Proper 13 / Pentecost 11 / Ordinary Time 18
Devotional
Water From the Rock
Lectionary Devotional for Cycle C
Object:
For he satisfies the thirsty, and the hungry he fills with good things.... Let those who are wise give heed to these things, and consider the steadfast love of the Lord.
-- Psalm 107:9, 43
The entire psalm is a litany of the saving ways of God. It rehearses the various conditions of life that threaten human existence and dignity and celebrates the saving power of God in each of them. The image of God that is celebrated is of a redeemer that is particularly aware of the needy in the world and works to extricate them from their problems. God's redemptive activity is not restricted to any one location, but God gathers the needy in "from the east and from the west, from the north and from the south." Those who are lost as in a desert waste and cry out to God, God delivers them to a home in which their needs can be satisfied (vv. 4-9).
Those who are imprisoned in a life of rebellion against God's ways and find their lives consumed by a deep darkness also can cry out to God, and God will set them free as a liberator (vv. 10-16). Those who are sick and suffer affliction can cry out to God and be healed by the great healer (vv. 17-22). Those who seek their fortune in business but find they are drowning in a great storm can turn to God who stills the storm and grants them peace (vv. 23-32).
God can turn the rivers into deserts and the deserts into pools of water that feed the hungry (vv. 33-38). God is contemptuous of those who misuse their governing power, and God is a continual redeemer of the needy. The wise take note of both aspects of God's steadfast love (vv. 39-43). God gives direction to the lost, freedom to the imprisoned, healing to the sick, and calms the storm or re-orders nature for the needy. The church could take note of how Jesus' life embodies these various aspects of the character of God and how this same litany can form the outline for the mission statement of the body of Christ.
-- Psalm 107:9, 43
The entire psalm is a litany of the saving ways of God. It rehearses the various conditions of life that threaten human existence and dignity and celebrates the saving power of God in each of them. The image of God that is celebrated is of a redeemer that is particularly aware of the needy in the world and works to extricate them from their problems. God's redemptive activity is not restricted to any one location, but God gathers the needy in "from the east and from the west, from the north and from the south." Those who are lost as in a desert waste and cry out to God, God delivers them to a home in which their needs can be satisfied (vv. 4-9).
Those who are imprisoned in a life of rebellion against God's ways and find their lives consumed by a deep darkness also can cry out to God, and God will set them free as a liberator (vv. 10-16). Those who are sick and suffer affliction can cry out to God and be healed by the great healer (vv. 17-22). Those who seek their fortune in business but find they are drowning in a great storm can turn to God who stills the storm and grants them peace (vv. 23-32).
God can turn the rivers into deserts and the deserts into pools of water that feed the hungry (vv. 33-38). God is contemptuous of those who misuse their governing power, and God is a continual redeemer of the needy. The wise take note of both aspects of God's steadfast love (vv. 39-43). God gives direction to the lost, freedom to the imprisoned, healing to the sick, and calms the storm or re-orders nature for the needy. The church could take note of how Jesus' life embodies these various aspects of the character of God and how this same litany can form the outline for the mission statement of the body of Christ.

