Monday
Psalm 45.1 “My heart is stirred by a noble theme as I recite my verses for the King; my tongue is the pen of a skilful writer.”
Every poet needs inspiration to bring out the best that is in them. In coming before God the King, we already have the uplift of knowing we come before One whose love is beyond our words, whose mercy is broader than our imagination, and whose grace is indescribable. But we will try anyway. Prayer can be those moments when we are left speechless by God’s glory, but our heart will not be silent. Our most heartfelt words are penned by a grateful heart articulating our love for God.
Tuesday
Psalm 27.8 “My heart says of you, ‘Seek his face!’ Your face I will seek.”
The Psalm poet knows his own heart, and he has learned to listen to its urgency. That exclamation mark signals an imperative, when the heart knows what is needed. Seeking the presence of God is a deliberate inward turning of the mind and heart towards the One who is holy, and in whose light we find strength to live and guidance to live well. There are instinctive impulses that turn us towards God, those nudges of the Holy Spirit reminding us of God’s pervasive presence and attentive care. When the heart speaks we do well to listen, and seek the face of God.
Wednesday
Psalm 27.4 “One thing I ask of the Lord, this is what I seek; that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life.”
This verse is a confession of faith and a declaration of life’s first priorities. When Jesus said “Seek first the Kingdom of God and his righteousness”, he was calling for a heart that wills one thing as life’s first priority. Get that right, and everything else falls into its proper place. The Psalm poet was unlikely to want to be in the Temple for the rest of his life. He longed to live all the days of his life in glad obedience and grateful praise. That is his prayer. May God be the ever-present reality, a conscious daily presence, whose sustaining grace infuses and informs our life.
Thursday
Psalm 42.2-3 “My soul thirsts for God, for the living God. When can I go and meet with God?”
Jesus was referring to that same longing of the heart for home and the security of a welcoming love when he called “Blessed” those who hunger and thirst for righteousness.” When we use the word ‘devotional’ to describe our times of prayer, or whatever we read and think about in our prayers, we are using a word laden with emotion. This is about the longing of love, the restless and homeless heart seeking the felt and known presence of the living God. When meeting up with someone we love, we might say, “I missed you!” That’s what the Psalm poet means about meeting with God. The anticipation of One we have missed, and the joy pf meeting again.
Friday
Psalm 119.103 “How sweet are your words to my taste, sweeter than honey to my mouth.”
When it comes to descriptive praise, our Psalm poet has no fear of exaggeration. In his day honey was the sweetest taste, though date syrup was the common sweetener (think sticky toffee pudding!). But God’s words are sweeter! God’s word is palatable, delicious, nourishing, a sheer delight, because in God’s presence there is fullness of joy. When we read, meditate and pray over the Scriptures we are putting ourselves intentionally in God’s presence, and so putting ourselves in the way of joy! Amongst the way we seek God’s face, is the habit of having some of the Bible for breakfast! And we know breakfast is the most important meal of the day.
Saturday
Psalm 63.67 “On my bed I remember you; I think of you through the watches of the night. Because you are my help I sing in the shadow of your wings.”
Lying awake in the middle of the night it’s often the anxieties we think about, rehearsing all the worst case scenarios of things going wrong. The Psalm poet knows better. Instead of putting his head under the duvet to shut out a worrying world, he already knows he is under the protective shade of God’s surrounding care. “O spread thy covering wings around / till all our wanderings cease; / and at our Father’s loved abode / our souls arrive in peace.” There is a healing wisdom underlying that practice of turning from our own anxieties to a rehearsal of God’s overshadowing mercy.
Sunday
Psalm 126.5-6 “Those who sow with tears will reap with songs of joy. Those who go out weeping, carrying seed to sow, will return with songs of joy, carrying sheaves with them.”
I have memories of my dad with a pitch fork throwing sheaves up to the stacker who built the corn stacks, and at the end of the day on late summer nights the tea and cake for all the workers made by the farmer’s wife! This verse recognises the rhythms of life, tears of sorrow and songs of joy, life’s gifts and losses, times of strength and weakness, disappointments and hopes fulfilled. All in the end is harvest, made up of God’s grace and blessing, the strength and comfort of the Holy Spirit, the guidance of the Scriptures and the love-gift of the community of Christ’s people.
(Photographs from a recent visit to Iona Abbey)