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Psalm 85 - Divine Intersection

  • Writer: Chad Werkhoven
    Chad Werkhoven
  • 16 minutes ago
  • 3 min read

God's righteousness and your peace have come together.



PSALM 85 (NASB)

For the choir director. A Psalm of the sons of Korah.


1 O LORD, You showed favor to Your land;

You restored the captivity of Jacob.

2 You forgave the iniquity of Your people;

You covered all their sin.

Selah.

3 You withdrew all Your fury;

You turned away from Your burning anger.


4 Restore us, O God of our salvation,

And cause Your indignation toward us to cease.

5 Will You be angry with us forever?

Will You prolong Your anger to all generations?

6 Will You not Yourself revive us again,

That Your people may rejoice in You?

7 Show us Your lovingkindness, O Lord,

And grant us Your salvation.


8 I will hear what God the Lord will say;

For He will speak peace to His people, to His godly ones;

But let them not turn back to folly.

9 Surely His salvation is near to those who fear Him,

That glory may dwell in our land.

10 Lovingkindness and truth have met together;

Righteousness and peace have kissed each other.

11 Truth springs from the earth,

And righteousness looks down from heaven.

12 Indeed, the LORD will give what is good,

And our land will yield its produce.

13 Righteousness will go before Him

And will make His footsteps into a way.



Canons of Dordt


Point 2, Article 1 - The Punishment Which God’s Justice Requires


God is not only 

  1. supremely merciful, 

  2. but also supremely just. 

  3. This justice requires 

    1. (as God has revealed in the Word) 

    2. that the sins we have committed against his infinite majesty 

      1. be punished with both temporal and eternal punishments, 

      2. of soul as well as body. 

  1. We cannot escape these punishments

    1. unless satisfaction is given

    2. to God’s justice.




Summary


Psalm 85 poetically presents the process of repentance. Notice where repentance so often begins - conventional wisdom places its first steps in realizing the wrongness of your actions. Although such a realization is an important step, the psalmist in v1-3 places the first step of repentance in being reminded of God's simultaneously righteous and gracious nature. The LORD showed favor, He restored the fortunes and forgave iniquity and covered sins. He set aside wrath (other translations: hot/burning/raging anger) and turned from His fierce anger.


It makes sense that repentance must begin with this theological understanding of who God is. Why else would one repent if there was no fear of punishment? Why would one repent if there was no possibility of the resulting hot/burning/raging anger and wrath being set aside? 


The superscriptions that precede many Psalms are different than the headings that appear before other passages in the Bible. Those headings have been added by the publisher as a handy convenience to help us locate and summarize passages. But the superscriptions in the psalms are an ancient indication of not only who wrote the psalm, but what the psalm was written for.


There are 55 psalms (roughly 1/3) designated for the director of music. Among other things, it meant the psalm was a key part of ancient Hebrew liturgy - it was meant to be sung by all the people. Notice here that God wanted His people singing of His wrath! But not just singing about its hot/burning/raging nature, but about how God sets it aside in order to show favor, restore and forgive the sins which He has covered.



  Dig Deeper  


After completing this critical first step of coming to understand God's righteous / gracious nature, Psalm 85 walks us through the remaining aspects of repentance:


  • Asking God our Savior to restore (v4) and revive (v6) us;

  • Promising to listen to what God the LORD says;

  • Being certain that His salvation is near those who fear Him, and that somehow God doesn't compromise His holy nature as He forgives our sin. God's covenant requirements (ḥěʹ·sěḏ) are met by His faithfulness, and His righteousness [holy justice] and peace kiss each other. To the psalmist, this must have seemed impossible. Of course we know that God accomplished this through Christ!

  • An assurance that upon our repentance, that the LORD will indeed give what is good.



  • ACKNOWLEDGE WHO GOD IS: Our Father, God our Savior in whom loving kindness and truth are met together;

  • ALIGN YOUR LIFE WITH GOD'S WILL: Pray that as you prepare for Lord's Day worship that your church's music and liturgy will remind you that God has set aside His wrath and calls you to repent before Him;

    ASK GOD FOR WHAT YOU NEED:



 
 
 

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