Meditating on the Word

Robyn Black • September 26, 2021

Psalm 1

Psalm 1:1-6 (NLT)
Oh, the joys of those who do not
    follow the advice of the wicked,
    or stand around with sinners,
    or join in with mockers.
2 But they delight in the law of the Lord,
    meditating on it day and night.
3 They are like trees planted along the riverbank,
    bearing fruit each season.
Their leaves never wither,
    and they prosper in all they do.
4 But not the wicked!
    They are like worthless chaff, scattered by the wind.
5 They will be condemned at the time of judgment.
    Sinners will have no place among the godly.
6 For the Lord watches over the path of the godly,
    but the path of the wicked leads to destruction.

On the Thursday night online catch up we spoke about which TV show is our guilty pleasure. I won’t revel any of those – but I could have said Better Homes and Gardens. I really love this show - not sure why, because I can’t cook or garden or use a hammer or saw! Anyway, last Friday night, Graham the garden guy, visited the Illawarra Grevillea Park in Bulli which was set up in 1987 to house a wild grevillea collection for scientific research.

One of the things they spoke about was how to plant a grevillea and make sure it grows. So they dug a hole, wet some water crystals and put them in the base of the hole, then they put a handful of wetting agent in the hole. I’m not going to lie, I’ve got no idea what I’m talking about here, but this is from the grevillea expert. 

They threw a handful of slow release fertiliser in the hole, and they completely filled the hole with water. Then they dunked the roots of the tiny grevillea plant in a bucket of water until all the air bubbles came out, then they picked up the plant, water dripping from the roots, and put it into the hole that was still half full of water. They patted the soil around it, then tipped more water on it. 

Graham said there’s misconception that Grevillea’s like dry conditions but he said they like to have water around their roots, and for the first 12 months water them once a week. And in no time at all, they’ll be flowering. 

Wouldn’t it be great if every living thing came with instructions for care, you know, “do this to help this plant/puppy/baby thrive”. Well the great thing is, we’ve been given instructions about the conditions that help us to thrive. 

Here’s the advice “Oh, the joys of those (other versions of the Bible say “blessed or happy are those) who do not follow the advice of the wicked, or stand around with sinners, or join in with mockers.”

Firstly, we need to be careful about who is influencing us. I have a friend who’s become an Influencer on Instagram. She takes photos of herself and her family endlessly, where they look happy and beautiful, and she subtly promotes whatever clothes or kids games or baby accessories she’s been given. For people reading her posts, the carefully staged photos are appealing and there’s an underlying message…you can have this lifestyle too if you buy these products. 

All our life we will contend with subtle messages from our culture about what we need to make us happy and successful and beautiful. Sometimes we might believe it…and just HAVE to buy a particular car and then we’ll be happy, or try that face cream and then we’ll be beautiful (even though we really know that the model is 18 years old and of course she doesn’t have wrinkles). The psalmist says, be careful who you follow, who you allow to subtly influence you. 

Because the psalmist tells us…the only thing that will really change us is to “delight in the law of the Lord, meditating on it day and night.”

Now this word meditate is an interesting one. The Psalmist is not talking about eastern meditation, where we sit with our legs crossed and go ‘Ooohm!’ That’s not what we’re talking about. Eastern meditation is about emptying yourself.

The word ‘meditate’ has quite a different meaning in the Bible. The word meditate in Hebrew means “to mutter or mumble or growl to moan or to talk to oneself about.” It was actually used to describe an animal who was standing over its prey, ready to feast. 

When a lion is in this position it makes a low, growling sound. Or the noise of a cow chewing away on fresh delicious grass and loving every moment of it. 

Look I’m pretty certain that sometimes I make these same noises when I’m eating ‘mmm, nom, nom. That’s good!’. It’s kind of like savouring your food, slowing down, tasting each mouthful. 

That’s the same word being used to describe the person who’s not just reading the Word of God but feeding on the Word of God.

It was always the habit of the people of God to meditate. In Old Testament times they didn’t have the benefit of a printed copy of Scripture so they would take what they were taught in the Temple or early gatherings of the church and they would turn the words over and over in their minds. They would do this in the morning and during the day while they worked and before they went to bed at night.

It’s about slowing down, savouring the Word of God, thinking about ‘what does this tell me about God?’, what does this tell me about people?’ and ‘what should I do this week in response to this passage of scripture?’. Chewing it over. 

For instance, if I was to answer these questions about these verses….what does it tell me about God…he strengthens us, he watches over our path, he nourishes our soul. What does it tell me about people…we have a choice, freewill to live with God or without God, the company I keep, the influences I have will shape me. What am I going to do about this week….I’m going to chew over the word of God for half an hour a day.

Every so often I’ve spoken at or attended conferences. They can be enormously expensive and truly I’m not sure that most of them bring lasting change. I’m more convinced than ever, that the only true change with come in our lives, when we get serious about reading the Bible and discovering the delights held within for ourslef. The Bible is an amazing, challenging, uplifting book, and God uses it to change our lives.

The next part of this I love is Psalm 1:3, “They are like trees planted along the riverbank, bearing fruit each season. Their leaves never wither, and they prosper (or thrive) in all they do.”

This reminds of the grevillea – for it to grow it needed moist soil, regular watering. Sure you could choose not to water it. I gave a friend of mine a well-established lavender bush in a large pot for one of her birthdays. She put the pot on her covered veranda and I noticed every time I visited it looked a little less healthy. When the plant was on death row, I finally said, what’s happened to the lavender? She said, well I never water it. 

There’s no mystery to life and health in our relationship with Jesus. I mean, if we want a relationship with God, why not go all in, why not give it 100%. 

Because this is the outcome, you’ll be like a stable, strong tree, and you’ll get your source of life and strength from the Holy Spirit filling your life, like water from a stream. You’ll grow and thrive and there’ll be new fruit in your life. You don’t have to fake enthusiasm for Jesus, it will just be part of who you are.

We’re going to listen to “He will hold me fast” written in 1906 by Robert Harkness. a gifted Australian pianist who travelled the world in his twenties with the famous evangelist R.A. Torrey and his musical director Charles Alexander. 

One night, at an evangelistic rally in Canada, Harkness met a young man, recently converted, who feared he might not be able to “hold out.” Harkness longed for the young man, and countless others impacted by the revival meetings, to have confidence deep in their souls that their finishing the race, and keeping the faith, did not fall finally to themselves. He wanted this young man and others to know that God finishes what he starts. 

I’ve chosen this song, because as we meditate on God’s word, he holds us fast, we’re grounded, stable, growing. You can stand up to temptation, you delight in Jesus.

What is your response to these verses? God bless you as you chew on the Word of God this week.

Sermons For The Moment

By Robyn Black January 9, 2022
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Luke 1: 26-33
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Ruth 3
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Ruth 2
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Commitment from Love, Ruth 1: 1-18
October 28, 2021
This is an interesting Psalm – another psalm of ascent. We spoke about these Psalms of Ascent a few weeks ago. They were songs the Jewish people sang as they made their way to Jerusalem to go to the temple, through the forest, along the tracks, camping by the roads. And I believe songs like this kept them focussed and kept their spirits up. I can imagine days of walking together, tiring, boring, hot and dusty. And singing some of these Psalms keep them focussed on the faithfulness of God. Much better then eye spy for the kids. Journeys are not all their cracked up to be even if the destination is worth it. As you know, when I was growing up we always holidayed at Bawley Point past Ulladulla, and in those days it was about a 4 hour drive from Sydney. We always left later than we meant to…and the last 20 mins was on a dirt road. One year when I was probably about 4 years old it was dark by the time we got to the dirt road, and half way along the dirt road, was a dodgy wooden bridge over a river. I think part of the bridge had been damaged and we had to wait a bit in the pitch black darkness before we could proceed. Dad was out with a torch ensuring the bridge was safe to drive on and mum and us 4 kids were sitting in the darkness – no street lights, no moonlight. Of course, you might be able to guess what I said to mum in that car, with fearful crying…you’ve probably heard it from kids before. I said ‘I want to go home’. Mum said to me, ‘we can’t go home Robyn, we’re almost there’. In truth, after the bridge we had the last 10 minutes of a 4 hours journey left. We safely crossed the bridge and we were OK. But I remember it. I remember the feeling of being scarred in the darkness. I remember not liking this journey at all. Even though I always loved the destination. Well this psalm celebrates the end of the journey and the arrival at the destination. Psalm 126:1-3, “When the Lord brought back his exiles to Jerusalem, it was like a dream! We were filled with laughter, and we sang for joy. And the other nations said, “What amazing things the Lord has done for them.” Yes, the Lord has done amazing things for us! What joy!” Before we can understand the laughter and joy of the Israelites, we have to understand their journey. This Psalm looks back to when they arrived back in Jerusalem after 70 long years in Babylon. The captives had experienced great sorrow and mourning in exile. We read these heartbreaking words in Psalm 137: “Beside the rivers of Babylon, we sat and wept as we thought of Jerusalem. We put away our harps, hanging them on the branches of poplar trees. For our captors demanded a song from us. Our tormentors insisted on a joyful hymn: “Sing us one of those songs of Jerusalem!” But how can we sing the songs of the Lord while in a pagan land?” (Psalm 137:1-4). Their tormentors demanded they sing joyfully, but they were like – that’s impossible, it doesn’t come from our heart. So they just sat by the waters of Babylon and wept. But now by an amazing work of God they were suddenly back in Jerusalem. And so their joy came from their heart. The wait was over, the journey was complete. “We were filled with laughter, and we sang for joy.” The journey is the hard bit though isn’t it? I was reminded of this, this week. An Officer couple I was speaking to, said that their teenager said some very hurtful things to them. Stuff like, ‘you make my life worse’. As they spoke to me, I did very little but listen and pray with them. They do have other supports in their life as well, already seeing a psychologist. But what I was thinking in my head as they were speaking was ‘oh the teenage years, I’d forgotten them’. Though we have 2 wonderful young adults in P and K, they were times when it was more than tense. K wears her heart on her sleeve, and to this day apologises for some of the things she said to me. And P, you wouldn’t know what he was thinking, and then all of a sudden all his thoughts and feelings for the last 3 years would come out like molten lava everywhere. A few days later I checked in to see how the couple and their teenager were going. I mentioned in passing about teenage years and very briefly about our experiences. I didn’t want to make it all about me. But I said teenage years can be painful and those years can really hurt everyone in the family. Teenager included. They know that we have a good relationship with P and K and they said to me, you know, this is helpful. It gives us hope. I was like, yep, this too shall pass. Because when you’re in the midst of the journey of pain and sorrow, you sometimes wonder if there’s light at the end of the tunnel. If you’ll laugh again or experience joy again. You begin to wonder, “Is this all that God has for me? Will I ever be happy again?” And here’s the promise in Psalm 126:4-6, “Restore our fortunes, Lord, as streams renew the desert. Those who plant in tears will harvest with shouts of joy. They weep as they go to plant their seed, but they sing as they return with the harvest.” When you are going through a time of deep sorrow, Psalm 126 is strong medicine for your soul. It carries a powerful message of hope. It tells you that times of trouble and sorrow do not last. It tells you that God will turn your sorrow to joy and your tears to laughter. If you are going through a challenging time right now, I pray that this psalm will speak to your heart this morning. Let me tell you right up front, whatever you’re going through, it will get better. God will change your tears to joy. This week I found something I wrote about 10 years ago. I had written it on a piece of paper and there was a whole reflection about my life. At the time we had my mum living with us, she had dementia, and mostly I remember the good times and the fun times with her. I was also the Corps Officer at Glebe and Bob was the manager at William Booth House. After a page of writing I had written something like this “I’m often anxious, I’m usually stressed, I have eczema on my eyelids and ulcers in my mouth. I always feel pressed.” I went out to Bob in the lounge room and I’m like, ‘oh my goodness, eczema on my eyelids and ulcers in my mouth’, often anxious, usually stressed. The thing is, my life feels a long way from that now, and I’d forgotten what that part of my journey felt like. I’m sure when I was there I couldn’t look ahead and see a time of joy…but the truth is that “Those who plant in tears will harvest with shouts of joy. They weep as they go to plant their seed, but they sing as they return with the harvest.” This too shall pass. ‘Yes, the Lord has done amazing things for us!’ says verse 3. God is faithful – he does the healing, the restoring, he brings the streams in the desert that renews and brings fruitfulness. I don’t need to tell you – it takes time. Today, I’m praying for a work of healing in your life, a gradual restoration of joy, of laughter. Like me as a kid, sometimes we don’t like parts of this journey at all. Even though we know our destination is good. And ultimately, we have a destination like no other and that’s the promise of God. A home in heaven made possible through Jesus. May God bless you this week as you look to Him, listen to Him, find your hope in Him and find courage and healing in your journey.
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