IMPERATIVE
OR INDICATIVE? - By most reckonings, Psalm 65 is a communal song-poem of
thanksgiving, specifically thanking God for a bountiful autumn harvest.
However, other scholars have noted that it is quite possible to construe the
verbs used in vv. 3-5 and 10 as imperatives (commands), thus turning the
harvest festival into a rain dance. The psalm then becomes a fervent prayer
for the rain that will produce an abundant harvest.
GOD AT THE CENTER OF OUR THANKS- God shows up as the Object of praise in
each of the three strophes, though in each case God is praised/thanked in
different ways and reasons why God is to be praised. For example: vv. 1-4
focus on answered prayer-including forgiveness and the ability to approach
God’s presence-while vv. 5-8 recall God’s saving and creating activity. In the
final strophe, God is thanked for God’s awesome deeds and provisions.
A REMINDER OF OUR SOURCE - Psalm 65 reminds us that Uncle Sam, our economy,
our health, our resources of food, water, and fossil fuels-is not the Source,
but derivative and dependent upon God’s gracious rule and providence. Anything
praise less than that degenerates into self-congratulatory adulation at worse
and worst, idolatry. As Walter Brueggemann says,
Psalm 65 reflects a public imagination capable of a
troubled spirit, not so full of self, but able to reflect on its life in
light of the majesty of God, a community forgiven and therefore ready to
begin afresh. [1]
List
your top three things in life that would evoke an immediate heart-felt
thanksgiving to God as the Source. Try this-it’s a bit more challenging-list
your next twenty reasons for offering God thanks. And for you praise/thanks
veterans, what would you list for your next twenty reasons for offering thanks
to God?
God is the hope of all the ends of the earth (v. 5), says the psalmist.
Some days when the newspaper tells us another sad story of conflict across the
ocean and the television shows us the desolate faces of hungry people, it is
hard to feel that hope,. And overload of bad news can numb our hearts. As a
way of remaining faithful to God’s undying love for the world take a story or
issue from the world news and make it a focus of intercessory prayer for the
day. Be a partner with God in hope as you pray.
I would use this psalm as a way to bring listeners’ attention to the
harvest season and God as the reason for the season.
This would also lend itself to a homily that holds God as the Source with
everything else in life derivative of that life. Yet, in reality, too often we
worship the wrong sources! This would be an excellent "reminding" homily that
reclaims God as the center of the universe and our lives.
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[1] The New Interpreter’s Bible IV (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1996),
page 935.
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