts. This proverb places huge value on righteousness, those ways in which we have made a difference in the lives of others by compassion, generosity and care for justice. Yes, for the Christian what delivers from death is faith in Christ and trust in God’s grace. But faith has practical outcomes, visibly evident in the life we then lead. 

    Friday

    Proverbs 11.5 “The righteousness of the blameless makes a straight way for them, but the wicked are brought down by their own wickedness.”

    This is wisdom at its most practical. A straight way is walked by those whose characteristics are already mentioned – humility, honesty, integrity, right priorities. The metaphor of the straight path, contrasted with the crooked path is very common in the Old Testament. Torah, the Law, is itself the path of righteousness, and obedience is to walk the straight path. Wickedness carries within it the seeds of its own destruction – as another Proverb says, the wicked get caught in their own trap.

    Saturday

    Proverbs 11.6 “The righteousness of the upright delivers them, but the unfaithful are trapped by evil desires.”

    Many of these proverbs were aimed at preparing people for public life. Wisdom is a process of learning to take responsibility, to act responsibly, and to be an influence for good wherever God places us. “The unfaithful” is a description of those who can’t be trusted, who break promises, who look after themselves, and who never take responsibility for their own actions. To be “trapped by evil desires” is to be a slave of our own appetites. According to Proverbs, that’s no way to live. True freedom comes when we give ourselves to the service of God who is righteous and faithful and who will “lead us in the paths of righteousness for His name’s sake.”

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    Sunday

    Proverbs 11.7 “When a wicked man dies, his hope perishes, all he expected from his power comes to nothing.”

    You can’t read Proverbs without bumping hard into politics, just as surely as you will bang your knee on the heavy coffee table if you walk across the room without putting the light on! This verse is about the folly of putting our trust in powerful people, who, when they die, their power dies with them. Israel had seen this time and again. This is the distilled essence of Wisdom teaching: only God is worthy of our ultimate trust. And that God is righteous, faithful and without injustice. Christians of all people know that our hope is in God, and in his Son Jesus raised by the power of the Spirit. When it comes to power, we look to the Lamb in the midst of the throne.    

  • TFTD Nov 11-17 God and Our Sometimes Imperfect Prayers.

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    Monday

    Psalm 86.11 “Teach me your way, O Lord, and I will walk in your truth.”

    Many of the saints pray that they might have a teachable heart. To be teachable is to be humble. You can’t be both teachable and a know all. The Psalm-poet has his priorities right. To be open to the teaching of the Spirit, receptive to the word of God, obedient to the Holy Spirit; these are the dispositions of a teachable heart and a mind attuned to the will of God. This verse is a prayer that we will listen, learn and love the truth of God, and then be willing to walk in that truth as our way of life.

    Tuesday

    Psalm 86.11b “Give me an undivided heart, that I may fear your name.”

    I love the Scottish word for a divided heart – ‘swithering’! Those moments or even hours when we can’t make up our minds one way or the other. An undivided heart is one that knows its own mind! Jesus said, “Blessed are the pure in heart.” The Danish philosopher Kierkegaard wrote, “Purity of heart is to will one thing.” That’s just another way of saying “Love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, mind and strength.” To fear God’s name is to pray for the grace of undivided loyalty to the God whose love to us is faithful, and whose promises are to be trusted.

    Wednesday

    Psalm 86.12 “I will praise you, O Lord with all my heart. I will glorify your name for ever”

    The Psalm poet knows his spiritual psychology. Praise that is heartfelt, unqualified, and arising from gratitude, is the way we express our love to God. No half measures – with all my heart, and for ever. I know. None of us can manage full intensity all the time. We sleep, eat, work, play, meet friends, and do all the things that life requires of us just to make it work. But when it comes to praise, nothing is to be held back. No matter how long we live, praising and thanking God, and uplifting God’s name will always be the goal of worship and the theme tune of our living.

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    Thursday

    Psalm 86.5 “You are forgiving and good, O Lord, abounding in steadfast love to all who call on you.”

    This is the God we praise and thank, whose name we never tire of glorifying. The older phrase “abounding in steadfast love” conveys clearly the utter reliability of the love of God. The lovely Hebrew word ‘hesed’, contains a cluster of meanings; faithful in love, dependable like a friend, merciful to the needy and forgiving to the penitent. It’s one of the favourite Hebrew words used to describe the heart of God. In the gift of God’s only Son, we have been shown what ‘hesed’ looks like in a fully human life.

    Friday

    Psalm 86.4Bring joy to your servant, for to you O Lord, I lift up my soul.”  

    Prayer is never occasional in the Psalms. They are full of it – petition and complaint, praise and thanksgiving, confession and penitence – it’s all poured out. The psalm-poet is never embarrassed to be asking, pleading, or arguing with God. Never slow to open up about whatever concerns him – enemies, his own depression, anger, shame, his despair about the state of his world. But again and again, as he lifts up his soul in all the turmoil, he comes back to the reason for joy – the steadfast love of the Lord. Joy is God’s gift, kindled in the heart, then taking hold of the mind in renewed trust.

    Saturday

    Psalm 86.15 “But you, O Lord, are a compassionate and gracious God, slow to anger, abounding in steadfast love.”

    This verse is like a revision exercise. If the exam questions was: “Give examples of the characteristics of God that the Psalm-poet thinks important?” Well, then, you could be quite confident of a secure A grade if your answer was based around verse 15. Memorise this verse and you will have internalised a robust theology of the enduring faithfulness of God to all his people. Slow to anger is an important balancing corrective – God’s love is not indulgence overdosing on sentiment. All the gifts of God’s grace in Christ are freighted with the demands of holy love, including the call to holiness of heart and life.

    NovBackpage

    Sunday

    Psalm 86.17 “Give me a sign of your goodness, that my enemies may see it and be put to shame, for you, O Lord, have helped me and comforted me.”

    When did you last mention your enemies in your prayers? I guess like me, you don’t want to think you have any enemies – not really. Maybe so. But most of us have to deal with difficult people, workplace tensions, family fall-outs. Few of us can claim that we are universally popular and liked. What this verse does is bring all the wrong relationships into the presence of God to be honestly faced. When Jesus said, “Love your enemies and pray for those who give you a hard time”, he wasn’t speaking hypothetically. One reliable sign of God’s goodness is the grace to forgive those who wrong us, and the help and comfort of God is best experienced in a heart that seeks to mirror to others, God’s ways with us – ‘compassionate and gracious.’ The Psalm-poet isn’t always right in what he asks – but God can always be trusted to adjust the answer to serve God’s ways of justice, compassion, peace and yes, goodness!