In my current trek through the Bible, I've just finished the book of Psalms. I had not planned to end the book right before Thanksgiving, but I was glad it worked out that way.
Once again, I used Warren Wiersbe's short "Be" commentary as a companion, along with the ESV Study Bible notes.
Since Psalms is the longest book of the Bible at 150 chapters, Wiersbe divided his commentary on the book into two parts. I reviewed the first one here: Be Worshipful (Psalms 1-89): Glorifying God for Who He Is. The second is Be Exultant (Psalms 90-150): Praising God for His Mighty Works.
As I said in the earlier review, the book of Psalms is Israel's songbook. The passages cover Israel's history from creation to the latest happenings of the day, their return after being exiled in Babylon for seventy years.
Though David wrote a majority of the psalms, various other authors contributed as well.
The writers composed in caves, in hiding, in their rooms, under persecution, in celebration.
Many of the psalms are deeply personal, yet benefit the whole congregation.
The psalms are deeply doctrinal, some prophesying of the Messiah to come, many quoted in the New Testament.
But many people value the psalms most for their wide range of emotion, from the highest praise and exaltation to the lowest depths of misery. The psalms give us many examples of someone pouring out their heart to God in confusion, sorrow, pain, or guilt, then reminding themselves of what they know to be true about God.
Here are some of the quotes from Wiersbe's book that most stood out to me:
Life is brief, so Moses prayed, "Teach us." Life is difficult, and he prayed, "Satisfy us." His work at times seemed futile, so he prayed, "Establish the work of our hands." God answered those prayers for Moses, and He will answer them for us. The future is your friend when Jesus is your Savior and Lord (p. 25, Kindle version).
It is better to suffer in the will of God than to invite trouble by disobeying God's will (1 Peter 2: 18–25) (p. 26).
This hidden life of worship and communion makes possible the public life of obedience and service (p. 26).
To rely on our faith is to put faith in faith, but to rely on God's faithfulness is to put faith in the Lord. Our assurance is in the Word of God and the God of the Word (p. 102).
The Word of God performs many wonderful ministries in the life of the devoted believer. It keeps us clean (v. 9), gives us joy (vv. 14, 111, 162), guides us (vv. 24, 33–35, 105), and establishes our values (vv. 11, 37, 72, 103, 127, 148, 162). The Word helps us to pray effectively (v. 58) and gives us hope (v. 49) and peace (v. 165) and freedom (vv. 45, 133) (p. 110).
What a precious treasure is the Word of God (vv. 14, 72, 127, 162; 61: 5)! It is like a deep mine filled with gold, silver, and precious gems, and we must take time to "dig" for these treasures (Prov. 2: 1–9; 3: 13–15; 8: 10–11; 1 Cor. 3: 9–23). A mere surface reading of Scripture will not put spiritual treasure into our hearts. Mining treasure is hard work, but it is joyful work when we "mine" the Bible, as the Spirit guides us into truth. Then, the Spirit helps us to "mint" the treasure so we can invest it in our lives (obedience) and in the lives of others (witness) (p. 131).
Wrong ideas about God will ultimately lead to wrong ideas about who we are and what we should do, and this leads to a wrong life on the wrong path toward the wrong destiny
(p. 193).
I'm thankful once again for Dr. Wiersbe's insights.
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