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Psalm 137 | Psalms for Shepherds

An audible devotional on Psalm 137

November 30, 2024 • Holly Culhane, Psalms for Shepherds, P4S • Psalm 137

This week we are in Psalm 137, a psalm that some say is “no doubt one of the most troubling and difficult psalms in the Psalter”!  

 

This song is nine verses of “remember” and “forget”. The psalmist, most likely a Levite, is asking God in this prayer to help the Jewish people remember Jerusalem, the precious city they inhabited before Babylon invaded, ravaged, and destroyed, taking many of the people captive. He also prays for consequences should his people forget their city, and to remember that what Jerusalem represents in indeed their greatest joy.  

 

You will hear the psalmist say, “they sat down and wept”, something many of us have done in the most tragic, frustrating, or severely disappointing moments in our lives. 

 

This psalm is also a song of prayer for severe retribution on the Babylonians. It is believed a Levite wrote this psalm after he had returned home from captivity in Babylon with the remnant of God’s people who could return to this great city. It is interesting that 20 years after that return, Babylon was destroyed. 

 

Timothy and Julie Tennent, in A Meditative Journey in the Psalms, wrote this:  

 

“The psalmist had experienced extraordinary pain, ridicule, mocking, violence, and scorn…He [then] remembered that somewhere in the writings of his own people, God had promised that he would not let such violence go unpunished, and that he would pay back to them as they had done. Thus, he does exactly what he has been taught to do in the face of such evil and wickedness and injustice. He prays! He does not take vengeance into his own hands or strike back with comparable violence for violence. No, he laments, and he prays. He prays for God to take that action, and he trusts that God indeed will do just that. This is his only hope for not going mad in all that he has to endure.” 

 

The dear psalmist does exactly what we must do: lament our past sufferings, and celebrate that our God is loyal, worthy of worship, praise, and our complete trust. 

 

So, dear fellow under-shepherd, what past sufferings have you endured as a shepherd leader, as an influencer in your home, your church, your business, or your community? Have the sheep of your pasture harmed you, have they betrayed you, have they hurt you more deeply than you thought possible? Don’t hesitate to lament, to sit down and weep at the pain you’ve felt, the sense of loss you didn’t think possible, or the betrayal you experienced. Then seek to the follow the Father’s leading from there. Let him keep score. Let him seek justice. Believe me, He will do it far better than you or I ever could. 

 

Thank you for joining me, and thank you for loving, multiplying, and championing the shepherding message. May you live deeply into your calling this week.