Saturday, June 6, 2026

When Discipline is Necessary

Hosea 5:15 - 6:6

Some people have the mistaken belief that God is a cruel and mean deity, out to cause pain and misery in people’s lives.  They might feel this way because of some tragedies or difficult times that they have faced in life.  Perhaps they feel that God has stepped away from hearing their prayers and no longer cares about them.  Our Scripture for today answers this thought.

Today’s Old Testament reading comes from the Prophet Hosea.  He preached and ministered to the people of the Northern Kingdom of Israel between approximately 753 and 722 BC.  Ever since Israel had broken away from the Southern Kingdom of Judah in 930 BC, Israel had been steeped in pagan worship.  Hosea preached during a time of idolatry and Baal worship, of the country trusting in political alliances instead of trusting in God, of moral corruption, and of superficial religious observance.  Yahweh spoke to the people through His prophet, addressing this national spiritual condition.

As our Scripture opens, the Lord says to the people of Israel that He is returning to His place, meaning that He is withdrawing His protective presence (vs. 5:15).  He is not abandoning the people, but doing this as a discipline to them for their continual idolatry and wickedness.  His purpose is not to bring destruction upon them, but instead to draw them to repentance and back to worship of Him alone.  When God brings discipline upon His people, it is not because He enjoys punishment, but instead it is for the purpose of restoration (Hebrews 12:5-11).

Discipline will often hurt, but that pain is for our good, not out of cruelty.  God doesn’t want to cause pain for no reason if He could avoid it (Lamentations 3:33).   Think of a doctor who must prescribe a treatment that is uncomfortable, or even a bit painful, but the end result is to bring healing.  When someone’s shoulder is out of joint, it is very painful to pop it back into place, but it must be done.  The nation was like that dislocated shoulder, and God needed to treat it.

The people of Israel responded by saying they would return to the Lord (vs. 1-3).  At first glance, this might look like genuine repentance, but as we see throughout the rest of the Book of Hosea, it was very shallow and superficial.  They were treating repentance like a formula.  They assumed that God would quickly fix everything, even though there was no real change in their heart.  What they really wanted was relief from all discipline, not a restoration of their relationship with God.  They thought that if they just repeated the right words to Him, all would be well.  However, God is not a vending machine. He responds to genuine repentance, not just ritualistic words.  This is the case with many today.  They desire God’s blessings in their life, but they do not want to surrender their sins.  This is not Biblical repentance.

As we continue with our Scripture, God exposes their shallow devotion (vs. 4).  Their “good” behavior was just momentary.  It was inconsistent, and basically evaporated like a cloud in the morning, there one moment and gone the next.  Emotional repentance that fades quickly is not true, genuine repentance.

God had sent the Northern Kingdom many prophets before, the great prophet Elijah being one of them, and He would continue to send them more.  Their message and words would cut them, bringing the pain that should bring healing (vs 5).  The prophets' words were to confront, expose sin, and call the people to repentance.  However Israel ignored all of them.  This shows us that God is patient and just, and always warns the people before He brings judgment.

Our Scripture passage ends with the heart of this passage (vs. 6).  God desired His people to have mercy on others, and have a true knowledge of Him, a relational and obedient knowledge.  He rejects people going through religious rituals without having obedience to His Word.  He rejects their sacrifices if there is no submission to Him, and their worship if there is no relationship or desire to live their lives for Him.  Jesus would later quote this verse several times in His dealings with the Pharisees (Matthew 9:13; 12:7).

The prophets spoke clearly, yet Israel ignored them.  How about us today?  We have God’s Word in the Bible.  Are we ignoring His message to us through Scriptures?  Is our devotion as fleeting as a cloud, short-lived, emotion-driven, and inconsistent?  God desires steadfastness, and a heart that prioritizes obedience over empty religious activity.  As this passage teaches us, let us have genuine repentance, consistent devotion, and heart-level obedience.  And if God does see fit to bring discipline when necessary, instead of resisting or resenting it, let it draw us closer to Him.


Friday, June 5, 2026

Two Warnings

Matthew 7:21-27

It is rather obvious going through life that heeding warnings are important.  When hiking through some rugged areas, one should obey the warning signs to stay on the specifically marked paths.  One should certainly follow the warning signs about poisonous materials.  And when people warn us about getting involved with some dangerous person, we should heed their warnings, as well.  In our Scripture today from the Gospel of St. Matthew, Jesus gives us some warnings that would be wise to follow, along with the results of not heeding the warning.

Our Scripture verses come at the end of one of Jesus’ most well known messages, the Sermon on the Mount.  As He concludes that important sermon, He gives two warnings - the first that true salvation is evidenced by obedience, not empty profession, and the second that one must not just hear God’s words, but also follow what they hear.  As we will see, not everyone who claims Christ truly belongs to Christ.

In the first of these two warnings, Jesus confronted verbal profession of faith without true heart submission to God (vs. 21-23).  There are plenty of people who go tossing the Name of Jesus around, they may wear a cross around their neck or a T-shirt with some religious saying and a Bible verse on it, but that doesn’t necessarily make them a genuine Christian.  Calling Jesus “Lord” is not enough.  Doing the will of the Father is the evidence of true conversion.  Do they truly follow what the Bible says, or do they just pick out some favorite verses, and that is all?  This is not supporting salvation by works.  It is salvation evidenced by works (James 2:17-26).  A person can be religious, and verbally orthodox, but still be lost.

These are one of the most serious and solemn verses in the Bible.  Jesus says that there will be many who will be self-deceived, not just a few.  They appeal to their own works, not to Jesus’ finished work on the Cross.  And their works are impressive - preaching, casting out demons, and other miracles.  However, that activity is not proof of their salvation.  False converts often rely on what they did, rather than on what Jesus did.

Frequently they will preach an all-inclusive, non-condemning, watered-down gospel, where no mention of sin or need of repentance is ever mentioned.  That may give no offense, but no souls are ever saved.  Those who preach such a gospel will one day stand before Jesus and expect a reward, yet He will say for them to depart as He does not know them.  This is the final verdict of Jesus on false professors.  A person who lives in continual rebellion against God’s complete Word while claiming to be His follower is deceiving themselves.

The second warning that the Lord Jesus gave at the conclusion of His Sermon on the Mount was about the wise builder versus the foolish one (vs. 24-27).  Jesus described two different groups of people.  The first are those who hear His Words and do them.  They are the wise ones who build their house (life) upon the Rock of God.  They don’t just merely hear the Scriptures, but they are obedient to God’s teachings therein.

The foolish person also hears God’s Word, but they do not obey it, or they pick and choose what they want to obey and what they won’t obey, saying that some parts are “problematic” for today’s world, or just don’t fit in with their lifestyle.  Both houses experience storms, which symbolize the trials of life and temptations.  One house stands, and the other falls.  The difference is not the storm but the foundation.  Judgment reveals the true nature of a person’s faith.

The Leaning Tower of Pisa is a famous tourist attraction. It was built on a mixture of clay, sand, and shells.  As the tower was being built the ground shifted beneath the foundation.  While we might like to see this tilting structure, we don’t want our own homes to slip and crumble.  When building our life, we need to make sure our foundation is firm, made up of wisdom and faith in Jesus.  We must listen to His Word, and then do what He asks of us.  Our life’s foundation will be tested by storms.  Will it stand up to the test?  Have we chosen to build on a firm foundation?  If our spiritual house is solidly based on Jesus and His Word, we can have complete confidence that no matter what happens, our souls are secure.

In closing, we learn from this Scripture passage that religious activity is not salvation.  Neither is emotions or miracles salvation.  Jesus Christ alone saves.  Not all who profess faith actually possess faith.  Reading and obeying Scripture, and repenting of sin helps us to build daily upon the Rock of the Lord Jesus.  True believers obey the Lord.  Trials will come.  Temptations will come.  Judgment will come.  Only a life built upon Jesus Christ will endure.


Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Can I Be Good Enough?

Romans 3:21-28

In order to get passed on to the next grade in school you have to learn the material and pass the tests.  If you want to get good grades, you have to study.  To get picked for any sports team you have to practice in order to be good enough.  The same goes for being picked for the lead role in a play.  And if you want to get that prized promotion at work, you need to do well at your current position.  Going through life we see that one has to earn their way to get chosen, one has to be good enough.  One cannot make a lot of mistakes.  If you do, you will lose out.  In our Scripture for today, however, we see that no one is good enough on their own to receive the greatest of all things, that of a place in heaven, eternal life.  Try as we might, doing the best that we possibly can, we will fall woefully short.  So what can we do?  Is there any hope?  Let’s take a look at what God says in His Word.

Our Scripture today comes from St. Paul’s letter to the Christians in Rome.  He spent the first 2 ½ chapters explaining that before God, everyone stands guilty of sin, of breaking His laws.  The Gentiles are guilty, the Jews are guilty, the whole world is guilty.  We are all sinners before God, and there is nothing we can do.  But as Paul continues in the middle of chapter 3, we see a dramatic shift.  We come to a “But now…..”  As Paul will explain in our Scripture passage, God has revealed His righteousness in a way that does not depend on our ability to try and do right, to try and impossibly earn our way, to be good enough to earn salvation.

As Paul begins to explain in our Scripture, God’s righteousness is revealed apart from the law (vs. 21).  The righteousness of God is the righteous status that God gives to all believers.  It is “apart from the law”, meaning that it is not earned, not merited, nor achieved by obeying God’s laws, which is impossible to do on our own.  Salvation has always been by grace through faith.

This righteousness comes to us through the Lord Jesus Christ.  It is available to everyone, however it is applied only to those who believe in Him and accept Him as Savior (vs. 22).  Salvation is offered to all people universally, but it is applied individually by faith. Faith is the sole instrument of receiving God’s righteousness.  This is something that many people take offense at, that God will accept anybody, literally anybody, who comes to faith in Jesus Christ.  Think of the most terrible, sinful, and vile person.  If that person turned to the Lord Jesus, and genuinely called upon Him for salvation, they would be saved and receive a place in heaven.  However, if someone whom the world might think is a “good person”, but they die having never accepted Jesus as their Savior, they will not see heaven.  Salvation is given to all who believe.

Paul continues by explaining that there are no “good” people, everyone has sinned and fallen short of the glory of God (vs. 23).  There is universal guilt, every person without exception continually falls short of God’s perfect standard.  To those who accept Jesus, they are freely justified (vs. 24).  Justification is a legal declaration by God that the sinner is righteous because Jesus Christ’s righteousness is credited to their account.  This is given to believers freely.  It is unearned favor purchased by His Blood.  To obtain His gift we must accept the truth that we have all sinned before God, which breaks our relationship with Him.  This break can be restored when we acknowledge our sin, repent of it, and turn by faith to Jesus, and accept His death on the Cross on our behalf.

Jesus’ death on the Cross satisfied God’s just wrath against the sins we all have committed (vs. 25). God demonstrated His righteousness by punishing sin in Jesus.  The Cross is not merely an example of love.  It is a substitutionary, wrath-bearing sacrifice.  Jesus’ sinless Blood blotted out our sins forever.  But for that Blood to be effective in our life, we must accept it by faith.

The Cross allows God to remain just, as He does not overlook sin, but also allows Him to be the Justifier, as He can declare sinners who accept Jesus as righteous (vs. 26).  This is the heart of the Gospel - God satisfies His own justice through Jesus Christ so He can save sinners without compromising His holiness.

Justification by faith eliminates all human pride (vs. 27-28).  No one can brag that their good works earned them a special spot in heaven.  Since salvation is by faith, no one can boast of anything.  Otherwise heaven would be filled with people going around saying how good they were, and that my good works were better than yours, and yours were better than the next person, and so on.  Paul concludes by saying salvation is by faith alone.  No sacraments, rituals, moral efforts, or religious works contribute to it.  It is the empty hand receiving Jesus.


Monday, June 1, 2026

Our Place of Safety

Psalm 31

When I was a child growing up in the 1960’s the children of the neighborhood would get together to play various outdoor games, such as “tag”, or other games which had a safety place, where if you ran to that, the opponent couldn’t get you out.  Sometimes boardgames have a space that is safe from getting taken out, as well.  With all of the dangers and trials of life, it would be nice to have a safety place, where our enemies, real or figurative, could not harm us.  Our psalm for today speaks of just such a place.  Let’s take a look so that when we want or need a safe place we know where to run to.

Psalm 31 was written by David, possibly when he was fleeing for his life from King Saul, or perhaps when his son Absalom staged a coup against him and he had to flee Jerusalem.  David knew where his safety was, and who to trust in the middle of severe distress, betrayal, slander, and danger.  Right in the opening lines we see that he proclaimed that God is his refuge and righteous deliverer.  This was not casual belief.  This is total reliance upon Yahweh for deliverance.  David cried out to the Lord, praying for deliverance, not because of anything good he had done to deserve it, but because of God’s righteousness (vs. 1).  He appealed to God’s character, not his own.

David called God his rock and his fortress (vs. 2-3).  The many large rocks and boulders in the wilderness were a safe place to hide behind. Ancient communities would build fortresses when they knew an enemy army was on the way, so the people could flee to that for safety.  One was protected from danger when hiding behind a large rock or within a fortress.  David knew that Yahweh was his safety place.  The enemy could not harm him when he was in God’s care.

We all have times in our life when we feel the enemy is pursuing us or our family.  We need a safe place to run to.  We may have real, literal enemies pursuing us, or it could be other serious problems, such as major health problems, financial problems, or other worries.  Like David did, we can turn to God.  We can commit ourselves completely into His hands (vs. 5).   The Lord Jesus is our Rock and Fortress, our place of safety when we are tired of running and hiding.  He offers relief for those who seek security in the strength of God’s presence.  Like David found, we too can be pulled out of the net that tries to trap us (vs. 4), and have our feet set in a wide place (vs. 8), a picture of safety and freedom.

The Bible doesn’t deny the reality of truly deep suffering.  David described himself as consumed with grief, weakened by sorrow, and surrounded by enemies (vs. 9-13).   As we read, David said he was a reproach among both his enemies and his neighbors, and repulsive to his acquaintances (vs. 11).  Everyone, it seemed, was against him.  Not only was he suffering physically and emotionally, he also was socially, as well.  People were plotting against his life (vs. 13).  This is something that was also echoed in the life of Jesus, during His last days (Matthew 27:1).

There are times in the middle of our trials, that we also experience betrayal, slander, and abandonment.  We may be misunderstood, are lonely, have lies told about us, and even be abandoned by those we thought were our friends.  David’s enemies foreshadow the world’s hostility towards God’s people.  Like David, and most importantly, also like the Lord Jesus, we can put our trust and hope in the Lord, who is our only true anchor.

The turning point of this psalm is when David proclaims his trust in the Lord (vs. 14).  He goes from looking at all the problems he is facing, and how his enemies are attacking, to renewed trust in Yahweh.  David knew that all power and authority are from God, and that He controls whatever happens in his own life (vs. 15).  God controls our circumstances, our lifespan, and our destiny, not ourselves.  Our life is not governed by chance but by God’s hand.  He permits suffering, He also provides comfort.  Deliverance is God’s prerogative, not man’s, and the wicked will ultimately be silenced and judged (vs. 17-18).  We don’t need to let our problems and troubles discourage us.  Our life is in Jesus’ hands.  Instead, focus on finishing each day in a way that will please Him.

David ended his psalm with triumphant praise (vs. 19-24).  He praised God for His goodness, which is laid up for those who fear Him.  David also praised Him for His protection, as believers are hidden in the secret place of His presence, a picture of spiritual security.  When he panicked and felt that God was not seeing him, he remembered the truth, that God still does hear his cry (vs. 22), just as He does for us.  We may have moments of doubt, but God remains faithful despite our weakness.

David closed with an exhortation to be of good courage and hope in the Lord (vs. 24).  The world doesn’t offer much hope for those in despair, but God does.  If we surrender to Him in moments of despair like David did, He will provide what we need.  He wants to strengthen His children so that they can bear up under the weight of tough circumstances.  God gives hope to the hopeless and help to the helpless.  The hope that God gives is beyond the scope of human limitations because God is a good God.  Like in those childhood games with the neighbors, run to the Lord Jesus, and find in Him your place of safety.


Saturday, May 30, 2026

Blessings or Curses

Deuteronomy 11:18-21, 26-28

If you had to pick blessings in your life or curses, which would you choose?  You may think that is a very silly question, as everyone would pick blessings, wouldn’t they?  One would certainly think so.  God has given us in His Word the way one can ensure blessings in one’s life, and the way that one will incur curses.  Yet, all too often people are continually going the route of choosing curses, either unknowingly, not believing, or not caring what they are doing.  Let’s look into God’s Word and see what it says about receiving blessings or curses.

Today’s Scripture comes from the Book of Deuteronomy in the Old Testament.  Deuteronomy contains Moses’ final sermon series to the nation of Israel right prior to their entering in and taking possession of the land that God had promised them, as far back as the days of their forefather Abraham.  The people had seen God’s mighty acts when they left Egypt and all throughout their years in the wilderness.  God promised that if they obeyed His Word, they would prosper in the new land.  However, God’s Word must be internalized and taught diligently to their children.  They would need to make a choice between being blessed or being cursed.  This is not just for the ancient Israelites several thousand years ago, it is also very applicable to believers today.  What God instructed them, He is also telling us today.

As our Scripture passage opens, God instructs the people, and us, that we need to keep His Word in our heart and soul (vs. 18).  We need to saturate our life with His Word.  We do this by incorporating and integrating the Bible into our life, letting it shape our affections, convictions, and decisions, and not just having mere outward conformity.  The Bible should be our inner compass.

Moses spoke of binding God’s Word on their hands, and as frontlets between their eyes.  Today some very Orthodox Jewish men will wear phylacteries on their foreheads.  They are little boxes that contain bits of the Torah, and are tied on their forehead with leather straps when they pray, as a literal following of this verse.  Jesus warned, though, of this becoming just an empty ritual (Matthew 23:5).  It is more important that God’s Word govern our thinking (“between your eyes”) and our actions (“on your hand”).  We must keep God’s Word constantly before us.

Next, God instructs us that we need to be teaching His Word and ways to our children (vs 19).  This is to be continual daily instructions, when we sit down, walk, at bedtime, and upon rising.  Parents should be the primary spiritual teachers, keeping a Scripture-centered home.  They are to train and raise their children, not the schools nor the culture.  This is a command of God, not just a suggestion, and will safeguard against generations shifting away from Him.  He also instructs us to write them upon our door posts and gates (vs. 20).  Today we can do this by having framed Bible verses in our homes.  I have several cross-stitched Bible verses on my walls.  This way our homes are publicly identified with God, and where Scripture is not hidden away.

The reason for this is so that we can obtain God’s blessings in our life (vs. 21).  This is not prosperity-gospel teaching, which is tied to God blessing you so long as you give to any number of prosperity preachers (so he can buy another personal jet for himself!).  This was a covenantal blessing for Israel, but also teaches us today that a society grounded in God’s Word will flourish.  However, one that rejects His Word will decay.

God now confronts us with a moral decision (vs. 26-28).  We have a choice between having His blessings in our life, or having His curse.   His blessing is not automatic, nor His curse arbitrary or haphazard.  God’s moral law is objective and binding.  It is impossible to be morally neutral.  Either one obeys God and receives blessings, or he disobeys and receives curses.

If we choose to obey God and the Bible, we will receive His favor, protection, provision, and stability (vs. 27).  This is consistent with the Biblical pattern found in Psalm 1, Joshua 1:8, and Proverbs 3:1-6.  If we choose to disobey the Bible, we will lose God’s protection, the nation will decline, we have spiritual darkness, and ultimately God’s judgment (vs. 28).  We cannot choose what we obey or not obey, either.  We can’t pick and choose, treating the Bible like a cafeteria, saying that we don’t like this, or that particular verse “is problematic in today’s world.”  God’s commands are not optional.  Sin has real consequences.

As we close, we see that in order to receive God’s blessings in our life, we need to store His Word in our heart, teach it to our family at home, and obey it in our daily life.  Obedience is the dividing line between blessing and curse.  God places before every person and every generation the same choice - blessing through obedience or curse through disobedience.


Friday, May 29, 2026

Living Water

John 7:37-39

Have you ever come to a pond that is filled with nasty, slimy water, and with rotted or dying plant life?  You’re not likely to want to dip your hand in and take a drink!  Sometimes a fish tank can get rather nasty, too.  If there is no movement on the surface of the water in your fish tank, there will be no oxygen, the water will become nasty and the fish will die soon.  That is why we put those air-bubblers in there.  Swiftly moving water, or “living” water from a mountain spring can taste good and be refreshing, but no one wants warm, stagnant water.  Moving water brings life.  Water that has sat for a long period of time will taste nasty, grow bacteria, and could make one sick.  In our Gospel reading for today, Jesus speaks of a different type of “living water”, one that also brings life.  Let’s take a quick look at what He was talking about.

John Chapter 7 takes place in Jerusalem, and the Jewish festival of Sukkot, also known as the Feast of Tabernacles, was finishing.  This feast is held in the autumn, and commemorates Israel’s wilderness wanderings.  Each day there was a water-drawing ceremony, where the priests poured water at the altar in the Temple.  This would symbolize God’s provision and the hope of future spiritual renewal.  It was during this festival, with all of these ceremonies being performed in the sight of the people, that Jesus stood and proclaimed our Scripture verses, that He is the true source of the water they were symbolically celebrating.

Jesus knew that these people were spiritually thirsty.  Most everyone at one time or another has a spiritual thirst.  They want something more in their life, their soul desires God, but they don’t know how or where to quench that spiritual thirst.  All too often they end up drinking from the spiritual equivalent of the foul and fetid pond.

The Savior told us that whoever is thirsty should come to Him and drink (vs. 37).  First, we must know that we are thirsty, to be aware of our spiritual needs.  Jesus says if anyone is thirsty - His offer of salvation is universal.  He didn’t call just those of a certain race, or who looked like this or that.  Jesus said “anyone”.  Those who are spiritually thirsty are to come to Him.  Salvation is found in Jesus Christ alone.  Lastly, they are to drink, that is, personally appropriate the salvation He offers by faith.  Salvation does not come by religious rituals or works, but is Christ-centered, grace-based, and faith-activated.

Jesus then tied His promise directly to belief - the one who believes in Him will have rivers of living water flow from their heart (vs. 38).  Salvation is by faith alone (Ephesians 2:8-9).  This promise is not for the world generally, but instead it is for the believer specifically.  Also, belief is not just intellectual assent, but is instead trusting in Christ’s Person and His saving work on the Cross.

As Jesus stood among the crowds, He stated that to those who believe, out of their hearts will flow rivers of living water (vs. 38).  The living water symbolizes the Holy Spirit’s life-giving ministry.  The Spirit not only indwells the believer, but also overflows from the believer to bless others, producing fruit, power, witness, and spiritual vitality.  This doesn’t just come out like a trickle.  Jesus said it pours forth like a river.

The Apostle John, as he wrote his Gospel, clarified that Jesus was indeed speaking of the Holy Spirit, which was yet to come (vs. 39).  The Spirit would be given to believers, not to the world or to those just superficially religious, but to those who believe in Him.  The Holy Spirit would come later, after Jesus’ death on the Cross, His resurrection, and ascension.  Only after this redemptive work could the Holy Spirit come to indwell believers permanently.

As we see in this brief passage of Scripture, salvation is found only in Jesus Christ.  He, alone, offers the living water.  Today, since we all live post-Pentecost, the Holy Spirit indwells every believer from the moment they accept Jesus as their personal Savior (Romans 8:9).  Jesus said “if anyone thirsts”, the Gospel invitation is universal.  No one is excluded, but one must come to Him.

Are you thirsty?  If so, come to Jesus Christ for salvation.  If you have already accepted Him, but feel spiritually dry and empty today, renew your fellowship with Him.  Is the Holy Spirit flowing through you to others?  His presence should produce love, joy, and peace.  It should move us to bring the Gospel message to others, and bring holiness in our lives.  If the “rivers” feel more like “drops”, the issue is not with God’s supply but the level of our surrender to Him.

Jesus did not promise a cup-full or a trickle.  He promised rivers - abundant, overflowing, and unstoppable.  The Christian life is not meant to be dry and stagnant.  It is meant to be Spirit-filled, Christ-centered, and overflowing with His life in us.  Each day let us yield ourselves to Him fully and completely.  And if you have not yet accepted Him as your Savior, come to Jesus and drink of the living water He offers.


Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Creation in the Psalms

Psalm 104

Poets and song writers will often see, hear, or read something that inspires them greatly, and then they do what they do best, write a song or poem about what moved them.  In our psalm for today, the unknown author likely had read or heard recited Genesis 1, and was moved to write this psalm.  When Moses penned the words of Genesis 1, he wrote it as a narrative.  The psalmist observed God’s protective care in His creation, the order of the universe, and His ultimate authority over life and death.  Then he wrote this psalm as a song of worship to the Lord, celebrating Him as Creator, Sustainer, and Ruler over all creation.  Let’s take a look at God’s Word here.

There are several hymns which speak of Creation, such as “All Creatures of Our God and King”, by St. Francis of Assisi, “All Things Bright and Beautiful”, and “How Great Thou Art”.  This psalm affirms that there was a literal creation by God.  Creation was not by chance or evolution.  God is the divine Ruler over nature, life, and death, and every human is dependent upon Him for every breath.  Nature is not divine.  God is distinct from His creation, yet He is intimately involved in it.

Our psalm opens with personal worship of the Lord God, blessing Him and proclaiming His majesty and glory (vs. 1-4).  This also corresponds with Genesis 1:1-4.  The psalmist describes God as being clothed with light, which shows His holiness and glory.  God stretched out the heavens, creating them by His divine command.  He rides upon the clouds, which shows His power and rule over the weather.  He controls the weather, not man.  The angels, a different type of created being, are his servants.  They are not independent powers.  God is not a part of creation.  He is above it.  Light, heavens, winds, and angels are His tools.

Next we see God shaping the earth, establishing its foundations (vs. 5-9).  This is paralleled in Genesis 1:6-10.  Here we see God setting the earth on its foundation and covering it with water, setting its boundaries.  This is not mythical language.  This psalm describes literal acts of God during the creation week.

Continuing on we see how God provides for all of His creatures (vs. 10-18).  We see how He provides water for animals and plant-life, along with food for all.  God also provides homes for each creature, including trees for the birds, and homes in the rocks and mountains for goats and rock badgers.  Nature is not self-sustaining.  It is God who maintains the environment and every creature’s habitat.

God also governs time and seasons, as we see in verses 19-23.  He made the moon for seasons and the sun for daily cycles.   He made some animals active during the night, and others during the day, including man, with the work he does.  Time itself is a creation of God.  The orderliness of the universe reflects His wisdom.

God showed forth His wisdom through His creation of the sea and all the various creatures therein (vs. 24-26).  If you’ve ever been out on a ship in the ocean, you know how vast those oceans are.  And within the oceans are innumerable creatures, both large and small.  The psalmist mentions the Leviathan, which is a large but unspecified sea creature, possibly now extinct.  He mentions the Leviathan playing in the ocean.  We see that God delights in His creation.

We see that God controls life and death (vs. 27-30).  All creatures, including mankind, look to Him for their food, and we all live by His provision.  God created us by His Spirit, and we will die when He withdraws our breath.  Life does not come on its own.  God is the giver and sustainer of life.  The psalmist closes with worship of the Lord and a righteous desire and longing for a world free from sin (vs. 31-35).  True worship includes a desire for righteousness and the removal of all sin.

As we look back over this song of creation, we see that God’s creation is purposeful, ordered, and personal.  He sustains all of life, moment by moment.  He also controls weather, seasons, life, and death.  As we go about our life, take time to observe God’s marvelous creation, and be reminded of His power and goodness.  Every breath that we take is a gift from God.  And remember, if He feeds the lions and the birds, He will certainly care for His children.