September 10th 2023: David Hails

Psalm 66

There are many ways to think of dividing up time, such as the way time is divided up into calendars and also the academic year. We are now in September, a new academic year. It is often a time to reflect and think about our lives. Psalm 66 gives us good cause to think about a new year. We’re not told who wrote this song; it could be David. There are certainly parts of this psalm which speak in the way David speaks. It is a song. There are lessons for us as well as a challenge. There are three parts to this psalm:

  1. Shout for joy.
  2. Come and see.
  3. Come and hear.

1.Shout for joy because we have a praiseworthy God (verses 1-4).

There is a challenge right at the start of this psalm, ‘Shout for joy to God.’ As we come together Sunday by Sunday, is your desire to praise God? As you get up each morning is your desire to praise God, to give Him glorious praise? As a British, evangelical church, how do these words make us feel? A little uncomfortable? It is OK to shout on the school playground or the Millennium Stadium, but in church, before God, is shouting for joy what we are supposed to do? The psalmist says so. Has our worship become a bit too formal, distant? Is this something we could be learning? I am not looking for chaos, but do we need to be a bit looser? Have we lost some of the joy of worship? Old Testament worship would have been loud and joyous. Let us be desiring and seeking to know His joy, the feeling of His presence in our worship.

We have many reasons to praise God. There are also reasons that bring fear. In this psalm not everyone will praise God, they are seen as enemies of God (v3). The mighty deeds of God are not good news for everyone. The power of God is such, His enemies cannot triumph. The victory is already won, Therefore God has highly exalted him and bestowed on him the name that is above every name, 10 so that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, 11 and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.” (Philippians 2:9-11).

As we look forward, all will worship God and have to acknowledge the mercy and greatness of God. The call of the psalmist is to do this before it is too late. Come to Him, know Him, trust in the Lord Jesus Christ now. Come and worship the only one through which you can be saved.

2.Come and see because we have a mighty God (verses 5-13).

We have a call to come and see what God has done. He is a mighty God. Within section there are three different parts:

Verses 5-7: a call to those outside of Israel, to come and see what God has done. He is calling on those outside Israel to come, to see, to believe, to worship. The primary reason is to come and see what God has done in bringing His people out of Egypt. It points back to history, to the birth of the nation of Israel. It was many years ago, but they are still here. God brought a people together, out of His mercy. It is from the people of Israel that His greatest gift came, the Saviour of the world. He lived in Israel, He died in Israel. He died for the sins of the whole world. He came from the people of Israel for all the peoples of the world. The Lord Jesus Christ came so that sinful people would be forgiven. He lived the perfect life and died a sacrificial death. He did awesome deeds. How do we react? As a foreigner, a Gentile, outside of Israel, how do we respond? There is only one way – in praise, in adoration and glory.

Verses 8-12. The emphasis changes slightly to ‘our’ God (verses 8-9). The psalm goes from a cry of foreigners to come and see to a national cry, to corporate worship. So, today, we are God’s people. We come together today and worship Him together, to proclaim Him together. Praise God that the God of the past and is the same God we worship today.

Verses 13-15. The call now becomes a personal call. Five times the word ‘I’ is used. It is a reminder that our worship is both corporate and personal. Our faith has to be personal. It has to be me: ‘I come,’ ‘I will worship, ‘I will trust,’ ‘I believe.’ Just being part of a church isn’t enough; our faith in God has to be personal. We must believe personally and trust in the Lord personally. Have you believed and trusted in the Lord?

3. Come and hear because He is a personal God (verses 14-20). God is sovereign, He is mighty, but He is also personal. We cannot be a Christian on our own or by relying on the faith of others. We come to worship one who is here, one who is with us. He dwells within you.

There are more challenges for us (verses 17-18). We are pointed back to a call to worship. But who can praise God? As those who claim to be Christians, do you cherish Him or do you hold tightly to sin, to wrongdoing? Does your wrongdoing bring shame to you or bring the light to your heart? We should not expect God to listen to us if we hold tight to sin.

What right do we have to call on God? We need to truly bend the need to worship Him. If we hold tight to our sins, we won’t be able to speak to God, He won’t listen. If we put to death sin, if we repent and turn back to God, to Jesus the one who died so we could be made right with God, we can call on Him.

If we confess our sin, then we can know comfort, joy, and peace. The Psalm finishes,

“But truly God has listened;
    he has attended to the voice of my prayer.

20 Blessed be God,
    because he has not rejected my prayer
    or removed his steadfast love from me!”

Coming to Jesus in repentance, to seek forgiveness, laying down your sins, He hears you and loves you with a steadfast love, a love that never changes, a love that is everlasting.

He gave, out of love, out of mercy, out of grace, so that we can be forgiven and know His everlasting love. God is almighty but also personal. He knows each one of us.

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