A Reflection on Psalm 127

How do you build a good life?

It takes a lot of time and hard work to build a life, but how do you build a life that you’re proud of? A life that is successful and satisfying? According to the Bible and the 127th Psalm, you can can’t build a good life without God’s help. He provides two blessings that are essential for longterm flourishing.

First, God provides the blessing of rest. This may seem confusing at first, so let me explain. Verses 1 and 2 describe all kinds of strenuous activities like build a house, guarding a city, and poetically “eating the bread of painful labors.” While the Bible affirms the value of work, it doesn’t view work as an end in itself. The reason that people endure long hours is so they can eventually rest and verse 2 says that God is the one who provides it. It may be rest for the night, a weekly sabbath rest, or resting for eternity, but true rest can only come from trusting in God.

Second, God provides the blessing of children. In verses 3 to 5, children are described as an unqualified good and a blessings from God. They are called “a gift,” “a reward,” and “arrows in the hard of a warrior.” But, the last line of verse 5 makes the strongest connection for me between the blessing of children and a good life. In the ancient world, the “gate” was a place of public debate and legal action. Grown children could provide support and even a defense for their parents as they age. Without an up-and-coming generation, people are left to themselves.

The lesson from this practical psalm is clear: You can’t build a good life without His help. So, the question becomes, “How do you get God’s help in building a good life?” In addition to believing in the value of children, it’s also important to trust God to meet your needs. This doesn’t erase the need to work hard, but it does tie our labor to God’s care and provision. If He can give his children what they need while they sleep, than we can rest easy and live the good life.

Devotional Thoughts for Leaders: There’s Hope for a Withering Ministry

seedling 2Ministry is similar to gardening in that both activities require a lot of time and energy before anything develops.  It takes patience and dedication to prepare the soil, sow the seed, and water and fertilize the seed so it has a chance to grow.  The Apostle Paul made this comparison while warning the Corinthian believers against jealousy and strife.  As “fellow workers” in God’s field, we are responsible to plant and water as we have opportunity, even if we aren’t the ones who ultimately produce the harvest (1 Corinthians 3:5-9).

Summer can be a tough for churches, like it is in the garden.  Most churches experience a dip in attendance, participation, and even giving as members celebrate holidays and travel with their families over the summer break.   Numbers of guests may dry up as they try to make the most of summer’s long days and warm weather.  In ministry, like gardening, water is especially important during the hot, dry summer months.  In ministry, watering could mean investing in a budding ministry relationship or it could involve some extra planning and preparation for the upcoming fall.  In addition, watering should include prayer remember that it is God, Himself, who brings the harvest.

What will you do this week to “water” your ministry?

What will you do this week to invite God’s provision and blessing?

Why Do I Have to Wait?

waitng by the roadWaiting seems like a waste of time.   It makes us feel unproductive, ineffective, and sometimes worthless.  It wears us down. Like treading water, waiting dulls our senses and saps our strength.

No one looks forward to waiting.  We pay large amounts of money and go to great lengths to avoid it.  We judge our satisfaction of products, places, and even people by how long they make us wait.  Patience may be virtue, but only in a bygone era.

Recently, I realized that waiting is a major theme in the Bible.  Many of the major characters in the Bible had to wait for days years, and even decades for their situations to be resolved and God’s promises to be fulfilled.

Noah waited for over a year on a boat filled with wild animals for the flood waters to recede (Genesis 7:6, 8:13-14).

Abraham and Sarah waited for 25 years for the birth of their special son, Isaac (Genesis 12:4, 21:5).

Joseph waited for two full years for the chief cupbearer to remember him and get him out of jail (Genesis 41:1).

Moses watched his father-in-law’s sheep on the back side of the desert for 40 years waiting for God’s plan to unfold (Exodus 2:23, Acts 7:30).

Job waited for seven days and seven nights for a comforting word from his so called “friends” and even longer for a comforting word from God (Job 2:12, 38:1).

David waited about 15 years to ascend to the throne of Israel (1 Samuel 16:1-13; 2 Samuel 5:1-5).  Mary and Martha watched their brother, Lazarus, die and then waited four agonizing days for Jesus to come to them (John 11:1-46).

The Apostles waited for three dark days before Jesus appeared to the them and commissioned them as witnesses (John 20:19-23).

The Apostle Paul waited for three years in the desert before starting his ministry to the Gentiles (Galatians 1:17-18).

In addition, the Prophets waited for God’s judgment to fall (Jonah 4:5).  The Wisdom literature contains repeated references to patience and waiting (Psalms 27:14, Proverbs 15: 18, Ecclesiastics  7:8).  Patience is even listed as one of the nine fruit of the Spirit (Galatians 5:22).

So what lessons can we learn from this survey of waiting in the Bible?

1.  Waiting is normal.

Following God does not mean you will have a wait-free life.  In fact, it guarantees that you will have to wait as He works out His perfect plan for you.

2.  Waiting is beneficial.

Waiting builds character as you learn to depend on God and His promises.  Waiting brings perspective to your life as you view things from the lens of eternity.

3.  Waiting is difficult

There are no short-cuts to patience.  Waiting is hard work, even if it feels like no work is getting done. 

Can you name another lesson we can learn from tracing the theme of waiting through the Bible?