Monday, 5 January 2015

Tuesday, January 6, 2015 (Epiphany of Our Lord)

Tuesday, January 6, 2015 (Feast of the Epiphany)
Psalm 46

Psalm 46 is a hymn celebrating God’s provision and protection for his people, for the city of God, intended to be sung together by the congregation.  The three stanzas are separated by each ending with the Hebrew word Selah, which is most likely a musical term, perhaps instructing the accompanists about what they should play.  Each stanza also contains a brief refrain restating the theme of the whole psalm.

In Stanza 1 (vv. 1 – 3) the refrain comes right at the beginning and introduces all that follows:
God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble.

In both Stanzas 2 (vv.4 – 7) and 3 (vv. 8 – 11), the refrain comes at the end and is worded slightly differently:
The Lord of hosts is with us; the God of Jacob is our refuge.

Notice how carefully the poetry of the refrain is constructed.  Poetry in Hebrew often expresses its ideas twice using slightly different words or shades of meaning.  The initial refrain starts with God and the latter ones with the parallel Lord of hosts.  The latter two also place Lord of hosts in parallel with God of Jacob.  The initial refrain begins God is our refuge and the latter refrains end almost the same: God of Jacob is our refuge.  Thus, this phrase brackets the entire psalm.  Just inside these brackets there is another pair: God is a very present help in the initial refrain and God is with us in the latter two.  So, like other good poetry, Psalm 46 uses repetition and parallels to reinforce its message.
The initial refrain, however, has two words, in trouble, with no parallel in the latter refrains.  These two words set the scene for the psalm and especially its first stanza.  The psalmist will soon come back to the thought of trouble, but first comes positive reinforcement:
Therefore we will not fear ….

Why?  Because God is our refuge, our strength, our very present help, no matter what the trouble may be.
Interpreters often think the trouble in Stanza 1 is an invading army and the fear of war.  For example, Martin Luther used Psalm 46 as the basis for his famous hymn A Mighty Fortress is our God, and that hymn is full of battle imagery throughout.  But it’s perhaps more likely that the psalmist is referring to a great natural disaster:
Though the mountains shake in the heart of the sea; though its waters roar and foam,
though the mountains tremble with its tumult ….

Isn’t this perhaps an earthquake causing destruction?  Perhaps also a tsunami, or a hurricane?  But whether the disaster the psalmist has in mind is natural or man-made, whether it is past, present, on the way, or only dreaded isn’t really the point.  What’s important is that the people are in danger of falling into great fear of trouble, and the psalmist is assuring them that God is in charge, God is their refuge and their help, and there is therefore no reason for them to be afraid.

Why not? – Because God provides for them and protects them, and us too.  This is the theme of Stanza 2, which begins “There is a river whose streams make glad the city of God.”  As we think about this promise and the whole psalm, let’s meditate on a wonderful 18th century hymn (Common Praise, #388) by John Newton (who also wrote Amazing Grace and other great hymns):
Glorious things of thee are spoken, Zion, city of our God;

            God, whose word cannot be broken, formed thee for his own abode.
On the Rock of Ages founded, what can shake thy sure repose?

            With salvation's walls surrounded, thou mayest smile at all thy foes.
See, the streams of living waters, springing from eternal love,
            well supply thy sons and daughters, and all fear of want remove.

Who can faint while such a river ever will their thirst assuage?
            Grace which like the Lord, the giver, never fails from age to age.

Round each habitation hovering, see the cloud and fire appear
            for a glory and a covering –  showing that the Lord is near!
Thus they march, the pillar leading, light by night and shade by day,

            Daily on the manna feeding which God gives them when they pray.

See how this wonderful hymn both re-emphasizes and expands on the themes of Psalm 46, especially its refrain and its second stanza.  What excellent exposition!

For Stanza 3 we turn to a contemporary hymn for insight.  Unlike some psalms where God brings victory in war, in Psalm 46 God
makes wars cease to the end of the earth; he breaks the bow and shatters the spear….

In Psalm 46, it is no particular nation, but it is war itself that is the enemy, and God defeats all war.  So we come to experience “Be still and know that I am God!”

Today, January 6th, is the Feast of the Epiphany, celebrating the revelation of Christ to all nations – the revelation of the Prince of Peace.  Epiphany celebrates bringing the Gospel of Peace (Eph. 6:15) to all the world, just as Psalm 46 prophetically declares that God will destroy all weapons and bring all war to an end.  Let us pray and work for this ourselves, as we join in praying with the contemporary hymn (Common Praise, #593):

O God of every nation, of every race and land,
            redeem the whole creation  with your almighty hand;
 Where hate and fear divide us and bitter threats are hurled,
            in love and mercy guide us  and heal our strife-torn world.
 From search for wealth and power and scorn of truth and right,
             from trust in bombs that shower destruction through the night,
 From pride of race and nation and blindness to your way,
            deliver every nation,  eternal God, we pray!
 Lord, strengthen all who labor that we may find release
             from fear of rattling saber, from dread of war's increase;
 When hope and courage falter, your still small voice be heard;
            with faith that none can alter, your servants undergird.
 Keep bright in us the vision of days when war shall cease,
             when hatred and division give way to love and peace,
 Till dawns the morning glorious when truth and justice reign
            and Christ shall rule victorious o'er all the world's domain.

[By William Watkins Read, © 1958, 1986 The Hymn Society of the United States and Canada]


Robert Kruse

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