PENINSULA PARISH | Anglicans in Miramar, Seatoun and Strathmore
  • Home
  • About
  • What we do
    • Worship Services
    • Being Whanau
    • Being Neighbours
    • Shop 89 mission op-shop
    • Weddings, Baptisms, Funerals
    • Giving
    • Venue hire
  • Resources
    • Parish Newsletters
    • Sermons
    • Scripture reflections
    • Worship in the home
    • mental wellbeing
    • Library
  • Connect

Thought bubbles

God is God, we are not

4/11/2020

0 Comments

 
As the world fixates on US elections and the Presidential race, I thought this reflection on Psalm 90 by Tim and Julie Tennant, was a fitting read. We can become overwhelmed with the news cycle, and anxious about events taking place, but Psalms like this one remind us to fix our eyes on God. We are not in control, and the world is not out of control. The following is from Timothy and Julie Tennent. A Meditative Journey through the Psalms (Kindle Locations 2105-2128). Seedbed Publishing.

BOOK FOUR OF THE PSALMS OPENS WITH PSALM 90, The psalm of Moses. This makes this psalm very ancient, since it precedes the life of David and the exile out of which most of the other psalms arise. This psalm is a wonderful way to begin this book because it is both a historical and spiritual “stepping back” to capture a renewed perspective on life apart from the day-to-day challenges we face. Thus, this psalm serves as a kind of reset button after all the anguish and trials of Book Three.

The grandeur and majesty of this psalm is powerful and inspiring. The opening line, “Lord, you have been our dwelling place throughout all generations” (v. 1), sets the tone for Psalm 90. This psalm reasserts the eternality and majesty of God: “Before the mountains were born or you brought forth the earth and the world, from everlasting to everlasting you are God” (v. 2).

The psalm then begins to offer a contrast between God’s grandeur, eternality, and majesty and our own fleeting existence. In contrast to his lofty grandeur, verse 3 reminds us that we are but dust, an obvious reminder of the creation account in Genesis, in which we are made from the dust of the earth (Gen. 2: 7).

The eternality of God is then contrasted with our temporality. About God, Moses declares, “For a thousand years in your sight are like a day that has just gone by, or like a watch in the night” (Ps. 90: 4). In contrast, “the length of our days is seventy years— or eighty, if we have the strength” (v. 10). Even those days are full of “trouble and sorrow” and “quickly pass” away (v. 10).

This psalm is an important reality check, much like Job 38– 41. It reminds us of who God is, and who we are. We are not God; he is. It teaches us humility. It grants us much-needed perspective. It enables us, to use the words of this psalm, “to number our days aright, that we may gain a heart of wisdom” (v. 12). In the hymn tradition, Isaac Watts set this psalm into hymn form with the beautiful text, “O God, Our Help in Ages Past.” In several of the monastic traditions, this psalm, quite appropriately, is sung or recited at the dawn of each day. The intention, in whatever way we encounter Psalm 90, is to enable the worshipper to gain a proper perspective at the start of the day, before all the distorted adorations and skewed perspectives of this world begin to bombard us.

With this renewed perspective, our daily frailty is met with his enduring strength; our life in the press and rush of time is tempered by the sure knowledge that God is eternal and outside of time. He meets us “in the morning” with his “unfailing love” (v. 14) and enables us to be his regents and ambassadors in the world. Knowing who God is and who we are enables “the favor of the Lord our God [to] rest upon us” and assures us that he will “establish the work of our hands” (v. 17). 

0 Comments

    Rev Chris

    Some reflections from God's word

    Archives

    March 2022
    September 2021
    November 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Peninsula Parish
PO Box 15106
Miramar, Wellington 6243

Office: 89 Miramar Ave
Phone: +64 4 3807174
Email: office@peninsulaparish.nz



We are an Anglican Parish and part of the Diocese of Wellington.
Our parish life is primarily based at St Aidan's Anglican Church at 89-91 Miramar Ave, Miramar, Wellington
  • Home
  • About
  • What we do
    • Worship Services
    • Being Whanau
    • Being Neighbours
    • Shop 89 mission op-shop
    • Weddings, Baptisms, Funerals
    • Giving
    • Venue hire
  • Resources
    • Parish Newsletters
    • Sermons
    • Scripture reflections
    • Worship in the home
    • mental wellbeing
    • Library
  • Connect