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SCRIPTURE
Psalm 38.19-20
Many have become my enemies without cause, those who hate me without reason are numerous. Those who repay my good with evil lodge accusations against me, though I seek only to do what is good.
WORDS OF HOPE
Today’s Scripture reading is one of many titled A Psalm of David and could easily have been written by King David himself, considering the subject matter and degree of frustration the writer pours into his lyrics. The Psalms were written as song lyrics and I can imagine the music for this one being a heavy Wagner opera, not a Little Mermaid overture.
I can’t count the times I’ve been asked how something written (in this case) about 2,800 years ago in a different culture could have anything to say to us today? My answer is that the words were written by humans, and we are humans with the same kinds of hopes, dreams, adversities, joys, disappointments, and surprises in our culture as they had in theirs. They felt the same raw emotions that we are feeling now.
The Psalms remind us to never keep those emotions locked up inside of our minds and souls until they eventually destroy us, but to express them to ourselves, to the ones we love and trust, but most of all, to God! The Psalmists had no problem with releasing their inner selves, even when the presumed perpetrator of their griefs was God. They yelled at God all the time. Did God hear them? Yes! Did their stories always have happy endings? You know the answer to that.
A common happy-ending thread in most of the Bible narratives, however, teaches us that when the families, nations or tribes were unified in their determination, their purposes were accomplished. When they were feuding or fragmented, they failed. How does that fact effect our lives today? Do we have enemies we had considered our friends, who repay our desire for justice and truth with baseless accusations and hatred?
What would the Psalmists have us do? Yell at God? Blame others? Blame ourselves? Write a sorrowful song? Fine! Do all of that. The ancients were honest with their emotions and went through that whole list of positive and negative responses to what they considered as hopeless situations, but hear the words of the last lyric of today’s reading: “I seek only to do what is good.” That was God’s Commandment and Jesus’ lifelong practice, and he always did it to build the community. And that community survives today in you and me.
PRAYER
Empathetic God, you have listened patiently to our laments for thousands of years. You have never abandoned us. You are with us now. Guide us today as we seek together to do only what is good, what is right, on the path first walked by Jesus. It is in His name we pray. AMEN.
DEVOTION AUTHOR
Dan Peeler
Order of St. Francis and St. Claare
Cathedral of Hope
Proclaiming Christ Through Faith, Hope and Love
5910 Cedar Springs Road | Dallas, TX | 75235
214-351-1901
info@cathedralofhope.com