Serving Well. Jonathan Trotter
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Many people have a hard time identifying and allowing emotions; some countries and cultures (and denominations) struggle with this more than others. But wherever we’re from, the Psalms draw back the curtain and help us to see things as they really are.
The Psalms provide emotional nomenclature.
Furthermore, the Psalms can help people to acknowledge the presence of pain, an important first step towards healing. This is especially crucial in honor/shame cultures; the Psalms give the reader permission to feel negative emotions: “Well hey, he felt this and he’s in the Bible! Maybe it’s OK if I feel it too.”
Once, after watching a young believer read a psalm that discussed “unacceptable” feelings, I simply asked, “Have you ever felt that?” The resulting heart-level conversation would not have happened without the ice-breaking action of the psalm.
Letting Others Make the Case for the Psalms
Are you tired of listening to me talk about the Psalms? How about these guys?
Dietrich Bonhoeffer wrote: “Whenever the Psalter is abandoned, an incomparable treasure vanishes from the Christian church,”7 and then went so far as to say that “The Psalter impregnated the life of early Christianity.”8
Billy Graham once said: “I used to read five Psalms every day–that teaches me how to get along with God. Then I read a chapter of Proverbs every day and that teaches me how to get along with my fellow man.”9
And Martin Luther even wrote: “The Psalter promises Christ’s death and resurrection so clearly–and pictures his kingdom and the condition and nature of all Christendom–that it might well be called a little Bible. In it is comprehended most beautifully and briefly everything that is in the entire Bible.”10
And yet we hardly ever read or teach or preach them! Could we change that, please?
Letting Jesus Make the Case for the Psalms
You know, Jesus really loved Psalms. In fact, Jesus quotes it more than any other book in the Old Testament. These are the four Old Testament books that Jesus quoted the most:
#4 Exodus
#3 Isaiah
#2 Deuteronomy
#1 Psalms
Kind of makes me think they’re important. But here’s the kicker, when Jesus quoted from Psalms, it was almost always in a difficult situation. That is to say, when Jesus was in a stressful situation, he fell back on Psalms. Here are some examples:
• Jesus outwits angry, accusing, scheming, educated guys (aka Pharisees) with the Psalms on several occasions (Ps 8:2, 110:1; Matt 21:16, 22:44; Mark 12:36, 14:62; Luke 20:42–43).
• He quotes the Twenty-Second Psalm while dying on the cross (Ps 22:1; Matt 27:46; Mark 15:34).
• Jesus is hated without cause, which he says the Psalms foretold (Ps 35:19, 69:4; John 15:25).
• He quotes Psalms when talking about his betrayal (Ps 41:9; John 13:18).
• When the Jews want to stone him for claiming to be God, he responds with a line from Psalms (Ps 82:6; John 10:34).
• He quotes Psalm 110 when Pilate asks if he is the Son of God (Ps 110:1; Matt 26:64).
• After having his authority challenged, he quotes Psalms to the chief priests and elders, calling himself the chief cornerstone (Ps 118:22–23; Matt 21:42; Mark 12:10; Luke 20:17).
• He references Psalms when foretelling Jerusalem’s destruction (Ps 118:26; Matt 23:39; Luke 13:35).
So basically, when Jesus quoted from Psalms, good things weren’t happening. In stressful situations, when he was under duress or attack, Jesus referred back to Psalms. Maybe that’s when we need to remember them too.
And for what it’s worth, it’s not a great idea to pack for a trip after the trip has started. (Although, with this audience, I’m sure some of you have tried!) You know life’s going to be crazy. You know it’s not all going to be smooth sailing. Pack your bags now. Read Psalms now. Soak in the Psalms now.
Repeated exposure to the Psalms etches into the hearts of young believers (and old ones too) a biblical response to pain and suffering. The Psalms show the new way.
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Theologically, we need the Psalms.
Emotionally, we need the Psalms.
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Looking for Balance
The Psalms balance Paul’s head with David’s heart. We tend to idolize Paul, valuing an intellectual (rational) approach that prizes productivity and aims at finishing the task. But if we’re not careful, we become automatons on an assembly line to salvation. We show up, clock in, put a rivet here and a prayer there. The Psalms protect us from heartless evangelism and cold workaholism, modeling integration and allowing the mind and heart to be simultaneously present.
The psalmists weren’t scaredy cats, but they were sometimes scared. They weren’t sobbing piles of emotion, but they sometimes cried. They weren’t angry men, but they sometimes demanded sovereign revenge. They got depressed. They sang. They wept. They danced.
And they prayed.
Closing Argument
We’re working in hard places in dangerous times; we need the Psalms. We’re working among people who’ve suffered tremendously and endured courageously; they need the Psalms.
Jesus knew the Psalms and used them. A lot. So should we.
How? Read them. Sing them. Pray them.
Especially when you have no words to pray, pray the Psalms. Have you ever been there? Wordless but hurting? Bonhoeffer said, “That can be very painful, to want to speak with God and not to be able to.”11
We need the Psalms to be deeply planted and carefully cultivated.
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For more in depth study of the Psalms, check out these books:
The Songs of Jesus: A Year of Daily Devotions in the Psalms, Tim Keller
The Case for the Psalms: Why They are Essential, N.T. Wright
Psalms: The Prayer Book of the Bible, Dietrich Bonhoeffer
5. Wright, Case for the Psalms, 43.
6. Wright, Case for the Psalms, 91.