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Psalm 125 | Psalms for Shepherds

An audible devotional on Psalm 125

July 27, 2024 • Holly Culhane, Psalms for Shepherds, P4S • Psalm 125

This is Holly Culhane with Presence Point and welcome to our Psalms for Shepherds podcast.  

 

This week we are in Psalm 125, yet another Psalm of Ascent. This one wonderfully names the benefits that faith and faithfulness bring to God’s people. 

 

This song mentions “those who trust in the Lord”, who are called good and upright. One translation puts it this way: “those whose hearts are in tune with God”.  

 

And this song speaks of the wicked and refers to them as “whose scepter will not rest on the land allotted to the righteous”. 

 

In the words of Charles Spurgeon, “Two kinds of men are always to be found, the upright and the men of crooked ways... When God is smiting the unfaithful, not a blow shall fall upon the faithful.” 

 

It may not always seem like this last sentence of Spurgeon’s is true, but it is! For believers today, this promise will ultimately be fulfilled when God’s people from every nation, tribe, and tongue reign in the new earth. Ultimately, not a blow shall rest on the righteous. 

 

It is that confidence that is what keeps followers of the Good, Great, and Chief Shepherd standing in moments where, in our humanness, we want to sink to the floor and crawl into a corner. It is then that we can have the confidence of verse 1 of this psalm: “Those who trust in the Lord are like Mount Zion, which cannot be moved, but abides forever”. And, from verse 2: “As the mountains surround Jerusalem, so the Lord surrounds his people, from this time forth and forevermore.” 

 

And that, fellow under-shepherd, is what we must rest in today. No matter what is tempting to shake us, “even as the mountains surround Jerusalem, so the Lord surrounds” us. 

 

No matter what wickedness is looming before us, it shall “not rest on the land allotted to the righteous”. 

 

No matter what’s happening in our family, among our team members, in our organizations, or among the congregation, even as we lead in the most difficult of situations, we can stand firm, we can obey the father, we can continue to talk to and listen to him, and we can have hope in the God of the universe and every one of His promises. 

 

Thank you for joining me this week. And thank you for the commitment you have made to shepherd well.