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Psalm 27                                                       

PSALM OF TRUST - From the motif of the parallelism that begins this psalm, comes the content and context for the entirety of the psalm: trust and confidence in God. In our English translations, the magnificent statements/rhetorical questions are broken into four half lines; in the Hebrew, however, the construction is two whole lines; according to Westermann, the Hebrew moves much closer to a prayer-form and the double address accentuates the parallelism. [1]

METAPHOR -In psalms like this one, such terms as refuge, shelter, tent cover, rock, fortress, castle, shield, et al, are more than just metaphorical flourish. These descriptions refer us to concrete divine action-‘he will hide me,’ ‘he will conceal me’, ‘he will set me’ - so that when God is compared to such tangibles, the language is not just metaphorical but the comparisons result from experience and is validated by experience. [2]

FEAR FACTOR - Psalm 27 suggests that the opposite of faith is not so much doubt as it is fear. For the psalmist to say, "My heart shall not fear" (v. 3), is to say, "I believe" (v. 24). Psalm 27:3 recalls Psalm 23:4. There, too, the psalmist is threatened by deadly forces but is able to say, "I fear no evil." The determining factor is trust in God’s presence-"you are with me" and it is precisely God’s presence that the psalmist both affirms and continues to seek in Psalm 27. [3]

 

This psalm exposes anxiety as faith’s opposite, rather than disbelief. The final strophe invites waiting for God. Waiting is difficult, especially in our age of high-speed modems and blue-tooth technology. Not a far cry to think that change should come quickly in ourselves. What problem is causing you to feel anxious or impatient? Can you surrender it to the Lord? Journal it. Share it with another. Lay your concerns before God.

 

You could allow Psalm 27 to lead you into a discussion about the "Age of Anxiety," as faith’s opposite. That while fear and worry characterize our post-modern illness, the Scriptures invite us to a life sustained by trust in God.

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[1] Claus Westermann, The Living Psalms (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1989), page 147.
[2] Ibid, page 149-150.
[3] The New Interpreter’s Bible IV (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1996), page 787.