Memorize Scripture: Psalm 119:113-116

Hiding God’s Word In Our Hearts

Scripture often refers to our relationship with God as a “walk.” That image is conveyed in the last stanza very clearly, in both a positive and negative light. This stanza tells us how to achieve this. Let’s look at the first half of it in Psalm 119:113-116:

Psalm 119:113-116

In the previous stanza, the psalmist presented the word of God as a light for the path. If we are to walk in God’s ways, we need such a light to clarify where we are to put our feet. With that information, we know what to do. In the next stanza, we are told how to do it.

Very often, we can see the path before us, and we can see obstacles in that path very clearly. What we sometimes cannot see is our way around those obstacles. And if we are not using God’s Word as a light for our feet, then we cannot see clearly how to get around them at all.

So how are we to stay on the right path and keep ourselves form straying away from it? That’s the point of this stanza. If we are to walk the path that God has called us to, we must be very intentional in doing so, because the wrong paths are many, and they are easy to stray onto. If we are to stay on the right path, we must be intentional. And that intentionality comes through a consistent, continuous investment in the Word of God.

There are at least three ways that we can keep our focus intentionally upon God’s Word according to this strophe of Psalm 119. Two are found in the first half, and the third is in the second half, which we will look at next week.

Memorize Scripture: Psalm 119:109-112

Hiding God’s Word In Our Hearts

In the first half of this stanza, we saw several ways that God’s Word gives us clarity in this world. In this week’s passage, we will find three more ways. Take a look at this passage in Psalm 119:109-112:

Psalm 119:109-112

In the first half of this stanza, the author identified four ways that God’s Word provides clarity to life. God’s Word leads us in the way which we should go, it helps us to live with right behavior, it gives us clarity when we face suffering, and it shows us how to worship fully.

At the beginning of that passage, we saw one of the most familiar passages from this psalm, found in verse 105:

“Your word is a lamp to my feet, and a light for my path.”

That’s the kind of clarity that God’s Word brings to all areas of our lives. And in the second half of this passage, we find three more ways that God’s Word provides clarity.

The Words Of My Mouth

A Daily Prayer From Psalm 19:14

There are times when I am reading through the Bible and a particular passage seems to reach out and smack me. Has this ever happened to you? It’s rather disconcerting and refreshing all at the same time.

The Words Of My Mouth

I strive to spend some time daily in the book of Psalms. As I have grown older (and hopefully, grown more mature), I have found that if Scripture consisted of nothing more than the Psalms, I could be content with that. I’m not downplaying the rest of God’s Word. It’s all inspired, and it’s all useful. And I love many, many different parts of it.

It’s just that I have found, especially recently, that the book of Psalms seems to contain most of what I seem to need at this season of my life. It gives me the encouragement I need, from passage such as Psalm 106, or Psalm 95. I receive reminders of God’s love for me in passages like Psalm 100. There are passages like Psalm 23, which comforts me and reassures me of God’s presence.

The Psalms give me the challenges that I need to grow, they convict me in areas that I fall short, and they strengthen my resolve to stay as closely connected to God as I can.

Not too long ago, I came across this passage in my reading of the Psalms. I’d encourage you to go read the whole chapter, but look especially at Psalm 19:14.

Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in Your sight, O Lord, my rock and my Redeemer.

What an incredible idea to keep before myself daily!

Memorize Scripture: Psalm 119:105-108

Hiding God’s Word In Our Hearts

In this new stanza of Psalm 119, titled Nun, the psalmist declares his delight in and love for God’s Law. This passage contains one of the most familiar portions of Psalm 119. You can see it for yourself in Psalm 119:105-108:

Psalm 119:105-108

Do you recall the story of the Exodus from Egypt? God led the Israelites out from under the harsh rule of the Egyptian Pharaoh, and protected the nation of Israel as they crossed the Red Sea. From there, he guided them though the wilderness, leading them with a pillar of cloud by day, and a column of fire by night, illuminating the way forward.

That is the image the psalmist gives us in this stanza, declaring that God’s Word lights our way. Of course, the psalmist uses the image of a lamp lighting the path, but the symbolism is clear: God’s Word provides the light and clarity that we need to see how to follow him clearly.

Clarity is something that we still need in our lives, no differently than in the days of the writer of these words. Our world is confused and clouded, darkness seems to pervade, and we need light shed on our way. We long for it, and it can be found in God’s Word.

In these verses, the psalmist gives us a few example of how God’s Word gives us the clarity we need to live for him in this world.

The Wiersbe Study Bible

A Book Review for The Randleman Review

The Wiersbe Study BibleThe first time I was introduced to the writing of Warren W. Wiersbe was when I was a student at Ozark Christian College, in a preaching class. One of our assigned readings was a small book called Elements Of Preaching. It was simple and yet profound, and formed some of the basis upon which I still craft my sermons and lessons twenty-five years later.

It didn’t take me long to track down a few other books by Wiersbe to add to my library, each as helpful as that first one. When I saw that there was a new Wiersbe Study Bible, I was immediately interested in looking it over. And I was not disappointed.

Of course, the text of the Bible is not what is on review here; it is the study notes that accompany the text itself. And these notes are phenomenal. Warren Wiersbe has a very intellectual mind, and that is very apparent in any of his books that I have read over the years. But these notes, while containing much that is challenging to the thought process, also remain very approachable and are not above the head of the average Bible reader.

The Wiersbe Study Bible has several great features that can help anyone striving to learn more about the Bible. Each book has a detailed introduction and an outline. Along with the overview, each book contains a section called “Be Transformed,” which is a practical application section, outlining several key aspects of each book for daily growth. Add to this the study notes, special notes, and cross references, and you have an excellent tool for spiritual growth.

Memorize Scripture: Psalm 119:101-104

Hiding God’s Word In Our Hearts

The first half of this stanza contained a turning point for the psalmist. His writing held a note of joy and love for God’s Word like nothing else so far. He gives five reasons for this joy, four of them in this second half. Read it for yourself in Psalm 119:101-104:

Psalm 119:101-104

With the majority of the psalmist’s reasons for joy contained in the latter half of this stanza, it’s worth refreshing our memory of the first reason, listed in the first half, and mentioned in three different ways.

As discussed in the last post, the first reason the writer loves the Word of God so much is that it is the source of all true wisdom. This reason is significant that he devotes half of this stanza to exploring it, comparing spiritual wisdom with worldly knowledge.

In this second half, he lists four more reasons for the joy he receives from God’s Law.

Out Of Egypt

Matthew 2:19-23

Matthew 2 closes out with the return of Jesus and his family from Egypt. Having fled there from Herod’s desire to kill the baby who threatened his reign, the family could now return, fulfilling prophecy in the process.

Matthew 2:19-23

Joseph was guided by a dream from God in which he was told to take Mary and Jesus to Egypt in order to avoid Herod. It’s not clear just how long they stayed in Egypt, but they were again guided to return by an angel in a dream after the death of Herod. It’s likely they were not in Egypt for very long at all.

Herod the Great died in the thirty-seventh year of his reign, when he was seventy years old, in the spring of the year 4 BC, just before the Passover. This event was God’s timing for Jesus to return to Judea. Matthew tells us that another angel appeared to Joseph in a dream and gave him these instructions.

When Joseph came back to his homeland, he settled in a small town named Nazareth. Verse 22 seems to indicate that Joseph’s intention was to return to Bethlehem, probably to make the ancestral city of David their permanent residence. God’s plans were different, and he sent the family back to their Galilean home.

So Nazareth becomes the home of Christ. At this point in history, it was an an obscure village, nestling on the hills about 500 feet above the Plain of Esdraelon. Now, it has become a large city of more than 75,000 people.