love, kindness, loyalty, fidelity. Hesed refers to God s covenant-faithfulness and promise-keeping love.

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*Hand out scripture text! A Godward Life of Gratitude and Wisdom Psalm 107 November 19, 2017 My desire this morning is that you will consider the lovingkindness of the Lord and choose to live a Godward life of wisdom and gratitude. Psalm 107 is a thanksgiving Psalm, but as we will see at the end, it is also a wisdom Psalm. Let me remind you that Psalm 107 is the 3 rd Psalm in a trilogy. Ps 105 focuses on the lovingkindness of God to make a covenant with Israel and all that He would do to bring them into the Promised Land where His people were to serve Him faithfully (Abraham to Wilderness Wanderings). Ps 106 rejoices in God s lovingkindness that persists in the face of Israel s unfaithfulness and anticipates a day when God s people will be exiled from the Promised Land because of their persistent sin.(wilderness Wanderings to time of Judges) Ps 107 rejoices in God s lovingkindness that has now brought the people back from exile to once again living in the land. So Psalm 107 is what we call a post-exilic Psalm; a Psalm that was written after the exile to celebrate God s lovingkindness, His covenant-faithful love that brings His people back from exile. The prayer in Psalm 106:47 for God to gather His people from the nations where they had been sent in exile is answered in [Psalm 107:2-3]. Scripture reading, responsively (Psalm 107) Those who order their lives according to God s lovingkindness have reason to give thanks and prove to be wise. The main theme in Psalm 107 is God s lovingkindness. This comes from the Hebrew word hesed, which carries with it the ideas of faithfulness, steadfast love, kindness, loyalty, fidelity. Hesed refers to God s covenant-faithfulness and promise-keeping love. The benefit of faithfully walking in a covenant with God as His children was to have His favor and blessing. The consequence of breaking covenant with God through disobedience was to experience the curses of the covenant. In other words, God s covenant-faithful love means that He will both bless His people when they are obedient and discipline them when they are rebellious. What Psalm 107 celebrates is God s lovingkindness that restores God s rebellious people when the repented. And so Psalm 107 opens by calling God s people to rejoice [vs. 1-3]. No longer are the people scattered in exile. They have been rescued from the north, south, east, and west. God has redeemed them from every adversary. The Hebrew word for adversary in vs. 2 is tsar, the very same word that is translated as trouble in vss. 6, 13, 19, 28. So the essence of vs. 2, is that they have been delivered from trouble on every side. Now the Psalmist proceeds to give us 4 portraits of God s lovingkindness that calls us to a life of wisdom and gratitude. Each of the four portraits or examples, has an identical pattern: Crisis (desperation) Cry out to God (dependence) Call to thanks giving (for God s deliverance) 1. The lovingkindness of the Lord is displayed through His providence as our Provider [vs. 4-9]. [vs. 4-9] Here the Psalmist describes a season when God s people were wandering about in the wilderness. The first thing that comes to mind is the Israelites in the wilderness for 40 years wandering about because of their sin of unbelief. God had delivered them from Egypt (to the south) but instead worshiping the

Lord with a heart of gratitude, they exasperated Him with their grumbling. They didn t want to walk by faith. They wanted life to be easy. Vs. 5 says they were hungry and thirsty to the point that their soul fainted within them. Was it because the Lord abandoned His people? No, Deut 8 tells us that God allowed them to experience leanness in order to humble them and test them to show what was in their hearts. Deut 8:3: He humbled you and let you be hungry, and fed you with manna which you did not know, nor did your fathers know, that He might make you understand that man does not live by bread alone, but man lives by everything that proceeds out of the mouth of the LORD. Life Principle: God will work through hard circumstances to teach us to trust in Him. Psalm 119 says, It is good for me that I was afflicted Before I was afflicted I went astray, but now I keep your word. You are good and do good (71, 67-68). Sometimes God will do the same in our lives. He will cause our unbelief and waywardness to be met with difficulty, even to the point that our soul faints. Why? So that we will see our need to return to the Lord and cry out to Him who alone can be our sufficiency. Have you noticed that when you are getting pressed by your circumstances that it effects your soul. We can grow discouraged and feel as though we are at the end of ourselves. This is an indication that God is pressing us to turn to Him. That is what happened in [vs. 6-7]. This calls for a response of praise in [vs. 8]. It was God s lovingkindness, His covenant faithfulness, that provided for their needs in the wilderness. By His providence God led them and provided, not only for their physical needs, but also to satisfy their souls with His goodness. Notice that in vs. 9, he not only satisfied their stomachs and their thirst He satisfied their soul. There have been times when I have prayed and trusted the Lord for a particular need and when I see Him answer, there is a satisfaction in my soul that exceeds the blessing of the thing itself, because God has lavished His goodness on me. If our hearts are in the right place, our souls will experience a deep satisfaction when God provides for our basic needs. If we don t experience soul-satisfaction when God provides for a need, it reveals that our hearts are aimed in the wrong direction. We can be so spiritually dull that we tribute God s provision to getting a break or a stroke of luck. But when our eyes are on God, and our hearts are in a posture of believing prayer, we will experience the deep satisfaction of God s compassionate and gracious work in our lives when God answers our prayer. 2. The lovingkindness of the Lord is displayed through His deliverance from the bondage our sin deserves [vs. 10-16]. [vs. 10-16] The scene here is one of captivity and bondage. It reminds us of a time when Israel was carried away into exile by their enemies and forced to do hard labor as prisoners. Where was God in the exile? How could He let that happen to His people? He wasn t allowing it. He was causing it. He was using foreign nations like Babylon and Assyria to discipline His people because of their rebellious ways. It was God s lovingkindness, His covenantfaithfulness (promise-keeping love) at work, bringing down the curses of the covenant so that they would repent and return to the Lord who alone could bless them. [Vs 10] describes their quality of life. [Vs 11] gives the reason. They rebelled against the words of God. They said, we don t need to listen to God and His messengers. We know better. We will live life our way. They spurned the counsel of the Most High. They despised the wisdom of the Most High God, the Creator. They refused to humble themselves before the highest One. In essence, they determined that they would be the god of their own lives. [Vs 12] explains God s response to their arrogance. We can either choose to humble ourselves before God or undergo the humiliation of God s discipline. Notice the end of vs. 12, They stumbled and there was none to help. God is bringing them to the end of themselves to show them that they are not self-sufficient; to show them that failing to obey God will only lead to bondage and no one can deliver them but God alone. It is the grace of God that brings a person to the point that the only possible hope, is to pray to

the God of heaven to have mercy on him and rescue him. God is bringing them back to a humble posture to cry out to Him in vs. 13. I want you to notice here that a person s relationship with God is based on his/her response to God s word. The Israelites stumbled because they rebelled against God s words and spurned His counsel. Yet, Psalm 119:165 says: Those who love your law have great peace and nothing causes them to stumble. The idea of stumbling is failing to trust God with our obedience. Trials are necessary in life. They are necessary for our growth. Yet, those who love the counsel of God s word will not stumble into disbelief and disobedience in the midst of those trials but will look to the Lord and trust in His promises. Loving God means loving His word and obeying it. Jesus said, If you love Me you will keep my commandments (John 14:15). Remember, its not your knowledge that produces intimacy with God, its your obedience that produces intimacy with God. Knowledge apart from obedience is still rebellion that pushes God away. It is the lovingkindness of God, His covenant-keeping faithfulness, that causes Him to discipline those whom He loves (Heb 12:6). It is the lovingkindness of the Lord that brings us to the end of ourselves and blesses us with just enough affliction that we will cry out to Him as Savior again. And it is the lovingkindness of God that rescues us when repent and cry out to Him who alone can deliver us. [Vs. 13-16] When God comes to deliver, no one can stop Him! 3. The lovingkindness of the Lord is displayed by restoring us from the affliction our sin deserves [vs. 17-22]. [vs. 17-22] The picture here is one of wasting disease and sickness. This affliction is a response to fools. They are suffering as a result of the stupidity of turning away from God. Think of a time when you have been so sick that you abhorred even the thought of food. That s the image in vs. [18]. Psalm 14 (which is repeated in Psalm 53) says, The fool has said in his heart, there is no God. The fools in Psalm 107 are living in denial of God by their rebellious sin. And God is allowing them to experience the consequences of that sin in sickness and disease that presses them close to death. [Vs. 19-20] Vs 20 should be understood in light of verse 17 which addresses the people as fools. Fools lack wisdom and deny God. So God sends His word to instruct them and reveal Himself to them. Their physical sickness merely demonstrated a deeper sickness. Where they really needed healing was in their hearts. But now that they have been made wise by God s word, to honor Him as God with their repentance and obedience, therefore God is pleased to lift the affliction of sickness. There can only be one proper response to this kind of undeserved lovingkindness and mercy: [vs. 21-22]. This is why we sing every week. God has delivered us from our foolish hearts and the hell our sin deserves. 4. The lovingkindness of the Lord is displayed through His providence as our Protector [vs. 23-32]. [vs. 23-32] The picture here is of a natural disaster, a storm and a sea vessel being thrown about by the waves. Vss. [26-27] vividly describe sea sickened sailors, fearfully struggling to hang on for dear life. Where did this storm come from? Who commands the winds and the waves? Who is sovereign over the weather? [vs. 24-25]. These sailors saw the wonders of the Lord and it terrified them! So what did they do at their wits end? [vs. 28-32] It was the lovingkindness of God, His covenant-keeping faithfulness, that answered their prayers of distress and delivered them as their Protector. Now just step back and take a survey of these 4 pictures of God s lovingkindness. The wilderness exposes our sense of self-sufficiency Prison will reign in our independence. Sickness will humble us. Stormy seas will expose our sense of invincibility

In each of these scenarios, God is bringing us back to the reality that we are not God. We are but frail humans. Yet in all of these scenarios, how were God s people delivered? By the lovingkindness of the Lord. Perhaps what s more important than each individual scenario, is the pattern that we see in all of them. Crisis (desperation) Cry out to God (dependence) Call to thanks giving (for God s deliverance) Where are you in the cycle of Psalm 107? Trouble is a tool in the hand of God to bring us to the end of ourselves so that we will cry out to God for mercy and experience His deliverance that we might know, and rejoice in, the lovingkindness of the Lord. What we must remember is that the lovingkindness of the Lord, His covenant faithfulness, means that He will both discipline and deliver His people because He is faithful to His covenant relationship with us. 2 Tim 2:13 says, If we are faithless, He remains faithful, for He cannot deny Himself. The fact that God, in His faithfulness, will both discipline and deliver, is a call to wisdom to which the Psalmist now turns in vss. 33-43. God s covenant-faithfulness: A Call to Wisdom (vss. 33-43) The Psalmist reminds us of God s sovereign ability to change circumstances at any moment to discipline evil and to deliver the righteous. [vss. 33-42] Now comes the question that will determine who is wise and who is foolish in light of God s lovingkindness, in light of His covenant faithfulness that will both discipline and deliver: [vs. 43]. Consider that God will bring trouble on those who rebel against Him. Consider that God will deliver those who look to Him for mercy. The Lovingkindness of the Lord in the Gospel If we were to think of Psalm 107 as a song, it has an introduction (vs. 1-3), four stanzas with a repeated course (A-D), followed by a bridge (vs. 33-42), and ending with a tag (vs. 43). Yet I would suggest that for NT believers, the song of Psalm 107 needs yet a final verse. If we were to add a fifth stanza, it might go something like this: Those who were dead in their transgressions and sins Who were without hope and without God in this world Victims of their own sinful cravings Had nothing to offer No price they could pay, to demonstrate merit Void of God s favor, doomed to torment forever But God in His mercy and love beyond measure Sent Jesus His Son to restore endless pleasure. With righteousness perfect He went to the cross Bearing the weight of our sin as His loss So that those who by faith would see the reward Of trusting in Jesus solely as Lord Would find grace to redeem and ransom their soul For Jesus their infinite joy to adore. By faith when they cried to the Lord in their trouble He saved them out of their miserable ruble. Let them give thanks to the Lord for His lovingkindness And for His wonderous love so underserving. Who is wise? Let Him give heed to these things, And consider the lovingkindness of the Lord. My friends, consider the lovingkindness of the Lord. We deserved hell, yet He brought us to the end of ourselves so that we might cry out to Him and be delivered from our sin. If God has granted us such a great salvation, why should we doubt His goodness to sanctify and deliver in much lesser troubles. Consider the lovingkindness of the Lord, and trust Him. He s faithful to discipline those whom He loves, and He s faithful to deliver those who love His mercy.

Oh, give thanks to the Lord, for He is good, for His lovingkindness is everlasting! (Ps 107:1).