By: Dale Weckbacher
Psalm 119:123
My eyes grow
weary looking for your salvation
and for your righteous promise.
and for your righteous promise.
(CSB)
Isaiah
40:31 gives us the promises of strength, victory, energy, and that we will
not give up while waiting for the fulfillment of God’s promises. While we find comfort in this promise as we
are waiting for the Lord to provide what we need, most of us share the emotions
of the psalmist in Psalm
119:123 during the waiting process. Psalm
119:121-128 gives guidance for us during this waiting process and provides
a sort of survival guide for us during this process.
The context of the psalmist’s writing differs from ours in
that he is waiting for salvation from God through the coming of Messiah, whereas we already have salvation available to us for the asking because of Jesus’ work on
the cross. However, while we have
salvation from sins through Jesus, we still live in a world dominated by evil,
sin, oppression, and persecution and like the psalmist can grow weary looking
for deliverance from these things with the second coming of Jesus. However, even with this difference in
context, we can still find hope and guidance in what the psalmist writes in Psalm
119:121-128. In this passage we see,
1)
Remaining faithful to God during the frustration
of waiting (Psalm
119:121) – Since scripture reminds us that we all have sinned and fallen
short of God’s standard (Romans
3:23), the psalmist is not declaring his self-righteousness. Instead, the psalmist is expressing frustration
at doing all the right things and yet suffering oppression. The Book of Job in the Bible tells the
account of a man severely oppressed.
While we know the reason for the oppression happening to Job (Job
1:6 – 2:10), there is no recorded record of Job discovering the back story
of his oppression. During the waiting
period for Job, and the constant barrage of advice from his “friends,” Job
shows frustration but never curses or turns his back on God.
2)
Asks for a guarantee against the arrogant
oppressing him (Psalm
119:122) – Notice that the psalmist is not seeking a guarantee against
oppression but a guarantee against oppression from arrogant people. Even Jesus the Son of God could not escape
oppression from arrogant people with them putting Him on the cross because of the
blinding of their arrogance, blinding them from truths in scripture pointing to
Jesus as their Messiah. This reminds us
not to focus on arrogant, ungodly commentary in opposition to the promises in
the Bible but to focus on the promises of God in scripture.
3)
Be honest with God (Psalm
119:123) – During the waiting period we may experience times as the
psalmist did when we believe we cannot continue. The psalmist’s confession of feeling weary while
waiting on the Lord appears to demonstrate a lack of faith in the promise of Isaiah
40:31. The truth, however, is that God knows our hearts and knows we grow
weary during the waiting process. We
therefore must be honest with God about our feelings and trust that He will
renew our strength during times of oppression.
4)
Rely on God’s love and continue learning truth
from His Word (Psalm
119:124) – Our fleshly tendency during times of oppression is to shake our
finger at God asking why this is happening to us. Job had his moments of finger shaking at God
but in the end, surrendered to a loving God, receiving deliverance. Instead of finger shaking we should search
scripture to reinforce the truth that God loves us and is with us.
5)
Ask for godly understanding of scripture (Psalm
119:125) – While we should daily read the Bible, it can become a routine activity
that we check off our to-do-list. While
reading scripture in this manner may produce some positive results, the best results
from reading scripture come through reading and asking God for understanding
through the Holy Spirit. Recently I
began the practice of using a journal to write down scripture that God brings
to mind as I read the Bible. This causes
me to continue meditating on that scripture throughout the day, taking Scripture
from simple words on a page to something I can begin applying to my life.
6)
Plea for prompt action against those violating
God’s instructions (Psalm
119:126) – While asking for prompt action during a waiting period seems
like a lack of faith and trust, the psalmist is not seeking prompt action on
his request from God but prompt action against violators of God’s law. Perhaps these are the same oppressors in Psalm
119:122, distracting the psalmist from his focus on God and His Word.
7)
Continue loving the priceless Word of God and
applying it to our lives (Psalm
119:127-128) – The constant struggle during the waiting period with God is
allowing impatience, frustration, or ungodly advice to distract us from the
truths in the Word of God and applying them to our lives. After honestly expressing his frustration and
impatience, the psalmist concludes this portion of Scripture with reaffirming
his love for God’s Word and his commitment to continue applying it to his
life.
Our human nature is to dislike waiting. We dislike long lines, being on hold on the
telephone, and rush hour traffic. Likewise,
we dislike waiting on God, growing frustrated and impatient as we seem to see
God leave our prayer unanswered. However,
the waiting process is where we receive renewed strength, and learn to soar
like an eagle in the victory of our salvation in Christ, gain strength to go on
without growing weary, and where we continue to go on without giving up. Please Lord help us survive the waiting
period.
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