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Psalm 27:1, 4-9                                      

 

FEAR AND FAITH IN THE SAME HEART– As mentioned in the overview, this psalm is remarkable in the way that it mingles the language of fear with the language of faith and confident trust in God’s help. On one hand the psalmist boldly shouts, “The Lord is my Light and my Salvation.” Yet, beginning at verse 7, the psalmist pleads for mercy and divine intervention from his enemies. As one commentator points out, “Psalm 27 invites reflection on the relationship between faith and fear. By imagining the situation of our psalmist, who although threatened by violence, yet stands steadfast in faith in God’s goodness, perhaps we can gain some inspiration for our own lives, when we become anxious over far less.” [1]

A GOSPEL ECHO – This strange admixture of faith and fear also shows up in the ministry of Jesus when, on one occasion Jesus happens to be present at the precise time when tragic news breaks that a little girl--to whom Jesus was on his way to heal--had suddenly died. “Do not fear, only believe,” Jesus tells the parents (Mark 5:36). Those pastoral words summarize well the message of Psalm 27. In the presence of dire threat to life (vv. 2-3, 12), the psalmist dares to believe: “even then will I be confident” and “I believe” (v. 13). [2]
 

Faith and Fear--both start with the same letter and both, it seems, can be found in our lives simultaneously. Can you think of a time when you discovered just such a struggle between fear and faith? Any of the following trigger some reflection of fear and faith? A threat of violence, a physical challenge, a struggle at work, a relationship disaster in the family, marriage, or in the church? How was such fear challenged by an unspoken confidence or knowing that God was a very present help in time of trouble?

 

On this third Sunday in Epiphany, Psalm 27 would provide a great conversational partner with the other texts that speak to the theme of divine light as illumination, but more importantly, of light as the presence of God among us.

The psalm could also provide a great call to worship that sets the worship them of the Epiphany Season.

Finally, this psalm could provide the worship leader with evocative images and contrasts for composing a wonderfully pastoral prayer for this Sunday in Epiphanhy.

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[1] New Proclamation, Marshall Johnson, ed. (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2001), page 110.

[2] The New Interpreter’s Bible IV (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1996), page 787.