Monday, February 5, 2024

Worn Out Bones

I cannot believe it. I did not realize that it's been 5 months since I posted a new addition to my blog. Much has taken place in that time, including a change in my work schedule. I have had to return to working nights. Please keep me in your prayers. I need wisdom to pursue the right plans in the days ahead.



Verse 3

When I kept silent,

my bones wasted away

through my groaning all day long

(NIV 2011)


When I kept silence, my bones waxed old through my roaring all the day long.

(KJV)


For when I kept silent, my bones wasted away

through my groaning all day long.

(ESV 2016)


When I refused to confess my sin,

my body wasted away,

and I groaned all day long.

(NLT 2015)

 

 

 

I. Covered – vv. 1-2

II. Conviction – vv. 3-4

III. Confession – v. 5

IV. Call – v. 6

V. Confidence – v. 7

V. Counsel – vv. 8-9

VI. Contrast – v. 10

VII. Celebrate! – v. 11

 

Blessed – vv. 1-2

Lament/Languish – vv. 3-4

Exonerate – v 5

Seek – v. 6

Shelter/security – v. 7

Educate – v. 8-10

Delight – v. 11

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Worship in Word:

 

I. Internal: the guilt of unconfessed sin

A. Wasting – 3a

B. Wailing – 3b

A. Wasting – 3a

In verses 3-4, David reveals the inner turmoil he experienced when the sin mentioned in verses 1 & 2 remained unconfessed. As said before, David speaks in generalities in the first two verses of this psalm, but he also has himself in mind as well. So, in verse three, he takes a more personal turn and gives an example of a time when the “spirit” of  “deceit” (v. 2  NIV) had control of him. Let us take a look at the first part of the verse in this study.  

The stark and abrupt change we read about in verses 3-4 heightens the contrast between the blessedness testified to in the opening two verses and the wretchedness that led up to it. If verses 1-2 can be described as the “blessed life,” verses 3-4 may be aptly described as the “stressed life!”

What caused this stress? David begins to answer that question with the word “When.”

“When I kept silent...”

Silent from what? It becomes clear in the words that follow in verses 3-4 that it is referring to the unconfessed sin he was harboring. The NLT paraphrases this phrase in a way that makes that clear:

“When I refused to confess my sin...”

He followed the “when” with the “whys” he was stressed. Today, I am looking at the first “why” under the heading “Wasting.”

David uses a phrase that may seem strange to some. He describes his inner turmoil not in psychological but in physical terms.

“my bones wasted away”

Or, as the KJV quaintly puts it:

“my bones waxed old”

The Hebrew word bālāh (baw-law`) has the idea of wearing out. The same word is used in Deut. 8:4:

Your clothes did not wear out and your feet did not swell during these forty years.

      Deut 8:4-5 NIV

David refers to his “bones” because of the view prevalent in those days that the bones give strength to the body. As David stubbornly refused to confess his sin, he felt his strength waning. In essence, He was saying he felt worn out.

 

Worship in Witness:

Unconfessed sin can have a debilitating (weakening) effect on one’s body and spirit. However, lack of confession and repentance can also be isolating for the believer whose heart is sensitive to the Holy Spirit’s conviction. Did David feel alone? Was the sense of God’s presence missing in his life? Verse 4 would indicate that God was present, but God probably felt far off to David.

How long, O Lord? Will you forget me forever?

                                How long will you hide your face from me?

                                Ps 13:1 NIV

Lacking the sense of God’s presence doesn’t always indicate unconfessed sin in our life. However, it should be our first question when this occurs. May our prayer then be as David prayed in Psalm 139.

 

23 Search me, O God, and know my heart;

                                                test me and know my anxious thoughts.

                                       24 See if there is any offensive way in me,

                                                and lead me in the way everlasting.

                                                Ps 139:23-24 NIV

 

Unconfessed sin can cause us to feel isolated from others as well. It can cause us to withdraw into ourselves. That may manifest itself in actual withdrawal from fellowshipping with other believers. If not physically withdrawing from others, it may at least make us feel isolated emotionally or spiritually even though we are physically present.

Unconfessed sin can lead to a judgmental spirit. In judging another’s sin, we attempt to assuage or suppress our own guilt.

Why do you look at the speck of sawdust in your brother's eye and pay no attention to the plank in your own eye?

Matt 7:3-4 NIV         

Finally, left unconfessed, that sin can fester and stunt our growth in grace. It will hinder us from running the Christian race.

...let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles, and let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us.

Heb 12:1-2 NIV

One cannot “throw off” what one refuses to recognize, confess, and repent of.


Not only will it cause us to stumble, but it can also affect another’s running of the race.

1Jesus said to his disciples: "Things that cause people to stumble are bound to come, but woe to anyone through whom they come. 2 It would be better for you to be thrown into the sea with a millstone tied around your neck than for you to cause one of these little ones to stumble.

Luke 17:1-2 TNIV

If that happens, our feelings of guilt and isolation will be multiplied. Therefore, take heed of our Lord’s words that follow in Luke 17:3a.

Pay attention to yourselves! ESV

I believe that is one of the underlying messages that David is trying to convey in Psalm 32.

 

Worship in Promise, Prayer, Poem, and Praise



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Oh, Sword of God, Pierce My Soul

Oh, sword of God, come pierce my soul

Make it willing by Thy marvelous grace

To listen not in part but in the whole

And run with certainty this glorious race

Straining forward towards the finish line

And though I may stumble and fall down

I will get up and declare, “Your will, not mine.”

That I may run the race to receive the crown

Amen


Lord, May I Be Humble

Lord, may I be humble

Repent and confess my sin

That others might

not stumble

 

Let me not assuage my guilt

By judging other’s sinful ways

But through the Lamb

whose blood was spilt

 

Spilt for a sinner such as I

Spilt to pardon my shameful sin

At the cross of Calvary

Where Christ did die

V Amen

 

Then At Last (Psalm 32), by Wendell Kimbrough

 

Blest is the soul that’s free from deceit—

No need to hide what he says from what he means.

Blest is the heart forgiven by love,

Whose every fault our good Lord covers up.

 

Long I disguised and buried my shame;

Ran through the night and I groaned through the day.

Shelter I sought where I thought I was safe,

But oh silent soul, how you wasted away!

 

Then at last I told all my sins,

And with shouts of joy, lovin’ arms drew me in

To my one true safe place:

In the love of God and the family of grace!

 

So listen up, if you truly want to live:

Do not hide alone in the dark like this one fool did.

Be not like the mule as he fights against the reins.

Come let your broken heart be bound by grace!

 

Words and Music: © 2016 Wendell Kimbrough. CCLI Song #7064730.

credits

from Psalms We Sing Together, released September 23, 2016

Lyrics Source: https://wendellk.bandcamp.com/track/then-at-last-psalm-32

Video Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OdEzHA6I3Zo

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