Proper 24 / Pentecost 22 / OT 29
Devotional
Water From the Well
Lectionary Devotional For Cycle A
Object:
The Lord is king; let the peoples tremble!
-- Psalm 99:1
Can you picture coming out to begin a worship service in a contemporary Christian church in America and announcing, "The Lord is king; let the peoples tremble! He is enthroned upon his cherubim; let the earth quake!"? Is it not likely that the people would sit there wondering what the first hymn was or reflecting on the nice decorations in the sanctuary? Few people in our churches tremble at the thought that God might really be in charge and have some definite expectations of us. This was a psalm for a people of God who had grown comfortable and perhaps even indifferent in their relationship with God. The psalm was a challenge to people who treated God as an emergency resource or even as a personal friend. It challenged people to praise God because God is holy -- totally different from and apart from us and, yet, is ruling over us. It lifted up a God who was a mystery; who cannot be grasped and understood. "Let them praise your great and awesome name. Holy is he!" The psalmist recognized that God was not a total mystery.
There are aspects of God's character that have been revealed to us. "Mighty King, lover of justice, you have established equity; you have executed justice and righteousness in Jacob." We are charged with worshiping (giving first priority to) God, which means that God's desire for justice and equity must be our desire as well. As further revelation of the character of God, the psalmist reminded them of Moses, Aaron, and Samuel as people who cried out to God and God responded to them (v. 6) and told them how they should live (v. 7). This same God who answered them was both a forgiving God and, also, a God who punished their wrongdoing (v. 8). Now we know why we should tremble. God is more than a magic amulet that assists us in living. God is someone totally different from us who expects us to reflect God's love for justice and equity (v. 9). Precisely because God has responded to us, we know that God expects something from our lives. "The Lord is king; let the peoples tremble!"
-- Psalm 99:1
Can you picture coming out to begin a worship service in a contemporary Christian church in America and announcing, "The Lord is king; let the peoples tremble! He is enthroned upon his cherubim; let the earth quake!"? Is it not likely that the people would sit there wondering what the first hymn was or reflecting on the nice decorations in the sanctuary? Few people in our churches tremble at the thought that God might really be in charge and have some definite expectations of us. This was a psalm for a people of God who had grown comfortable and perhaps even indifferent in their relationship with God. The psalm was a challenge to people who treated God as an emergency resource or even as a personal friend. It challenged people to praise God because God is holy -- totally different from and apart from us and, yet, is ruling over us. It lifted up a God who was a mystery; who cannot be grasped and understood. "Let them praise your great and awesome name. Holy is he!" The psalmist recognized that God was not a total mystery.
There are aspects of God's character that have been revealed to us. "Mighty King, lover of justice, you have established equity; you have executed justice and righteousness in Jacob." We are charged with worshiping (giving first priority to) God, which means that God's desire for justice and equity must be our desire as well. As further revelation of the character of God, the psalmist reminded them of Moses, Aaron, and Samuel as people who cried out to God and God responded to them (v. 6) and told them how they should live (v. 7). This same God who answered them was both a forgiving God and, also, a God who punished their wrongdoing (v. 8). Now we know why we should tremble. God is more than a magic amulet that assists us in living. God is someone totally different from us who expects us to reflect God's love for justice and equity (v. 9). Precisely because God has responded to us, we know that God expects something from our lives. "The Lord is king; let the peoples tremble!"

