Ps. 28:8
“Save your people and bless your inheritance;
Be their shepherd and carry them forever.�
Over the years, Psalm 28 has been an important Psalm for me both personally and pastorally. As I read the first verse of the Psalm I hear a desperate cry for help from someone who has fallen into a place they cannot get out of, and only God can rescue them.
To you I call, O LORD my Rock; do not turn a deaf ear to me.
For if you remain silent, I will be like those who have gone down to the pit.
2 Hear my cry for mercy as I call to you for help,
as I lift up my hands toward your Most Holy Place. (NIV)
However, as I have been contemplating the “Shepherd� motif and rereading the Psalm, I am noticing how this image of the shepherd in the last verse fills out the image. I have been in “the pit� before, and have been in need of rescuing from God. But to read this through the ideas of a sheep who has fallen into a pit, which fits with the last verse, it helps me better appreciate the care of God . As the shepherd knows the voice of his sheep, and the sheep that of the shepherd, so to God knows my voice when I call to him. Likewise, I can recognize how he has rescued me at time that I have been in the pit.
The interesting thing is that if I would stay where I belong, which is on his shoulders (described in the verse 8), I would not have to worry about being lost and falling into more pits.
Do we let God carry us? Or do we fall into the circular and destructive pattern of getting into these situations and God rescues us, but then within a short amount of time we are ready to go out on our own again, forgetting what that did for us last time? Perhaps one of the fallacies that we buy into is that God wants us to grow to a point of independence. Instead, it seems that he wants us to grow to a point of dependence that comes with a maturity and recognition of our limitations, instead of an arrogance belief that we should be able to exist without his intervention and protection.
As I grow, it seems that I need to become more aware of my limitations. This is not so I can claim helplessness and sit idly by as life plays out, but so that I can rely on God on a daily basis to carry me through a life that could find me in a lonely and dangerous place if left to myself.
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