The Book of Psalms is a book of poetry, which was used as the “prayer” of “service” book in the ancient Israelite Temple. Composed of 150 poems, Rev. Eugene Peterson writes that, they form are a “prayer book that gives us a language adequate for responding to the God who speaks to us.” They can teach us how to pray. Psalm 27 seems to be both a prayer of orientation, singing of trust and confidence in Yahweh in verses 1 to 6, and one of disorientation, in which there is a complaint a prayer for God to be faithful in versus 7 to 12. The poetic prayer seems to model the reality that trust and need come side by side in life. Even if we have confidence and trust in God to provide, we often find ourselves in wrestling matches with fear. And God’s promises of light and salvation are not just for a far off distant, other-worldly, future; but for us here, now, in the land of the living.
Throughout the psalm there is a repetition of certain words and metaphors, which are often reversed or expanded upon in each use. They put flesh upon a celebration of trust in God and a request for God to continue to be faithful in the face of fear, uncertainty and adversarial relationships. God is presented as an active light and salvation which illuminate the world, chase off the shadows and darkness and light the way forward. Repeatedly God is lifted up as a sure rock, a stronghold to trust and seek out. It’s a reminder and a prayer of self-reassurance.
We all have fears. When we’re little we turn on the bedroom light to chase them off, but as we age our fears are not so easily scared away, or overcome. Our fears can give us strength, opening our own mind to our own strength, the faithfulness of Gods, the gracious relationships that we have with family, friends and neighbors. At times our failures, fears and hard times can turn out to be transformative and enriching. Often when we don’t get the happy ending we expect, we receive something from the journey that we would never have imagined or asked for. This psalm might be a poem about an experience that you haven’t had, yet the metaphors, feeling and language are those of multiple experiences of fear, failure and flailing in life to which we can all relate.
Questions for the practice of Examen & Contemplation
Download a PDF textual study guide HERE.
Failures, Fears, and Hard Times. These are the marks of Psalms 27. The psalmist seeks safety, confidence, shelter, and ultimately a vision for the path that God will lead him on. In the face of death, can I say that I know and see where God will lead me?
What strikes me, is that in the security and safety of my own life, I cannot or do not seek that clarity of vision, I may not even know I need it, because I don’t feel so endangered. It’s not that I seek danger, but I know that God works in those worlds, with those who are war zones, or in poverty, or in despair, even if we can’t see it.