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Psalm 32

Preaching
A Journey Through the Psalms: Reflections for Worried Hearts and Troubled Times
Preaching the Psalms Cycles A, B, C
Forgiveness is difficult. Oh, with little things it can be done. Someone slips up and causes inconvenience. A little white lie here, a small mistreatment there, can be dismissed. But with the big things, it is not an easy matter. Who forgives betrayal in marriage? Who forgives a deliberate attempt to hurt or wound? Who forgives a rapist or a murderer? Who forgives an invading, rampaging army? Who forgives us for the litany of wrongs that can be laid at our doorsteps?

Yet, forgiveness is the key to new life. Indeed, forgiveness is key to the continuation of life itself.

This psalm speaks to forgiveness from the point of view of confession. It is, in a sense, formulaic. First confession, then forgiveness, then a new beginning. The confession piece of this equation is critical. In fact, it is almost as though the deceit surrounding the wrongful act is worse than the act itself.

Isn't this true? It's bad enough that someone has been wronged, but when the perpetrator lies about the wrong and it is as though the infraction never took place, that's when things really get bad. If, however, the guilty party confesses -- tells the truth -- apologizes -- forgiveness, and therefore a new beginning, becomes possible.

This dramatic process has been seen in the unfolding of the Truth and Justice Commissions in South Africa and in Guatemala after decades of horrible repression, violence, and murder. Those who committed the crimes came forward and told the truth. These were truths that staggar the imagination. Midnight kidnappings and murders, tales of death squads and massacres, and details too horrible to discuss here. Yet the truth was told.

In light of all this, it's distressing to note that many Protestant communities shy away from confession these days. In an effort to avoid "guilting" people, this most powerful and restorative process has been abandoned. One wonders if it might be retrieved. Deitrich Bonhoeffer felt that the Protestant church ought to return to the confessional for reasons quite similar to this.

The question that comes seems clear. What is the location of confession and forgiveness in the life of our nation? Where might this nation benefit from confession? Like any world power in history, the list here is long. From slavery to wars of empire, what would national confession look like? Where might our communities benefit from the truthfulness of confession? What truths might be told about homelessness and poverty? About racism and power?

And, of course, we cannot neglect our congregations. What healing truths might our churches tell? The list, of course, continues to narrow until at last we confront the one in the mirror.

Whether it is the sins of nations or the vagaries of one person, this psalm gets it right. Confession is good for the soul.
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John Jamison
Object: This is a role play activity.

Note: You will need to select six children to play roles in this activity. If you have a smaller group, you might ask some older youth or even adults to play the parts of the two attackers and the man being attacked. I will give suggestions for how they can play their roles, but feel free to help your children make the story as fun and memorable as you can. I have used boys and girls in the various roles, but you can change those however you want to change them.

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The Immediate Word

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Nazish Naseem
For July 13, 2025:
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Frank Ramirez
I say, “You are gods,
    children of the Most High, all of you;
nevertheless, you shall die like mortals
    and fall like any prince….”
(vv. 6-7)

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An ancient legend tells of a remote mountain village where people used to send their senior citizens out into the woods to die. The villagers had an eye to the future; they felt that those beyond a certain age would only slow down progress or use up valuable resources to no economically profitable end. Those who reached a certain age weren’t “put out to pasture” or “put out of their misery”; they were simply put out of other people’s way.
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Frank Ramirez
Amos 7:7-17 and Psalm 82
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Erskine White
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Consider all the worlds Thy hands have made,
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How great Thou art, How great Thou art!
(Stuart K. Hine)

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