Our psalm for this week is one of my three all-time favorite psalms. This psalm, along with Psalms 34 and 103, top my list of favorites. Psalm 27 was one of the first chapters of the Bible that I memorized. It is one of King David’s richest confessions of faith in the Lord, showing his confidence in Yahweh in the face of fear, enemies and uncertainty. We all face times in our life when we also face fear, sometimes great fear where our whole world seems to come crashing down around us, or even when our very life is in danger. Psalm 27 is a good one to latch onto in such times.
Though the Scriptures do not specify exactly when David wrote this psalm, it was likely either during the years when he was fleeing from King Saul, or later, after he was king, during the time when he had to flee Jerusalem when his son Absalom conducted a coup to dethrone him. David spent several years as a young adult on the run from King Saul. Saul wasn’t trying to just catch David and throw him in prison, or even to banish him from the country. Saul wanted to kill David. If someone is trying to hunt you down to kill you, that would certainly be a fearful time. Absalom was also serious, and he knew that as long as his father was alive he couldn’t be king, so David’s life was in danger then, too.
As our psalm begins, David spoke of how all of his confidence, all of his trust during this desperate time, was in Yahweh. God was his light, his source of truth, guidance, and hope (vs. 1). There is no darkness in God. Jesus said that He is the light of the world (John 8:12). Even when darkness fills the world, our heart does not need to feel hopeless. God shines a light on our inner being that no darkness can overcome.
David also called God his salvation (vs. 1). God alone would deliver him from danger and the enemies who were attacking him. He proclaimed that the Lord was the strength of his life. He is our stability and protection. Our courage is not just positive thinking. That will not defeat an enemy. Instead, it comes from God. Courage is rooted in God’s character, not in human strength. David speaks of real adversaries who were violent, malicious, and determined (vs. 2-3). Faith is not a denial of danger. It is trust in God despite danger. In these times our trust should be in God’s character, not in changing circumstances.
If you could have any desire of yours granted, what would it be? David had one wish, and that was to dwell in the house of the Lord his whole life, to behold God’s beauty, and inquire in His temple (vs. 4). He wanted fellowship, worship, and communion with God. Even though his life was in danger, David’s greatest desire was not deliverance, nor for money or fame, but deeper fellowship with God. He didn’t close his eyes to the trouble and danger that he was in. David trusted that God would hide him, set him upon a rock for protection, and give him victory over his enemies (vs. 5-6). In gratitude, David responded with worship.
Our psalm continues with a prayer that David made to the Lord (vs. 7-12). He wanted to seek God’s face, pursuing His presence, His will, and His approval in life, not that of his own. David also prayed to God not to abandon him (vs. 9-10). He knew that the Lord would always receive him, whether his earthly parents did or not. No matter what happens in our relationship with our parents or any other human relationship, our God and Father will receive us with His arms wide open. David continued to pray that the Lord would teach him, lead him, and protect him (vs. 11-12). He trusted in God, not in himself.
David closed with a final declaration of faith (vs. 13-14). He instructed all who would read this that we need to trust God, be of good courage, and wait for Him to respond. Waiting is not passive. It is active trust. Courage grows as we wait on God, not on circumstances to change. As we wait on the Lord, we should pray, giving thanks in our circumstances, thanking God that He has it all under control, and then release our situation into His hands to do what He will with it. Then we wait on the Lord. Waiting on God requires faith in Him, trusting Him even without knowing when or how He will resolve the situation. Such expressions of trust enable God to pour out upon us the very blessing that He intends.
Although circumstances change, God’s promises do not change. Stand on the rock of His promises and take shelter under His wings until the storms pass. We should not spend all of our time looking down at our circumstances, otherwise we will forget to look up to God. As the saying goes, don’t tell God how big your problem is, tell your problem how big our God is!