Tuesday, January 4, 2022

He sees... He Hears... He knows

 January 4, 2022

 In case you missed reading my last blog. Here is the link to it:

https://journal4christ.blogspot.com/2021/12/hesed-omnipotent-love-that-will-never.html

Just left-click the mouse over the link above then right click and tap "go to https:"

 

Worship in WORD


Ps 31:21-22

 

21 Blessed be the Lord,

for he has wondrously shown his steadfast love to me

when I was in a besieged city.

22 I had said in my alarm,

“I am cut off from your sight.”

But you heard the voice of my pleas for mercy

when I cried to you for help.

ESV

Ps 31:19-22

 

21 Praise be to the Lord,

for he showed his wonderful love to me

when I was in a besieged city.

22 In my alarm I said,

“I am cut off from your sight!”

Yet you heard my cry for mercy

when I called to you for help.

 

 

 NIV (1984)

Ps 31:18-22

 

21 Blessed be the LORD: for he hath shewed me his marvellous kindness in a strong city.

22 For I said in my haste, I am cut off from before thine eyes: nevertheless thou heardest the voice of my supplications when I cried unto thee.

KJV

Ps 31:19-22


21 Praise the Lord,

for he has shown me the wonders of his unfailing love.

He kept me safe when my city was under attack.

22 In panic I cried out,

“I am cut off from the Lord!”

But you heard my cry for mercy

and answered my call for help.

Holy Bible, New Living Translation ®, copyright © 1996, 2004 by Tyndale Charitable Trust. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers. All rights reserved.

 

I. Hope – vv. 1-8              

II. Help! – vv. 9-18

III. Hail – vv. 19-22

A. God, for His Great Goodness – v. 19

B. God, for His Sheltering Presence – v. 20

C. God, for His Hesed [ds#j# ]#] – V. 21

D. God, Who Hears and Answers His People – v. 22


IV. Heart – vv. 23-24


Ever feel surrounded? Perhaps it’s the feeling of being surrounded by debt. Everywhere you turn, there seems to be a bill demanding that you surrender your hard-earned money to them. Perhaps it is a work schedule that offers no way of escape for some much-needed R & R., or maybe it’s your children coming at you from all sides wanting your attention or help. Whatever it is, you can definitely identify with the feelings David had who was surrounded by enemies that sought to capture and kill him (inferred from v.21).

 

And perhaps you responded as David did in verse 22. The encroaching enemy was besieging the fortress David was in. He was cut off from escaping, and he felt as if he was cut off from God as well. And David confesses that he rashly cried out in a state of panic: “I am cut off from Your sight.” Have you ever responded that way?

 

The word in verse 22 translated “alarm” (ESV, NIV) or “haste” has both meanings at its core. 

hasten, flee, fear, be terrified

(from Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament. Copyright © 1980 by The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. All rights reserved. Used by permission.) 

It seemed to David that God couldn’t see him. However, he forgot that the LORD was El Roi  “the God who sees” (Genesis 16:13). Forgetting this, David panicked. Notice here the wonderful anthropomorphic wordplay on the senses. Although he thought God couldn’t “see” him,  God still “heard” him. And God did not turn a deaf ear to David but listened to him and took action.

 

š¹m¹± has the basic meaning "to hear." This is extended in various ways, generally involving an effective hearing or listening

(from Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament. Copyright © 1980 by The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. All rights reserved. Used by permission.)

 

We learn that the word “š¹m¹±” is not a mere hearing of David’s pleas from this quote. This is not a mono-directional word (↑), but bi-directional (↑ ↓). So by implication, God not only “heard” but “answered” (NLT) David’s “supplications” (KJV) for “help.”


Worship in Witness:

When we think that God doesn’t see the predicaments we find ourselves in, remember that he does, no matter how we feel. We are never out of His “line of sight” nor out of His “earshot.” Isn’t it is ironic then that we who are visible sometimes feel invisible to God, who IS invisible? But the word of God is replete with the promise that God sees us, hears us, and knows our needs.

Here are just a few:

 

For a man's ways are in full view of the Lord,

and he examines all his paths.

Prov 5:21 NIV

 

The eyes of the Lord are everywhere,

keeping watch on the wicked and the good.

Prov 15:3 NIV

 

The righteous cry out, and the Lord hears them;

he delivers them from all their troubles.

Ps 34:17 NIV

 

Later, David would declare these tremendous truths in Psalm 139:

 

O Lord, you have searched me

and you know me.

2 You know when I sit and when I rise;

you perceive my thoughts from afar.

3 You discern my going out and my lying down;

you are familiar with all my ways.

4 Before a word is on my tongue

you know it completely, O Lord.

Ps 139:1-4 NIV

 

And listen to these words of exhortation by our Lord:

 

6 But when you pray, go into your room, close the door and pray to your Father, who is unseen. Then your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward you. 7 And when you pray, do not keep on babbling like pagans, for they think they will be heard because of their many words. 8 Do not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask him.

Matt 6:6-8 NIV

We must constantly remind ourselves of these things, lest we forget them.

 

Bless the Lord, O my soul,

and forget not all his benefits,

Ps 103:2 ESV

 

Finally (for I know this journal entry is getting long), I recognize that we are human. And like David (who often wrote of God’s ability to see, hear, and know), we can temporarily forget these “benefits.” But when we do, may the Lord by His Holy Spirit convict us and call to our minds His faithful promises. And when He does, let us cry out for mercy. Even if it is only with the word “Help!” – Amen


Worship in Promise, Poem, Prayer, and Praise

 

 


http://www.faiththeevidence.com/uploads/8/5/6/6/8566914/published/psa103.jpg?1563228052

He

He knows your sorrow

He feels your pain

He’s in your tomorrow

In the sunshine and the rain

 

He sees your falling tears

He hears your mournful cry

He’s there in all your fears

There, as the answer to the why

 

 

Hear Me When I Cry


Hear me when I cry

Hear me when I pray

Hear me when I speak

Hear me when I say

 

All I want is You, Lord

All I want is You

All I want is You, Lord

All I want is You

 

And as I cry

and as I pray

And as I long for

You every day

 

And as I walk

And as I live

And as I seek for

You, my life to give

 

All I want is You, Lord

All I want is You

All I want is You, Lord

All I want is You

 

 

He Knows by Jeremy Camp

 

 

All the bitter weary ways

Endless striving day by day

You barely have the strength to pray

In the valley low

 

And how hard your fight has been

How deep the pain within

Wounds that no one else has seen

Hurts too much to show

 

All the doubt you’re standing in between

And all the weight that brings you to your knees

 

[Chorus:]

He knows, He knows

Every hurt and every sting

He has walked the suffering

He knows, He knows

Let your burdens come undone

Lift your eyes up to the one

Who knows, He knows

 

We may faint, and we may sink

Feel the pain and near the brink

But the dark begins to shrink

When you find the one who knows

 

The chains of doubt that held you in between

One by one are starting to break free

 

[Chorus]

 

Every time that you feel forsaken

Every time that you feel alone

He is near to the brokenhearted

Every tear

 

[Chorus]

 

He knows

He knows

Songwriters: Jeremy Thomas Camp / Seth David Mosley

He Knows lyrics © Capitol Christian Music Group

 

 

Lyrics: https://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/jeremycamp/heknows.html

 

Video: https://youtu.be/OsccUg4TDd8

 

 

For Further Thought or Study


I know this quote may seem to have nothing to do with Psalm 31. Yet, I was arrested by Spurgeon’s wording here as he comments on Matthew 6:7-8, which I quoted above in my “Worship in Witness section. And certainly, it is relevant to how I ended that section (i.e., “Help! - Amen).

 

Matthew 6:7-8


Repetitions we may have, but not “vain repetitions.” Counting beads, and reckoning the time occupied in devotion, are both idle things. Christians’ prayers are measured by weight, and not by length. Many of the most prevailing prayers have been as short as they were strong.

(from Commentary on Matthew, by Charles Spurgeon. Biblesoft Formatted Electronic Database Copyright © 2014 by Biblesoft, Inc. All rights reserved.)

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