3-21-21 Grace-Benson & Vail Sermon

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Psalm 143 Sermon. March 21, 2021. Grace-Vail and Grace-Benson We all want to be heard in our distress, we want to be safe from distress, we want to learn how to better avoid distress. But how do you get it? Imagine you were a King. You have skill and success, power and wealth, influence and energy. It would be easy to look to your own resources to get your desires filled. King David didn’t have to imagine. He had all those resources as King of Israel. Yet in Psalm 143, as he expressed his desire to be heard, to be safe, and to be more skilled in avoiding distress, he didn’t trust in himself. He laid out for us a path to get what we want. Let’s walk through this Psalm together. David began this psalm, “Lord, hear my prayer. Give ear to my cry for mercy.” When life is hard, one common desire is simply to be known and heard in your difficulty. We’re not entirely sure when David wrote this Psalm. His life had plenty of troubling times. Running for his life from Saul. Attacked by numerous enemies over the years. Or even the sleepless night and regret that most people face. It’s hard enough to face those problems. But if he was alone, David knew he had no chance. But a burden shared is a burden halved. David wanted to be heard, and known. He knew he needed God’s mercy. He asked that God answer him based on God’s faithfulness, not David’s, and because of God’s righteousness, not David’s. He didn’t claim to have earned the right to be heard and answered. He knew the opposite was true. He didn’t ask for rights, but for mercy. He asked God to treat him in an undeserved way. In fact, he went on to admit, no one living is righteous before you. Now at first, it may seem like David is comparing himself to others. Saying to God, “no one is righteous anyways, so I guess you shouldn’t judge me.” But actually David is laying out an argument before God that goes like this: “No one is righteous before you, and yet you seem to bless people all around me despite their unrighteousness. So on the basis of your merciful treatment of people that I’ve observed, I ask you to treat me in a merciful way as well.” David described his problem as “an enemy pursuing my soul.” This enemy is described in this way: “He crushes my life to the ground, makes me dwell in dark places like those long dead, causes my spirit to grow faint inside me, my heart within devastated.” What was this enemy? For David, could have been a literal army coming to fight him and his army, and times when it looked bleak for him. Or maybe when Saul chased him down. For us that is less common. But a spiritual attack is real as well. David was reminded in some way that the wages of sin is death; that sin is the ultimate enemy of my well being; death an enemy of life. The accuser satan comes to mind as well. Pursuing my soul. Crushing my life to the ground until I become dust and ash.. Makes me dwell in the darkness of a guilty conscience. The darkness of not trusting in God, because I feel my sins have separated him from me. Devastates my heart.


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