We all want to be heard, especially when we have a problem. At the customer service desk at the store we want a helpful and understanding person there to help us. When we call the help line we don’t like to be put on hold forever, only to end up having to talk to a computer. King David never had to deal with that, but he had numerous times when he definitely wanted someone to hear his cries for help. Fortunately, the One he turned to was One who would hear him, and will hear us, too, if we know who to turn to.
In our psalm for today, David reveals from the start who it is that would hear him in time of need, and that is Yahweh, the God of Israel. There were plenty of other “gods” that he could have chosen, as the foreign nations all around him had numerous pagan idols that they bowed down to, and he could have turned to one or more of them for help. So why did he turn to Yahweh? David answers that question in verse 2. He knew that the Lord God of Israel was the only one who “hears prayer”.
David knew that neither Baal nor any of the other pagan Canaanite gods ever heard the prayers said to them, and certainly could never answer or help anyone. If I go outside and talk to a rock, pouring all my troubles out to it, will it hear and help me? If I talk to the log in a fireplace, will it hear and answer my prayers? No! Do any of the false gods that people around the world worship ever honestly answer the prayers said to them? Again, no! As David stated, when mankind (“all flesh”) realizes that Yahweh is the only God who hears prayer, they will come to Him. He is not a distant or passive God, either. He hears and answers prayer.
Because the Lord hears prayer, He is worthy of praise (vs. 1). He alone is worthy of worship, which is rooted in His holiness and covenant relationship with us. We should praise and thank Him for His care of us all throughout our life. We should also praise and thank the Lord for providing atonement for our sins (vs. 3). We can never cleanse ourselves from our sins, but we do not need to despair, as God Himself has provided divine atonement and cleansing through the substitutionary death of His Son, the Lord Jesus Christ. St. Paul reminds us that in everything we are to give God thanks (I Thessalonians 5:18). Those who do, and who come to Him in worship, will be blessed (vs. 4).
The ends of the earth need to hear about the God of grace and glory. He reveals Himself to them in creation, but they must be told the good news of salvation (vs. 5-8). God answers our prayers with awe-inspiring, fear-producing acts of power. He is the God of salvation, the hope of all the ends of the earth, and the One who will judge all nations. His power is displayed in creation. It was Yahweh who established the mountains, and who stills the roaring seas. He is actively governing the world, and the universe is a witness to His glory.
God deserves our praise and worship for sending the rain, filling our rivers, and watering our fields (vs. 9-13). The fields provide food for the flocks and all mankind. We are completely dependent upon God’s faithfulness and love for us. We can find joy in God’s goodness at the beginning and end of each day (vs. 8).
As we close this psalm for the week I ask do, you know the only One who hears and answers prayer? Are you wasting all of your effort in crying out to a nonexistent, false deity who is as helpless as a rock or dead wood? Or are you trusting in another person, or even yourself, to get you out of the trouble that you are in? All too often the problems we are in are of our own or another person’s making, so how can they help us? The only One who hears and answers prayer is the Lord God. Have you turned to Jesus and accepted His salvation from sin? If you have, then you have the right to approach His throne, coming to Him in prayer, as He will hear your cries.