the root your right hand planted

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the root your right hand planted

Psalm 80:8-19 (JDV)

Psalm 80:8 You dug up a vine from Egypt; you drove out the nations and planted it.
Psalm 80:9 You cleared a place for it; it took root and filled the land.
Psalm 80:10 The mountains were covered by its shade, and the mighty cedars with its branches.
Psalm 80:11 It sent out sprouts toward the Sea and shoots toward the River.
Psalm 80:12 Why did you break down its walls so that all who pass by pick its fruit?
Psalm 80:13 Boars from the forest tear at it and creatures of the field feed on it.
Psalm 80:14 Return, God of Armies. Look down from the sky and see; take care of this vine,
Psalm 80:15 the root your right hand planted, the son that you made strong for yourself.
Psalm 80:16 It has been cut down and burned; they were destroyed at the rebuke of your countenance.
Psalm 80:17 Let your hand be with the man at your right hand, with the son of Adam you have made strong for yourself.
Psalm 80:18 Then we will not turn away from you; give us life, and we will call on your name.
Psalm 80:19 Restore us, Yahveh, God of Armies; make your face shine on us, so that we can be rescued.

the root your right hand planted

The imagery of this prayer is beautiful. It compares God with a gardener who transplanted a vine from Egypt. The psalmist prays for God to attend to his plant, which the nations have cut down and burned.

Of particular interest is the prayer in verse 17: “Let your hand be with the man at your right hand, with the son of Adam you have made strong for yourself.”

God’s answer to that prayer was to send his Son. By the work of Christ on the cross, rescue has come, and is coming.

LORD, thank you for letting your hand be with the man at your right hand, with the son of Adam you have made strong for yourself.

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a prayer for divine intervention

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a prayer for divine intervention

Psalm 80:1-7 (JDV)

Psalm 80:1 Listen, Shepherd of Israel, who leads Joseph like a flock; you who sit enthroned between the cherubs, shine
Psalm 80:2 on the face of Ephraim, Benjamin, and Manasseh. Rally your power and walk up to deliver us.
Psalm 80:3 Restore us, God; make your face shine on us, so that we may be rescued.
Psalm 80:4 Yahveh, God of Armies, how long will you be angry at your people’s prayers?
Psalm 80:5 You fed them the bread of tears and gave them a third measure of tears to drink.
Psalm 80:6 You put us at odds with our neighbors; our enemies insult us.
Psalm 80:7 Restore us, God of Armies; make your face shine on us, so that we can be rescued.

a prayer for divine intervention

Restore us, God! That is the prayer of a man who prays, yet feels that his and all his nation’s prayers are being met by anger from their God. It is a prayer for God to change that. He depends on his God to restore his people so that their neighbors and enemies would not keep controlling and persecuting them.

LORD, restore us. We need your divine intervention.

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for his name’s sake

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for his name’s sake

Psalm 79:1-13 (JDV)

Psalm 79:1 God, the nations have invaded your inheritance, defiled your sacred temple, and turned Jerusalem into ruins.
Psalm 79:2 They gave the corpses of your servants to the birds of the sky for food, the flesh of your covenant devotees to the animals of the land.
Psalm 79:3 They poured out their blood like water all around Jerusalem, and there was no one to bury them.
Psalm 79:4 We are an object of disgrace to our neighbors, a source of mockery and ridicule to those around us.
Psalm 79:5 How long, Yahveh? Will you be angry perpetually? Will your jealousy keep burning like fire?
Psalm 79:6 Pour out your wrath on the nations that don’t acknowledge you, on the kingdoms that don’t call on your name,
Psalm 79:7 because they have devoured Jacob and made his homeland open countryed.
Psalm 79:8 Do not hold past iniquities against us; let your compassion come to us quickly, because we have become very weak.
Psalm 79:9 God of our deliverance, help us – for the mention of your glorious name. Rescue us and atone for our failures, for your name’s sake.
Psalm 79:10 Why should the nations ask, “Where is their God?” In front of our eyes, let vengeance for the shed blood of your servants be recognized among the nations.
Psalm 79:11 Let the groans of the prisoners reach you; by to your great power, preserve those condemned to die.
Psalm 79:12 Pay back seven-fold to our neighbors the abuse they have hurled at you, Lord.
Psalm 79:13 Then we, your people, the sheep of your pasture, will thank you permanently; we will report your praise to generation after generation.

for his name’s sake

God has a purpose, and that we are not the center of that purpose. We are to come to God in prayer whenever there is a disconnect between what is happening in our world, and what God wants to happen.

Asaph knew that God was allowing all the tragedy that was happening in his day. But he also knew that could not allow it to continue, because it was harming his reputation. He called on God to act for his name’s sake. We can do the same.

LORD, rescue us and atone for our failures, for your name’s sake.

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he chose David

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he chose David

Psalm 78:56-72 (JDV)

Psalm 78:56 But they rebelliously tested the Most High God, for they did not keep his warning signs.
Psalm 78:57 They treacherously turned away like their fathers; they became warped like a faulty bow.
Psalm 78:58 They enraged him with their high places and provoked his jealousy with their carved images.
Psalm 78:59 God heard and became furious; he completely rejected Israel.
Psalm 78:60 He abandoned the dwelling-place at Shiloh, the tent where he resided among Adam.
Psalm 78:61 He gave up his strength to captivity and his splendor to the hand of a foe.
Psalm 78:62 He surrendered his people to the sword because he was enraged with his heritage.
Psalm 78:63 Fire consumed his chosen young men, and his young women had no wedding songs.
Psalm 78:64 His priests fell by the sword, and the widows could not lament.
Psalm 78:65 The Lord awoke as if from sleep, like a warrior from the effects of wine.
Psalm 78:66 He beat back his foes; he gave them permanent disgrace.
Psalm 78:67 He rejected the tent of Joseph and did not choose the tribe of Ephraim.
Psalm 78:68 He chose instead the tribe of Judah, Mount Zion, which he loved.
Psalm 78:69 He built his sanctuary like the places lifted high, like the land that he established permanently.
Psalm 78:70 He chose David his servant and took him from the sheep pens;
Psalm 78:71 he brought him from tending ewes to be shepherd over his people Jacob — over Israel, his inheritance.
Psalm 78:72 He shepherded them with a pure heart and guided them with his skillful hands.

he chose David

The words “he completely rejected Israel” sound off like a warning siren in the reader’s ears. Things had gotten so bad, his people so rebellious, that the LORD had to abandon them.

But he had a plan. He would take an insignificant shepherd from the tribe of Judah, who would shepherd his people with a pure heart and skillful hands.

He can use you too. You may be an answer to the prayers for revival and health that you keep hearing.

LORD, choose us, and use us.

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lessons from the past

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lessons from the past

Psalm 78:12-55 (JDV)

Psalm 78:12 He worked miracles in the sight of their fathers in the land of Egypt, the territory of Zoan.
Psalm 78:13 He separated the sea and brought them across; the water stood firm like a wall.
Psalm 78:14 He led them with a cloud by day and with a fiery light throughout the night.
Psalm 78:15 He split rocks in the open country and gave them drink as abundant as the depths.
Psalm 78:16 He brought streams out of the stone and made water flow down like rivers.
Psalm 78:17 But they continued to sin against him, rebelling in the open country against the Most High.
Psalm 78:18 They deliberately tested God, demanding food for their throats.
Psalm 78:19 They spoke against God, saying, “Is God able to provide food in the open country?
Psalm 78:20 Notice! He struck the rock and water gushed out; torrents overflowed. But can he also provide bread or furnish meat for his people?”
Psalm 78:21 Consequently, Yahveh heard and became furious; then fire broke out against Jacob, and anger flared up against Israel
Psalm 78:22 because they did not believe God or rely on his deliverance.
Psalm 78:23 He gave a command to the clouds above and opened the doors of the sky.
Psalm 78:24 He rained manna for them to eat; he gave them grain from the sky.
Psalm 78:25 People ate the bread of mighty ones. He sent them an abundant supply of food.
Psalm 78:26 He made the east wind blow in the sky and drove the south wind by his might.
Psalm 78:27 He rained meat on them like dust, and winged birds like the sand of the seas.
Psalm 78:28 He made them fall in the camp, all around the dwelling-places.
Psalm 78:29 The people ate and were completely satisfied, because he gave them what they craved.
Psalm 78:30 Before they had turned from what they craved, while the food was still in their mouths,
Psalm 78:31 God’s anger flared up against them, and he killed some of their best men. He struck down Israel’s fit young men.
Psalm 78:32 Despite all this, they kept failing and did not believe his miraculous works.
Psalm 78:33 He made their days end, being temporary, their years in sudden disaster.
Psalm 78:34 When he killed some of them, the rest began to seek him; they repented and searched for God.
Psalm 78:35 They remembered that God was their rock, the Most High God, their Redeemer.
Psalm 78:36 But they deceived him with their mouths, they lied to him with their tongues,
Psalm 78:37 their hearts were insincere toward him, and they were unfaithful to his covenant.
Psalm 78:38 Yet he was compassionate; he atoned for their iniquity and did not destroy them. He often turned his anger aside and did not unleash all his wrath.
Psalm 78:39 He remembered that they were only flesh, a breath that walks away and does not return.
Psalm 78:40 How often they rebelled against him in the open country and grieved him in the wasteland.
Psalm 78:41 They constantly tested God and provoked the Sacred One1 of Israel.
Psalm 78:42 They did not remember his power shown on the day he redeemed them from the enemy,
Psalm 78:43 when he performed his miraculous signs in Egypt and his miracles in the territory of Zoan.
Psalm 78:44 He turned their rivers into blood, and they could not drink from their streams.
Psalm 78:45 He sent among them swarms of flies, which fed on them, and frogs, which devastated them.
Psalm 78:46 He gave their crops to the caterpillar and the fruit of their labor to the locust.
Psalm 78:47 He killed their vines with hail and their sycamore fig trees with a flood.
Psalm 78:48 He handed over their livestock to hail and their cattle to lightning bolts.
Psalm 78:49 He sent his burning anger against them: fury, indignation, and calamity – a band of deadly agents.2
Psalm 78:50 He cleared a path for his anger. He did not spare their throats from death but delivered their lives to the plague.
Psalm 78:51 He struck all the firstborn in Egypt, the first3 progeny of the tents of Ham.
Psalm 78:52 He led his people out like sheep and guided them like a flock in the open country.
Psalm 78:53 He led them safely, and they were not afraid; but the sea covered their enemies.
Psalm 78:54 He brought them to his sacred territory, to the mountain his right hand acquired.
Psalm 78:55 He drove out nations before them. He apportioned their inheritance by lot and settled the tribes of Israel in their tents.

lessons from the past

This psalm serves as a teaching song, which could be used by fathers to teach their children. The LORD commanded that each generation instruct the next, so that no one is ignorant of who God is, and what he has done. The past is not just history. There are lessons in the past that can give guidance for the believer. The past can lead us to our LORD, where he wants to meet us in the present.

LORD, teach us the lessons of the past. Make us aware of who we are by showing us what we were, and what you have done for us.

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back to the drawing board

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back to the drawing board

Psalm 78:1-11 (JDV)

Psalm 78:1 My people, listen to my instruction; bend your ear to the words from my mouth.
Psalm 78:2 I will open for wise sayings my mouth; I will speak mysteries from the past —
Psalm 78:3 things we have heard and known and that our fathers have passed down to us.
Psalm 78:4 We will not conceal them from their children, but will tell a future generation the praiseworthy acts of Yahveh, his strength, and the wondrous works he has performed.
Psalm 78:5 He established a testimony in Jacob and set up an instruction in Israel, which he commanded our fathers to teach to their children
Psalm 78:6 so that a future generation – children yet to be born – might know. They were to rise and tell their children
Psalm 78:7 so that they might put their confidence in God and not forget God’s works, but keep his commands.
Psalm 78:8 Then they would not be like their fathers, a stubborn and rebellious generation, a generation whose heart was not loyal and whose breath was not faithful to God.
Psalm 78:9 The Ephraimite archers turned back on the day of battle.
Psalm 78:10 They did not keep God’s covenant and refused to walk by his instruction.
Psalm 78:11 They forgot what he had done, the miraculous works he had shown them.

back to the drawing board

Asaph had learned to not glorify the history of his people, because it contained a very important testimony for a future generation. That testimony includes the fact that his ancestors forgot about God’s miracles and refused to walk by his instruction.

It is very important for any people of any nation to own up to their failures. The country of my birth — The United States — is all the better for having begun to address how we have tolerated oppression and cruelty toward native Americans and African Americans. We are not finished correcting for those failures. We claim to be all about making our union more perfect, and we cannot do that without cleaning up our own messes.

What is the testimony that you will leave for your descendants? Will it be a stubborn insistence that you have always done what was right? Or, will you own up to your failures, and keep striving for his will — no matter how many trips back to the drawing board that entails?

LORD, here we go again. Thank you for your loving patience as we keep going back to you to correct our mistakes.

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light and sound show

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light and sound show

Psalm 77:10-20 (JDV)

Psalm 77:10 So I say, “I am sick (to think) that the right hand of the Most High has changed.”
Psalm 77:11 I will remember Yah’s works; yes, I will remember your ancient wonders.
Psalm 77:12 I will reflect on all you have done and meditate on your actions.
Psalm 77:13 God, your way is sacred. What god is great like God?
Psalm 77:14 You are the God who works wonders; you revealed your strength among the peoples.
Psalm 77:15 With power you redeemed your people, the descendants of Jacob and Joseph. Selah
Psalm 77:16 The water saw you, God. The water saw you; it shook. Even the depths quaked.
Psalm 77:17 The clouds poured down water. The storm clouds thundered; your arrows flashed back and forth.
Psalm 77:18 The sound of your thunder was in the whirlwind; lightning lit up the world. The land quaked and shook.
Psalm 77:19 Your way went through the sea and your path through the vast water, but your footprints were unseen.
Psalm 77:20 You led your people like a flock by the hand of Moses and Aaron.

light and sound show

The psalmist reminds himself that God was present working wonders in the past. He describes God’s miraculous presence as a light and sound show where God made himself known as he worked deliverance.

We need to remind ourselves of such things, because there will be many days of trouble where we see no sign. That does not mean God is away. These times test our faith in the God who is always there, but not always recognized.

LORD, thank you for always being there. Give me faith to know this, even in the times of trouble.

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I sought the Lord in my day of trouble

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I sought the Lord in my day of trouble

Psalm 77:1-9 (JDV)

Psalm 77:1 I sound off to God, crying out to God, and he will listen to me.
Psalm 77:2 I sought the Lord in my day of trouble. My hands were continually lifted up all night long; My throat refused to be comforted.
Psalm 77:3 I think of God; I groan; I meditate; my breath becomes weak. Selah
Psalm 77:4 You have kept me from closing my eyes; I am troubled and cannot speak.
Psalm 77:5 I consider days of old, years long past.
Psalm 77:6 At night I remember my music; I meditate in my heart, and my breath ponders.
Psalm 77:7 “Will the Lord discard forever and never again show favor?
Psalm 77:8 Has his covenant faithfulness ceased perpetually? Is his promise at an end for all generations?
Psalm 77:9 Has God forgotten to be gracious? Has he in anger withheld his compassion?” Selah

I sought the Lord in my day of trouble

The worst part of times of crisis and depression is the terrible feeling of being abandoned by God. Only those who have known the favor of the LORD can know the depth of this feeling. Would it be better not to have faith at all, than to experience times like this? No, it is better to have a LORD to seek in my day of trouble.

Thank you LORD — for a relationship so wonderful that we miss you deeply when we cannot sense your presence.

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to be feared

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to be feared

Psalm 76:7-12 (JDV)

Psalm 76:7 And you – you are to be feared. When you are angry, who could stand before you?
Psalm 76:8 From the sky you pronounced judgment. The land feared and grew quiet
Psalm 76:9 when God rose up to judge and to save all the lowly of the land. Selah
Psalm 76:10 Even your wrath against Adam will praise you; you will clothe yourself with the wrath that remains.
Psalm 76:11 Make and keep your vows to Yahveh your God; let all who are around him bring tribute to the awe-inspiring one.
Psalm 76:12 He humbles the breath of leaders; he is feared by the kings of the land.

to be feared

Our God is a God to be loved because he is loving. But he is also to be feared because he is powerful and just. He humbles leaders and they know it, so they fear him. It is possible to love God and fear him as well. Knowing what we know about him, it is our only option.

LORD, we love you, and fear you.

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still chariots

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still chariots

Psalm 76:1-6 (JDV)

Psalm 76:1 God is known in Judah; his name is great in Israel.
Psalm 76:2 His lair is in Salem, his dwelling place in Zion.
Psalm 76:3 There he shatters the bow’s flaming arrows, the shield, the sword, and the weapons of war. Selah
Psalm 76:4 You are resplendent and majestic coming down from the mountains filled with prey.
Psalm 76:5 The brave-hearted have been plundered; they have slipped into their final sleep. None of the warriors was able to lift a hand.
Psalm 76:6 When you rebuked them, God of Jacob, both chariot and horse lay still.

still chariots

The thought of a thundering chariot, driven by a warrior — intent on destruction and domination — would strike terror in the hearts of the people when this psalm was written. But the psalmist knows a power greater than that of a warrior. He speaks of a God who shatters the weapons of war, and stills the horse and chariot.

This is our God. He does the same for us today. Tank or chariot, it makes no difference. Our God is greater than our greatest fear.

LORD, thank you for the assurance that we have no fear too great that you cannot silence it.

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