Naylor
Community Christian Church
I. Introduction
-- turn in Bibles to Psalms 63:1-11
1 You,
God, are my God,
earnestly
I seek you;
I thirst
for you,
my whole
being longs for you,
in a dry
and parched land
where
there is no water.
2 I have
seen you in the sanctuary
and
beheld your power and your glory.
3 Because
your love is better than life,
my lips will
glorify you.
4 I will
praise you as long as I live,
and in
your name I will lift up my hands.
5 I will
be fully satisfied as with the richest of foods;
with
singing lips my mouth will praise you.
6 On my
bed I remember you;
I think
of you through the watches of the night.
7 Because
you are my help,
I sing in
the shadow of your wings.
8 I cling
to you;
your
right hand upholds me.
9 Those
who want to kill me will be destroyed;
they will
go down to the depths of the earth.
10 They
will be given over to the sword
and
become food for jackals.
11 But
the king will rejoice in God;
all who
swear by God will glory in him,
while the
mouths of liars will be silenced.
-- when I started getting older, I
came up with this grand plan of walking the entire Appalachian Trail -- the
2000-mile trail that runs from Georgia to Maine -- not all at one time -- but
to complete it over several years by hiking sections at a time
-- I started getting ready --
started buying equipment -- reading books and biographies -- studying the trail
and learning about it -- started getting serious about fitness -- I was lifting
weights and walking on the treadmill with a pack on at high inclines to imitate
the hills and mountains I would be walking up
-- I found someone willing to go
with me -- and so, a few years ago, I loaded up and headed to north Georgia to
begin my great adventure with a four-day, three-night trip
-- things started out well -- we
enjoyed the first day immensely -- it was a short, three-mile hike from the
starting point to the first shelter -- things were going great
-- but the next day, we ran into
problems -- the one thing the guidebooks didn’t warn us about was droughts --
the books told us where to find springs of water along the way, but they didn’t
tell us that sometimes, these springs dry up
-- that summer we tried our first
section on the trail was in the midst of a severe drought -- even here in south
Georgia, there were a lot of shallow wells going dry -- and when we got up
there on the second day, we stopped at the first watering hole, and it was
completely dry
-- we went on to the next -- it was
dry, too -- we finally made it to the shelter, and found the promised rushing
spring that was there was just a trickle -- we could fill up our water bottles,
but it took a long time to get enough water
-- the next day was a longer trek --
I had some other physical issues going on, and it was very hot, and I was
drinking a lot of water -- I ended up running out of water about midday -- and
all the springs and creeks were dry -- I continued to hike the next six hours
without water -- and I became thirstier than I have ever been in my life
-- towards nightfall, my vision
narrowed down -- it was like tunnel-vision -- like I was walking in a tunnel
through the woods -- I couldn’t think straight -- I wasn’t even sweating -- I
was so deficient on water, that I was probably in the middle of heat
exhaustion, and I was in very real danger
-- I walked on, thinking of nothing
more than wanting a drink of water -- just imagining what it would be like to
take a drink of cold, clear water -- it was the only thing that kept me going
-- when I finally stumbled into the
opening for the shelter, several people there greeted me -- I didn’t even
respond to them -- I dropped my pack -- I dropped all my gear -- and I rushed
to the promised creek at that shelter -- I almost wept in joy at the sight of
rushing water -- I dropped down and drank my fill and that was the best water I
have ever had in my entire life
-- I needed it so much -- I wanted
nothing more -- it was all I could think about -- it was all that I longed for
-- it was the most important thing in my life at that moment
-- that is what this psalm is all
about -- it’s about David needing God in such a desperate way -- as we read,
his soul is thirsting for God as our bodies thirst for water in a dry and
parched wilderness -- for David, God was the most important thing in his life
-- and without God, he would perish
-- this needs to be our perspective
on God, too -- we need to desire God -- to seek God -- to want Him and cry out
for Him and to need Him in just such a way -- we need to remember why we are
here -- we need to remember what the most important thing is -- and to seek God
and need God as David does here in this passage
-- we are told here that this is a Psalm
of David -- it was written during a time when David was on the run -- when he
was in the wilderness, hiding from those who would kill him and take his life
and his throne
-- most scholars believe that this psalm
was written during Absalom’s revolt -- Absalom was David’s third oldest son, known
for his good looks and especially his long flowing hair -- remember Fabio? --
the model who graced the cover of so many romance novels back in the day? --
when you read in the Bible about Absalom, think of Fabio
-- Absalom sought the throne of
David -- first, by trying to charm the people and draw them over to his side --
and then, once he had the following of a large multitude, through direct force
-- he took over David’s palace and David had to flee for his life with just a
handful of faithful attendants
-- Absalom sent his troops into the
wilderness to find David -- so, as this Psalm opens, we find David hiding in
the wilderness, in fear of his life -- if you want to read more about this in
detail, you can find the whole story in 2 Samuel 15
-- So, let’s look together at this
passage to see what we can learn about seeking God and desiring Him more in our
lives
II. Scripture Lesson (Psalm 63:1-11)
-- verse 1
1 You,
God, are my God,
earnestly
I seek you;
I thirst
for you,
my whole
being longs for you,
in a dry
and parched land
where
there is no water.
-- “You, God, are my God” -- this
seems a little repetitive, doesn’t it? -- little redundant?
-- the problem is that we’re reading
this in English -- and when we do so, we miss the richness of what David is
praying in the original Hebrew language
-- when David cries out, “God, you
are my God,” there are actually two different Hebrew words that he uses here
for God which add depth and meaning to his prayer
-- the first word we have translated
as God is Elohim in the original Hebrew -- Elohim is the plural form of God --
the same name of God that we find in the opening of the Book of Genesis -- it
refers to God in all His majesty and power and glory
-- the plurality of the name speaks
to God as the Three-in-One -- the Lord God Almighty -- Father -- Son -- and
Holy Spirit -- God in all His greatness -- God in all His glory
-- the second word David uses here that
is translated as God is the two letter Hebrew word, El -- when used alone, it
refers to the specific attributes of God’s strength and power -- narrowing down
David’s prayer in this Psalm to what he needs in this moment
-- so, reading this as originally
written, this Psalm opens with David’s cry to God as You, Elohim, are my El --
or, to put it in English -- You, Lord God Almighty, You are my strength -- the
source of my strength
-- knowing the original intent of
David’s prayer and the way he cried out to God specifically for God’s strength
and power in his time of need reminds us that it is okay to tailor our prayers
to the need of the moment
-- don’t just pray to God
generically -- don’t just pray to God in a general sense, but pray to Him with
your needs in mind
-- for instance, when we are in
need of His healing, we can cry out to God with His healing power in mind -- or
when we are in need of His providential care, we can cry out to God with His
grace and blessings in mind -- calling on God to meet us at the specific point
of our need -- whether that need is power, mercy, love, truth, faithfulness, or
any of the other specific attributes of God
-- David’s greatest need at this
time was God’s strength, power, and protection from his enemies -- so, David
prays to God with that need in mind
-- this verse goes on to say, “earnestly
I seek You” -- literally, “early I seek you”
-- in his cry to God, David is
telling God that He is the first thing on his mind -- before he rises -- before
he starts his day -- before he plans out what he is going to do -- his desire
is for the Lord -- he seeks out God and God’s presence and God’s power and God’s
will before the day begins
-- what does it mean to seek God? --
we hear that often in the church -- we are commanded to seek God -- we sing in
our hymns about seeking Him -- but what does that mean? -- what does that look
like?
-- first, to seek after God means
that you have an intimate relationship with Him -- you know Him -- you are
desiring His presence -- you are seeking Him in your life
-- notice what David says in this
verse -- Oh God, you are my God -- “My God”
-- years ago, I was taught in an
evangelism course to ask the question, “Who is Jesus to you?” -- if someone
knows Jesus, they usually answer the question with the word, “My...” -- “He is my
God -- He is my Savior -- He is my Lord” -- this lets you know that they have a
personal relationship with Jesus -- He isn’t just words on a page -- He is a
living person that they know -- they belong to Him and He belongs to them
-- but if someone doesn’t really
know Jesus -- or if they don’t have a close, personal, intimate relationship
with Him, they’ll answer more generically -- “He is the Son of God” -- He is
the second person of the Trinity”
-- do you see the difference? --
the “my” makes all the difference in the world
-- David knew God in a real and personal
way -- God was not an abstract thought -- He wasn’t “the man upstairs” -- He wasn’t
just a distant God on His throne -- no, when David prayed this psalm, he is
crying out to a God that he knows and loves and desires above all else -- he is
crying out to “my God’
-- do you know God in this way? --
when you cry out from your heart for God, do you know Him? -- and, more
importantly, does He know you?
-- so, to seek after God means that
you know Him in a real and personal way
-- to seek after God also means that
you desire more of Him -- that you can’t live without Him -- that you need Him,
as surely as you need air and water and food -- that only He can fill what is
missing in your life
-- in the movie “Rocky,” Rocky is
trying to explain to others his great love and need for Adrienne -- why he can’t
leave her alone -- why he can’t live without her -- Rocky says, “She’s got gaps
-- I’ve got gaps -- together we fill gaps” -- Rocky could not be complete
because he had gaps in his life, and he needed Adrienne to fill those gaps, just
as she needed him to fill hers -- it was only when they were together that they
were whole
-- we all have gaps -- and for many
of us, our lives are a frantic running here and there seeking something to fill
those gaps -- something to fill those holes in our lives in order to be made
whole -- in order to be made complete
-- David describes his desire for
God in terms just like this -- he has gaps in his life that no human
relationship can fill -- he has holes in his life that are meant only for God
to fill
-- so, he describes his seeking of
God’s presence and strength as a great thirst -- as thirsting for God in a dry
and parched land where there is no water
-- there is nothing else in the
whole wide world that can sustain David -- so, he seeks after God -- he thirsts
after God with his whole being -- his body and soul and spirit -- he cries out achingly
because of his need for God -- without God, David cannot live -- without God, David
cannot go on
-- and so here, before he rises for
the day, David cries out to the Living Water and says, “Fill me -- quench my
thirst -- fulfill the needs in me as I seek you with all my heart, soul, strength,
and mind”
-- in this first verse, we see David
turning his wilderness into worship as he rises early in the morning to seek
God and to know God and to worship God -- we need to learn to do the same in
our lives, too
-- verse 2
2 I have
seen you in the sanctuary
and
beheld your power and your glory.
-- David knows the Lord -- he knows
Elohim -- he knows Him as his El -- this is not just something that he read
about -- this is something that he has experienced
-- David has seen God’s power and
glory in the sanctuary, as he gathered with others to worship him -- he has
felt God’s power and glory as his heart was lifted up to God -- as he
completely and totally gave himself over to the presence of the One before him
-- the Lord God Almighty
-- when was the last time you truly
felt the presence of God as you worshiped? -- when was the last time you knew
God in the midst of corporate or private worship?
-- too often, we can get caught up
in the routine of worship -- we just go through the motions -- we just sing the
words of the hymn out loud rather than lifting them up with our hearts to God
-- we hear His word read and we listen to the message without ever really
hearing it -- we bow our heads before we eat, but we’re just mouthing the same
old words in the same old way and our hearts never carry our prayer to God
-- you know, Jesus’ harshest rebukes
were for the Pharisees, who were so caught up in following the Law and making
sure they and everyone around them was doing everything right without ever
really worshiping from the heart
-- as Isaiah wrote, they were ever
hearing, but never understanding -- they were ever seeing, but never perceiving
-- their hearts were calloused -- their ears were dull -- their eyes were
closed
-- on the outside, they looked like
they were truly worshiping God -- but even though their lips sang His praises,
their hearts were far from Him
-- when I look at the church in
America today -- when I look at my own heart -- I see this -- we have made the
worship of God so familiar -- so rote -- so ritualistic -- that we have turned
the glory and the majesty of the Lord God Almighty into the common -- into something
that we just take for granted
-- I’ve been in churches where the
music was so perfect and so professional it was like you were in a concert --
but God wasn’t there
-- and I’ve been in churches where
we struggled to sing and none of us could carry a tune in a bucket, but we all
were touched by God’s presence
-- it all comes down to the heart --
are we seeking God in our praises and our prayers? -- are we pouring ourselves
out for Him -- giving Him all our hearts, souls, mind and strength? -- or are we
merely going through the motions?
-- we need to take care that we are
actively seeking the Lord as David does here in this Psalm -- that our whole
being cries out for Him -- that we come to worship Him, privately and together,
with open hearts and open minds and open eyes, so that we can see Him and
behold His greatness -- His power -- and His glory -- just as David did
-- God is always with us -- Jesus
said He would never leave us or forsake us -- He has put His very Spirit within
our hearts -- we just need to learn to see Him again and give ourselves fully
over to worshiping the God who made us and loved us and died for us that we
might be with Him forever
-- verse 3-5
3 Because
your love is better than life,
my lips will
glorify you.
4 I will
praise you as long as I live,
and in
your name I will lift up my hands.
5 I will
be fully satisfied as with the richest of foods;
with
singing lips my mouth will praise you.
-- David reminds us here that God’s
love -- literally, His loving-kindness -- His grace -- His favor -- His mercy
-- His blessings -- are better than life
-- too many of us value our lives
above God -- we value the physical over the spiritual -- the temporal over the
eternal
-- over the last several years --
especially through the height of the Covid pandemic -- I’ve had to go to the
emergency room multiple times -- and I have been amazed at the efforts that we
put into saving a life -- at how multiple people will rush to save just one
person -- how they will even sacrifice their own life for someone else -- how
they will go to extraordinary means to save one human
-- think about what would happen if
we left here and, God forbid, came upon a wreck where a person was trapped in a
burning car -- we would do everything in our power to rescue them -- to pull
them out of the car -- to save their life -- we would withstand the heat and
the danger to bring them to safety -- but the thing is, all our efforts would
be to save the physical -- how much more should our focus be on the eternal?
-- and I’m not saying that this is
completely wrong -- that we shouldn’t seek to save the lives of others -- but as
David points out to us here, our focus -- our desire -- should be on the spiritual
first, before the physical
-- that even in our own lives, being
in the presence of God -- receiving His loving-kindness -- is of greater
importance than anything else we might consider
-- that is why Jesus said, “What
good is it for someone to gain the whole world, but lose their soul?” -- the
physical has importance, but it pales in relation to the spiritual
-- David understood this, so David
valued the friendship and favor of God above all else the world could provide
-- if something needed to be sacrificed, David would offer up his life before
he would even think of forsaking his relationship with God
-- when we begin to realize this --
when we can begin to put our focus on the spiritual and eternal above the
things of this world -- then the things of earth will slowly fade from being
what drives us and our desires will shift to what’s truly important, God
Himself
-- David’s desire for God above all
else drove his worship -- because of his great desire for God, David tells us
that his lips glorified the Father -- he spoke of God in the presence of others
-- he lifted God up in his prayers -- he praised God’s name with his heart and
with his whole being
-- David tells God that his love for
Him would never fail -- that he would worship and praise God his whole life --
that there never would be a moment when he would not remember and praise God --
that there would never be a moment when he would not offer up his worship to
the Lord God Almighty
-- this, David writes, is what truly
satisfies -- this sustains the soul, just as the richest food sustains the body
-- through his worship and praise -- in his seeking of God -- David found
satisfaction and sustenance -- praising God in this way fed his soul -- he
could not help but worship God
-- I like the way Mercy Me captures
this same thought in their new song, “To Not Worship You” -- let me share with
you the chorus to that:
“You're the one, You're the one
Who makes mountains move
Stars will not shine
Unless You tell them to, tell them
to
Conquered the grave
To make all things new
So, who am I, who am I
To not worship You
Who am I, who am I
To not worship You”
-- verse 6-8
6 On my
bed I remember you;
I think
of you through the watches of the night.
7 Because
you are my help,
I sing in
the shadow of your wings.
8 I cling
to you;
your
right hand upholds me.
-- David began his day by seeking Elohim
-- he ends his day the same -- by remembering God’s presence and power in his
life -- by reflecting on the blessings of God that he had received that day
-- it’s a good practice to take a
moment at the end of your day to reflect on where you have been -- on what you
have done -- and to see how God has been with you through it all
-- David made a practice of doing
that -- of thinking of God and His power and grace throughout the watches of
the night -- as he rested from the day’s labors, he rested in the protection of
God
-- and, keep in mind the context of
this passage -- David is on the run -- he is hiding for his life from his son
Absalom -- he is hiding from people trying to kill him
-- but because of his relationship
with God -- because he knows God and seeks Him with all his heart -- because he
cries out to him as his El -- as his strength and power -- David can lay his
head down and sleep in peace -- you can only do that if your faith is strong
-- one thing that really touched my
heart over the last few years was meditating on how the Jews viewed the passage
of time -- for us, our day begins when we wake up -- for the Jew, their day
begins when the sun sets
-- Jesus taught us to pray, “give us
this day, our daily bread” -- to give us this day, what we need -- protection
and providence -- grace and mercy -- to be with us and take care of us in this
new day
-- that carries with it a different
meaning when your day starts as you close your eyes and lay down to sleep -- when
we sleep, we are at our most vulnerable -- we are unaware of what is going on
around us -- we are unaware of what is going on in the world -- we can’t
protect ourselves
-- yet with hearts of faith and
trust, we can pray, “God, give us this day our daily bread,” and then close our
eyes and go to sleep, putting our faith and trust in Him to protect us until we
rise in the morning
-- going to sleep in this way --
remembering God and praying for His protection and providence in this new day
-- is an act of surrender and trust in El -- in the God who is strong and
mighty to save
-- we can rest in the shadow of His
wings -- at night or when danger comes, a mother bird wraps her young under her
wings to keep them safe -- David says here that God does the same -- He draws
us close and protects us through the watches of the night -- so we can rest
safe throughout the night, near to the heart of God, underneath His sheltering
wings
-- David says that this picture of
God surrounding him -- protecting him -- keeping him safe through His power and
strength -- causes his heart to cry out in praise -- he clings to God
throughout the night, trusting Him because he knows that God’s mighty right
hand sustains him and upholds him and that there is no fear when you are safe in
the hand of God
-- even though enemies seek him --
even though people are searching for David to kill him -- David can close his
eyes and sleep in peace because he is with God
-- verse 9-11
9 Those
who want to kill me will be destroyed;
they will
go down to the depths of the earth.
10 They
will be given over to the sword
and
become food for jackals.
11 But
the king will rejoice in God;
all who
swear by God will glory in him,
while the
mouths of liars will be silenced.
-- this is not David’s first rodeo
-- this is not the first time he had been hunted in the wilderness by those
seeking to take his life -- when he was a young man -- before he was made king
of Israel -- Saul had sought to kill David
-- he chased him into the wilderness
and had the entire army of Israel seeking after David, to kill him and remove
the threat to Saul’s throne
-- it was there, in the wilderness,
in the most trying time of his life, that David learned a new way to trust in
the Lord -- before he had known God as His creator and provider -- he had known
the beauty of God’s creation and God’s providence as he had roamed the pastures
as a boy and as a young man -- taking care of his father’s sheep
-- he knew God in part, but not in
whole -- but as he experienced the trial of Saul seeking his life, David came
to know God in a new way -- he came to know God as El -- he came to know and
depend on God’s strength and power and protection from those who sought his
life
-- and now we see David in a similar
situation -- once again hiding in the wilderness from those who would take his
life -- but David is older and more experienced now -- he has walked with God
for a long time -- his desire and his heart has always been for God
-- and he knows God now in a
different way -- a more encompassing way -- a more mature way -- he has seen
God’s sustaining and protecting hand in the past -- he had experienced God’s
grace in the midst of trial and trouble before
-- so, he cries out with the voice
of experience -- as God’s anointed -- as the man after God’s own heart -- he
remembers God’s grace and mercy in the past and stands on those promises
-- he knows that he will emerge on
the other side of this -- he knows that all his enemies will be destroyed -- he
knows that their efforts are in vain, because they are on the wrong side of God’s
will and God’s plan
-- and while he may suffer in the
meantime, he continues to live in the knowledge of God’s grace and mercy and
love -- he rejoices in El -- the God who sustains -- the God who gives power
and strength to the weak -- the God who is in charge, no matter how dark things
look
-- David’s voice will cry out with
praises and in worship as he rejoices at God’s victory, silencing the mouths of
all those who stood opposed
-- despite the best laid plans of
mice and men, God’s will will be done -- God’s will will be made manifest --
until finally His kingdom will be firmly established here on earth and all
those who oppose Him will be destroyed
-- David trusted in that day -- he
looked forward to that day -- and so he reminds us here in this psalm that the
most important thing of all is to remember God -- to seek Him and love Him with
all our hearts and minds and soul and strength -- to desire Him more than life
itself -- and to lift Him up in praise and worship with our whole being
III. Closing
-- in his poem, “Nearer,” C.S. Lewis
wrote:
“If you want to get warm, you must
stand near the fire;
if you want to get wet, you must get
into the water.
If you want joy, power, peace,
eternal life,
you must get close to, or even into,
the thing that has them.”
-- David and C.S. Lewis were cut
from the same cloth -- they both understood that the only source of joy, power,
peace, and eternal life was the Lord God Almighty -- and the only way to
receive these blessings from Him -- to experience His loving-kindness -- was to
get near to Him
-- we get near to God by seeking Him
-- we get near to God by lifting up our hearts and our souls to Him -- by
seeking His presence in our lives -- by desiring Him above all else
-- as we close now, let me encourage
you to take an honest look within yourself -- are you where you want to be with
God? -- are you in a close personal relationship with Him, or have you drifted
away from where you once were?
-- we all remember the parable of
the coal -- of the pastor visiting a member who had drifted away from God and
who hadn’t been to church in quite a while -- as they sat in silence, staring
at the fire, the pastor pulled a glowing red coal from the fire and set it
aside on the hearth
-- together they watched as it grew
darker and colder and the flames went out -- but then the pastor picked it back
up and put it back into the fire, and immediately it flamed up again in all its
previous brightness
-- if you are like that lump of coal
-- if you feel your fire is dwindling and growing cold -- if you don’t find
yourself thirsting for God as in a dry and parched land, as David describes it
in this psalm -- then the answer is to draw near -- to seek God again with all
your heart, mind, soul, and strength -- and when you do that, God will set your
heart on fire again
-- let us pray
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