Caring in an Expendable Culture
Week of January 15, 2012
Bible Verses: Psalm
139:1-6, 13-18.
Lesson Focus: God
values life and so should we.
God Values Us: Psalm
139:1-6.
[1] O LORD, you have
searched me and known me! [2] You know
when I sit down and when I rise up; you discern my thoughts from afar. [3] You search out my path and my lying down and
are acquainted with all my ways. [4]
Even before a word is on my tongue, behold, O LORD, you know it
altogether. [5] You hem me in, behind
and before, and lay your hand upon me. [6]
Such knowledge is too wonderful for me; it is high; I cannot attain
it.
[1-2] This Psalm is a prayer
addressed to God and the word LORD
(Yahweh) introduces the theme. The LORD is
the great central subject of which the Psalm is to speak. All else is
secondary; here it is God and God alone who stands out supreme, and who is also
to fill all our thoughts. The expression LORD
is of particular interest, and when David uttered it he spoke as one conscious
of the sacredness and preciousness of the word. This is the name which God
revealed to Moses at the burning bush. Speaking from the midst of the burning
bush, God declared, “I am that I am,” thus asserting His eternity. Although
times might change, and the purposes of God might seem to be forgotten, yet God
abides the same. What He has promised will in His own time most certainly find
fulfillment. He is the eternal God, and He can carry out and bring to fruition
all His purposes and plans. The name LORD
points to God as one who is a covenant God and who manifests that fact by acts
of redemption and deliverance. A covenant is simply a dispensation of sovereign
grace imposed upon a people by God Himself. The essence of the covenant which
God made with Israel was that they were to be God’s people and in turn He would
be their God. David can thus begin the Psalm with an appeal to the One who is
his own God. In this address there is tenderness and intimacy, but there is no
irreverence. This Psalm therefore is spoken by one with whom God had entered
into covenant; one whom God had sovereignly chosen to be His own; one with whom
He had been pleased to establish close relationship. David has placed the word LORD first in the Psalm and thus has
emphasized it. He now proceeds to make a statement about the LORD. The first verb (searched) implies that God has engaged
in an exhaustive search in order to learn all that there is to know about
David. There has been a minute and thorough examination and investigation on
God’s part. David himself has been the object of this exhaustive
examination. Whatever there is to know,
God knows. This is the truth which David will enunciate concerning God, for it
is not his purpose to speak to God as some abstract being who has no relationship
with man, but rather to show that God knows him as an individual. What does
David mean by the declaration, you have
searched me and known me? Does he mean to assert that God was ignorant of
David and could only come to know David after a long and exhausting
examination? That would be true of us but this is not the case with God because
He is omniscient, the all-knowing God of the Bible. Thus the language of the
Psalm does not mean that God, being ignorant, must remove His ignorance by
investigation. It means, rather, that God possesses full knowledge of David.
Indeed, what the Psalm presents is only a vivid way of saying that God knows
all that can be known of David. To utter the word You is to acknowledge that God is a Person to whom one may speak and
who will hear one’s words. It is to say in effect that there is but one God,
and that this God is capable of hearing prayer and of fulfilling the desires of
the suppliant. The one whom the Psalmist so confidently addresses as LORD and You is not some being far removed from the affairs of man’s earthly
life, but one who possesses knowledge of man. God is all-knowing and God is
all-wise. To be able to address such a God is a blessing indeed. What however
is it that God knows? He knows David’s sitting down and rising up. This sharp
contrast refers to the entirety of David’s life. God knows all of our life,
every moment, every posture, every activity. At no time are our ways hidden
from Him. It is not possible to escape from Him. Not only is the outward course
of life known to Him, but also the thoughts of our hearts. The word which is
translated thoughts probably refers
to the purpose or aim of a man’s heart. Thus all the purposes and intentions
which arise in our hearts are known to God. This is striking, for we ourselves
often do not know, much less understand, the intentions which come from our
hearts. God not merely knows of these intentions; He understands them. What
their origin is, why they have arisen in our hearts, how they affect us: all
this is perfectly understood by God. It is not a mere knowledge about David,
but an intimate, thorough knowing and understanding all that there is to know
about him. Such attributes can belong to God alone. No man can know as God
knows; no man can possess the understanding of God. God’s knowledge is perfect
and all-embracing. What is meant when David declares that God knows or
understands his thoughts from afar?
By the term afar the Psalmist has in
mind the thought that God, in heaven, is far removed from man. It is God’s
transcendence which is in view here. Although God is in heaven and not upon
earth, nevertheless, from this far-off place, He has a perfect and complete
knowledge and understanding of David’s life, both external and internal. The
God of glory, the sovereign LORD,
seated upon the heavenly throne, possesses perfect knowledge of man. How
wondrous is such a God!
[3-4] The path is the way in which one must travel during his active life,
since life in the Bible is often conceived as a journey. For all practical
purposes the word is an equivalent of the expression when I rise up which David had just employed in verse 2. To
indicate the passive life the Psalmist speaks of my lying down. To designate the entirety of his life, David speaks
of his path and the place of his repose. Different figures thus serve to
express the fullness of life, as though to stress the fact that God knows
wholly and completely the life of David, no matter from what aspect it be
considered. To state the truth that God has thoroughly searched out and
examined his path and his lair David employs what may be called picture
language. The verb (search out)
means to winnow, and thus David takes from everyday life in Palestine a figure
which would be rich in meaning for his hearers or readers. To the dwellers in
Palestine winnowing would have been thoroughly familiar. The worker throws the
grain high into the air, and the wind blows or carries away the chaff, leaving
the true grain to fall to the ground. Thus, the wind separated between the chaff
and the grain. It is this beautiful figure which David employs of God. God has
winnowed his path and his lying down, so that that path and lying down have
been thoroughly examined and searched out by God. God has tested them. Thus, by
means of another figure we are brought again face to face with the truth that
God knows the life of David. That there may be no misunderstanding of his
thought, the Psalmist inserts the phrase, with
all my ways. The language is self-explanatory. All that David does, all
that he suffers, all of his actions and all that affects him, is known to God.
The word acquainted suggests an
acquaintance which results from familiarity and habit. God intimately knows all
the ways of David. Man at best seems to be a bundle of contradictions; he does
not know himself as he should; he is not always sure of himself; he cannot in
every instance tell why he acts as he does. He is unaware of the thousands of
influences that for good or evil affect his actions. God, on the other hand,
possesses an intimate knowledge and understanding of man which extends to every
detail of his life. In verse 4 David now proceeds to give an illustration of
the truth which he has been declaring. Even before man utters his words, while
they are yet upon the tongue, unspoken, the LORD knows them. God actually knows the individual words which the
speaker is to use before he speaks them forth. You know it altogether emphasizes that God knows in their fullness
and entirety the words which are upon David’s tongue. Certainly God knows every
word, but more than that He knows the words in their entirety. The words which
come upon our tongues are the expression of the thoughts that have been formed
in our hearts. Both the thoughts and words are known to God. How practical is
this truth of God’s omniscience. From people we may be able to conceal the
thoughts which we have. And it is well that this is so. Thoughts of anger,
jealousy, hatred; how good it is that other people need not know them. From
God, however, we cannot conceal them.
[5-6] Verse 5 contains an almost
imperceptible transition from the consideration of God’s omniscience to that of
His omnipresence. In whatever direction David turns he cannot escape from the
all-knowing God. But this raises the question, ‘Why should one desire to escape
from the presence of God?’ ‘Why should reflection upon God’s omniscience lead
one to seek escape from Him?’ When we think of God as He has revealed Himself
to us in His Word, we are at once reminded of the great gulf which separates the
Creator from the creature. In our daily lives we do not meditate upon God as we
ought. Our lives are so filled with activity that in this modern day we have
all but abandoned the practice of meditation. When, however, we turn aside from
the cares and demands of daily activity and enter into the quiet of meditation
we are brought face to face with the greatness of our God. He is not a man like
ourselves, whom we can measure and circumscribe with the measures and limits
which we apply to ourselves. Instead, He is so great that we cannot comprehend
Him. He is the infinite One. Hence, we are not able to think of Him as He is in
Himself. There is nothing in this earth with which we can compare Him, for this
earth and its fullness belong to Him as His creation. God, however, in all of
His perfections and attributes is infinite, eternal and unchangeable. Hence,
when we think of His omniscience, we tremble. Before such a God who can stand?
From this God there is no escape. Before Him we can only bow in adoration and
in genuine reverence. David does not contradict what he had stated before, that
God understands his thought from afar. God in heaven is truly afar, yet God is
also omnipresent. God is everywhere, and yet God is the mighty Creator, whose
dwelling is in the heaven. These are truths which our finite minds cannot
comprehend nor reconcile, but we must note that the Bible teaches both God’s
omnipresence and also His transcendence. To express the thought of
inescapability from God David uses a word that actually means ‘to shut up’ or
‘to enclose’. God has confined man by shutting him up so that whether man go
forward or backward he is hemmed in, and unable to flee from God. David uses
graphic language to picture the hand of God placed over David so that escape is
impossible. When God places His almighty hand upon a person, that person is
completely in His power, and it is this truth which David is compelled to
recognize. The thoughts which the Psalmist has just expressed lead him to utter
an exclamation of wonder at the greatness and incomprehensibility of God’s
knowledge. The underlying idea of the word, wonderful, is that of separateness or distinctness. The root is
used of the miracles which God performed when He brought the Israelites out of
Egyptian bondage. These great miracles were acts of God, performed by His
supernatural power in the external world. The knowledge which David now wishes
to praise is distinct and separate from human knowledge; it is divine. Such
knowledge is incomprehensible; it is something that man cannot possess, for man
is but a creature and hence finite; the knowledge of which David here speaks
belongs to an infinite being. Hence, man cannot possess it. When David thus
exalts the knowledge of God, he does not mean to assert that he himself can
have no knowledge. He does have knowledge, in so far as he thinks the revealed
thoughts of God after Him. But David’s knowledge is only a reflection, as it
were, of God’s knowledge. David knows in part, but he does know; his knowledge
and ours also are simply that which the creature possesses. The knowledge of
God, David continues, is high, and this term signifies that man cannot attain
unto it, for it is beyond man’s reach. What David’s language means is that the
knowledge of God is such that only God can possess it; hence, it cannot be
reached by man. God’s knowledge is incomprehensible. It is knowledge such as no
mere man can possibly possess, for it belongs to God alone. Indeed, the purpose
of the language is to show that man and God are distinct. David wishes to make
it clear not merely that God is above man, but that He is infinitely above man.
Such an emphasis is eminently needed in our day, for men tend to bring God down
to the human level. They speak of God with familiarity, as though He were
simply one of themselves. The sense of awe and wonder in the presence of God
has all but disappeared. His Name no longer brings fear to the heart. It is
well then that we pause to remember that God is our Creator. We need Him; He
does not need us. He made us and He exists independent of us. We are dependent
upon Him, and without Him we can do nothing.
God Has a Plan for Us: Psalm
139:13-16.
[13] For you formed
my inward parts; you knitted me together in my mother's womb. [14] I praise you, for I am fearfully and
wonderfully made. Wonderful are your works; my soul knows it very well.
[15] My frame was not hidden from you,
when I was being made in secret, intricately woven in the depths of the earth.
[16] Your eyes saw my unformed
substance; in your book were written, every one of them, the days that were
formed for me, when as yet there was none of them. [ESV]
[13-16] With verse 13 we make quite a
transition in the thought. Having spoken of the possibility of fleeing from
God, David now adopts the opposite course of turning in a personal manner unto
God and reflecting upon the fact that God has created him. The verse begins
with a For, and this word introduces
the reason why God is all-knowing and also omnipresent, and that reason is
found in the fact that God is the creator. God knows the entirety of David’s
life, both his outward existence and the thoughts of his heart. From this God
there is no way of escape, and the reason why God possesses this knowledge and
why God is everywhere present is simply that God has created all things and He
has created David. Inward parts
refers to the seat of man’s emotions and will. Since God has created or formed these inward parts of man, then God’s control reaches to the inmost part
of our being. By means of the second part of the verse David wishes to show how
God has a control over his whole being. David is speaking of the embryo in the
mother’s womb. When as yet he was in the womb of his mother before actual
birth, he was in God’s control. We are not the creatures of chance, merely
happening in some inexplicable way to appear upon the scene of history. We are
here, for God has created us, and from the first instant of our creation, even
before our birth, we were wholly in His care. Truly the doctrine of divine providence
is a blessed thing. It teaches that God cares for us. David cannot continue the
development of his thought; it is too great, too vast, too all-embracing.
Before such a God he does what he cannot refrain from doing. He breaks off in
the midst of his argument, and bursts forth into thanksgiving and praise to
God. Indeed, one cannot think of God and His wondrous works without bursting
forth into praise. He who knows God and loves Him cannot speak of Him without
feeling. The greatness of His works of creation calls forth the adoration and
praise of the human heart. If we are not moved to praise by the contemplation
of God’s attributes, we may well examine our hearts whether we possess the true
knowledge of God. When the devout heart begins to contemplate the greatness of
God, it loses itself in wonder, love and praise. Each word of verse 14 is
worthy of particular note. The action of his praising God rests upon the fact
that God has made David: for I am
fearfully and wonderfully made. By fearfully
David is thinking of those things which cause fear and astonishment. They are
the circumstances which surround the coming into being of David. The very
wonder of the circumstances under which life is conceived and the embryo formed
should produce fear within our hearts, for we are then in the presence of the
Author of Life. Having considered the wonder of his own creation, David now
proceeds to a more general contemplation. Not only is his own being wonderful,
but the same may be said of all God’s works. In saying that these works are wonderful, the Psalmist employs a root
that is generally used of miracles which the Lord has performed. It designates
that which is extraordinary and filled with wonder. Hence, it is a fitting word
to employ of the miracles of God to indicate that these events are set apart
and distinct from ordinary events and also that they are wondrous. And if all
God’s deeds are wondrous, particularly is this true of the creation and
formation of man. This is an act that only God can perform; it is an act of
wonder. In contemplating the wondrous manner in which he has been formed, David
proceeds to assert that from the very beginning he was known to God. Even
before his birth God saw clearly the frame of David’s being. The origin of our
being is in His hands. Herein is another evidence of His omniscience and mighty
power. The second part of verse 15 refers to the mysterious manner in which the
bones and sinews of the human body are knit together. What, however, is the
meaning of the strange expression, in
the depths of the earth. In what sense can it be said that man was intricately woven in the depths of the
earth. The phrase obviously stands in parallelism to in secret. If, therefore, the phrase in secret refers to the womb of the mother, it would seem also that
the depths of the earth is a
figurative expression for the same thing. Here the figure simply serves to
emphasize that the womb of the mother is a place of darkness wherein the body
of man is formed. David continues his prayer to God in verse 16, declaring that
God’s eyes have seen his embryo (unformed
substance). To God the body of the mother is no covering, and God’s eyes
penetrate through the body, so that from Him nothing can be hidden. All the days of David’s life are written in
God’s book. The thought here is that
the entirety of David’s being, even including the days of his life, are
inscribed in the book that belongs to God. Furthermore, it is stated that these
days of the Psalmist’s life have been formed before there were any of them.
What actually is the Psalmist saying? He is saying that the days of his life
were actually formed before even one of them had come into existence. All his
life, the details of each day, had been written down in the book of God, before
any of these days had actually occurred. The Psalmist has here reached a peak
in his exaltation of the all-knowing and all-powerful God. Not only does God
know all things, but God has also foreordained all things. In other words, the
Psalmist has brought us head on with the doctrine of predestination. His life
he regards not as a chance happening, but as a life already planned by God even
before he himself was born. All the days that David would live and all the
events of each day had been written down in God’s book before David himself had
come into existence. David’s life is not determined by David; he is not the
master of his fate nor the captain of his soul, nor, for that matter, is any
man. Before David appeared upon this earth, the days of his life had been
determined by God Himself. Indeed, all that occurs has been foreordained of
God. God has a plan and hence there are no surprises for Him. He knows what the
future will bring forth, for He Himself has determined that future. David was
to live a life that had been predetermined for him. David does not rebel at
this thought and neither should we. The contemplation of this profound doctrine
leads him to an utterance of the preciousness of God’s thoughts. David is
content that God has determined in advance his life, predestined the course of
events for him. As a devout believer in the Lord he knows that whatever God
does is right. But this teaching of predestination does not in any sense do
violence to our human responsibility. We know that the very fact that God has
proclaimed both His sovereignty and also the responsibility of the creature is
sufficient warrant for us to believe in both. In God they find their harmony,
and that is sufficient for the believer. We can trust God and leave the
question of harmonization to him. David, apparently, was willing to do just
that. There is something else that we can do. In the light of this profound
teaching of the Bible we can bow in devout adoration before our great God. What
a wonderful thing it is to know that the very days of our lives have been
written down in His book even before these days come into existence. Life is
filled with difficulty. About us the world seems to be in turmoil. We see men
in desperation and agony, for they know not the meaning of life. But we know
better; we know that our days are in God’s hands.
God Is with Us: Psalm
139:17-18.
[17] How precious to
me are your thoughts, O God! How vast is the sum of them! [18] If I would count them, they are more than the
sand. I awake, and I am still with you. [ESV]
[17-18] What effect does such divine
scrutiny and knowledge of David’s being and ways have upon the Psalmist? David
does not exhibit resentment at God’s close scrutiny of himself; instead he
marvels at the wonder of the incomprehensible thoughts of his great God. In
verse 17 David directs our thought to himself, not in any sense to praise
himself, but rather to exhibit how he reacts to the divine scrutiny and
knowledge of which he has been speaking. And what is said here concerning David
should also apply to all who like David love and reverence the Lord as their
God. The Psalm thus exhibits a practical purpose: it is designed to promote
godliness among those who are God’s own, and nothing can produce godliness more
effectively than the contemplation of the attributes of the majestic God of
whom this Psalm speaks. The second half of verse 17 also includes an
exclamation: How vast is the sum of
them! David reflects on the vast number of God’s thoughts as well as the
power and greatness of the thoughts themselves. It would seem that David is
uttering his surprise at the power of the thoughts of God. The total impact
which they make upon him is that of strength. The thoughts of God are so many
that David cannot possibly count them. In the Scriptures sand is an example of
what cannot be counted. These thoughts of God which arouse the adoring wonder
of David are before him night and day. There is no escape from them. In
counting the thoughts of God David was not merely seeking to find out how many
thoughts God had, but rather was meditating upon these thoughts. It is not only
the number but also the greatness of the thoughts which impresses him. Night
does not exclude David from the thoughts which God has of him. When the morning
comes he is still with God. It is important
to note the word still, for it
implies that the night had not separated David from God. To say that when he
awakes he is still with God is to imply that he has been with God right along
throughout the night. In fact, the purpose of the verse is to show that even
the night does not separate from God.
Questions for
Discussion:
1. List all the things David
says about God in these verses. Now list the ways David responds to his Lord.
Spend time thinking about how you respond to the God David describes in these
verses.
2. In verse 2 David writes
that Yahweh (Lord) discerns (or understands) his thoughts. What is the
difference between being known and being understood? Why is it important to you
that God not only knows, but understands completely all the thoughts, purposes,
intentions, and desires of your heart?
3. How does David respond to
the fact that all the days of his life were written in God’s book prior to his
birth? How do you respond to this great truth?
References:
Psalms, Volume 3, James Boice, Baker.
Psalms, Volume 3, John Goldingay, Baker.
Psalm 139, Edward Young, Banner of Truth.