Songs are often written about and for holidays and other special days and occasions. We have hundreds of Christmas carols, both religious and secular ones. Our churches sing special hymns for Easter. There are birthday songs and anniversary songs. Today’s psalm is also a song written to commemorate a special day and event for the Jewish people, that of the Exodus and Passover. Let’s look at what message God’s Word has for us in this Scripture.
Traditionally, today’s psalm is part of a group of psalms, the Hallel or praise psalms, ones that the Jewish people sing during the Passover. The psalm celebrates the Exodus, which is the foundational act of redemption in the Old Testament. It also presents a picture of God’s saving power for His people in every generation. This psalm is historical, as it is rooted in actual, literal events that happened to the Jewish people when God delivered them out of slavery in Egypt. It is doctrinal, as it reveals God’s character, along with being prophetic, as it foreshadows Christ’s redemption. Lastly, it is a practical psalm, as it calls believers to have trust in, along with reverence, for God.
As we look at Psalm 114, we see in the first four verses how God redeems His people. The exodus from Egypt was a very decisive, identity-forming moment in the history of God’s people (vs. 1). They were delivered from a literal place of bondage. In various places in the Bible the word “Egypt” not only refers to the country in northeast Africa, but also is often a picture of the world system and sin’s dominion. Just as God brought the people of Israel out of their physical bondage and then into the Promised Land, redemption begins with a separation - God brings us out of sin’s dominion and into the kingdom of His Son.
God intended His people to be His dwelling place and His kingdom (vs. 2). They were to be His sanctuary, where His holy presence would be among them. They would also be God’s dominion, where His rule would be over them. This anticipated first the Tabernacle where God’s presence would be, then later the Temple, and ultimately the indwelling of the Holy Spirit in believers (I Corinthians 6:19).
The unknown author of our psalm continues with a poetic description of the parting of the Red Sea (vs. 3). The sea “fled” because God was present there. The events of the Exodus are not explained by natural phenomena, but by the Lord’s supernatural intervention. Though a body of water does not naturally part in two, God decides what nature will do. Then we read verse 4, which refers to Mt. Sinai trembling when God descended there in fire when He delivered the Ten Commandments to Moses (Exodus 19). Creation is reacting to its Creator. God’s presence, when He appears among His people, is not mild or passive. It is earth-shaking!
The last four verses of our psalm describe creation trembling before the Lord God. The psalmist asks a rhetorical question when he speaks to the sea (vs. 5-6). He mocks these forces of nature, those of the sea and mountains, not to belittle them, but as a way to magnify God. The only answer that one could give would be that God Himself was moving among His people.
Verse 7 is the theological center of the psalm. Though the events of the Exodus happened to the people of Israel, it is not just about them. It is about God revealing Himself to those who put their faith and trust in Him. The proper response to God’s presence is reverence, awe, and submission. The psalmist closes in verse 8 with a reminder of how God provided water from a rock for the people on more than one occasion (Exodus 17:6; Numbers 20:11). He can supply what His people need, bringing life out of barrenness. The Apostle Paul reminds us that the rock is a type of Christ (I Corinthians 10:4).
In closing we see that the sea, the Jordan River, the mountains all obey God. This affirms that He is the Creator and that He is sovereign. We also see that God dwells among His people in Christ, dwelling in believers through the Holy Spirit, and will physically in eternity (Revelation 21:3). The events of Exodus are a picture of salvation and deliverance from sin.
Too often today modern Christianity loses a sense of awe and reverence of our holy God. Psalm 114 calls us back to a deeper reverence and worship. Our psalm reminds us that God is still able to deliver His people. If He can part seas and shake mountains, He can handle the burdens we carry. He still turns “rock into water” - He still works miracles in barren hearts and situations.