THE BEATITUDES IN PSALMS The theme of trust forms the final
beatitude in the Psalms; such beatitudes have previously appeared in Psalm 40:4 (Oh,
the joys of those who trust the lord) and in Psalm 33:20-21 (in God our hearts
rejoice for we are trusting in Gods holy name). But not only in the beatitudes
does this relationship between trust and happiness/joy appear, for as the whole psalter
makes clear, "happiness is not the absence of pain and trouble, but the presence of a
God who cares about human hurt and who acts on behalf of the afflicted and the
oppressed." [1]
GODS CLAIM Verse 7 describes Gods universal claim to show compassion
on all of creation. Such a claim, Brueggemann calls "the main claim for Yahweh."
[2] What follows then tells us how God exercises sovereignty through service to others in
need.
THE REIGN OF GOD Throughout this psalmits beginning burst of praise, the
instructions in vv. 3-5, and the description of Gods reign in vv. 6-9we can
anticipate Jesus preaching on the reign of God (Mark 1:14-15). In the actual
ministry of Jesus we see the same kind of actions that Psalm 145 envisions in the coming
reign of God. As our Christian communities face the same challenges that the psalmist and
Jesus later faced, so we can also move forward in the face of challenges from within and
without with the encouragement that Psalm 145 offers: " Thy will be done on earth as
it is in heaven."
connections
A spiritual life is a life which is controlled by a gradually
developing sense of the Eternal . . . so that our relation to God becomes the chief thing
about us, exceeding and also conditioning our relationship with each other. [3] Evelyn
Underhill
How have you contributed to or collaborated in Gods physical and spiritual
creation through "a gradually developing sense of the Eternal?"
gambits
Use this psalm as an entry way to the topic of singing and
praise. When you think about it, Psalm 146 is a radical call to sing Gods praise.
For the pious Jew, to praise God was to live, and to live was to praise God. How can we
too sing our praise both in liturgy and lifestyle?
You might want to incorporate the idea of Brueggemann as you call your listeners to a
liturgy and lifestyle of praise:
Israel holds doxology against the powerful
staying force of the rulers of this age. Israel sings, and we never know what holy power
is unleashed by such singing. Israel sings, and we never know what human imagination is
authorized by such singing. One reason we may not sing is that such hope is intellectually
outrageous. Another reason we may to sing is that such an alternative is too subversive.
But the Church and Israel do sing! This singing is our vocation, our duty, and our
delight. We name this staggering nameand the world becomes open again, especially
for those on whom it had closed in such deathly waysthe prisoners, the blind, the
sojourner, the widow, the orphan. The world is sung open. Against this Holy One and this
song, death cannot close the world into injustice again. [4]
_______________________________________________________
[1] The New Interpreters Bible IV (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1996. page
1264.
[2] Walter Brueggemann, Psalm 146: Psalm for the Nineteenth Sunday after Pentecost,
No Other Foundation 8/1 (Summer 1987): 28; cited in New Interpreters Bible IV, page
1264.
[3] The Spiritual Formation Bible (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1999), page 816.
[4] NIB IV, page 1265.
|