Since Psalm 119 is very long, the longest in the
entire book, I want to save it for tomorrow and focus on that one psalm for the
day. Then the day after, we can begin the psalms of ascent with 120.
Psalm 117, by contrast to 119, is one of the
shortest psalms, if not the shortest. It is another invitation to join the
psalmist in praise. In fact, this invitation goes out to all nations and all
peoples. Thus, there is the clear suggestion, that not just Israel, but all
nations, all peoples, can praise the Lord.
However, it gets even better than this. After
inviting all the nations, all people, to join him in praising the Lord, the
psalmist gives us all a reason to praise God. “For great is his steadfast love
toward us, and the faithfulness of the Lord endures forever.”
What an inclusive vision! God loves everyone!
Clearly, the “us” in verse 2 refers to all the nations, to all peoples. God
loves everyone…no exceptions. This means that God loves people of every creed,
of every nation, of every race, of every color, of every sexual orientation, of
every gender, tall, short, fat, skinny, God loves every type of person, every
person you can think of, every person who has ever existed, is living now, or
will live in the future. This is just as sweeping a statement of the love of
God for all people as what we have in John 3:16.
As if that was not good enough, the writer of
Psalm 118 makes the statement even more expansive. “O give thanks to the Lord,
for he is good; his steadfast love endures forever!” God’s love is not only for
everyone, it is also for all time; God’s love for us is never ending! There is
nothing we can do that will make God love us any less and there is nothing we
can do that will make God love us any more because God’s love for us is already
perfect.
Furthermore, just in case we did not get the
message the first time, the psalmist repeats it four more times: God’s
steadfast love endures forever. The Psalmist invites Israel to make this
confession of faith. He invites the house of Aaron, the priests and Levites, to
make this confession. Furthermore, he invites all who fear the Lord to make
this confession.
The things we voice with our own mouths often have
greater power for us than the platitudes voiced by others. Therefore, I invite
you today to voice these words throughout the day until they get ingrained in
your mind, in your heart, in your soul: God’s steadfast love for me endures
forever.
Sometimes we have a hard time believing this. It
is often easier for some of us to believe that God loves everyone else but us. Perhaps
this is the case because every one of us experiences rejection at some time in
our lives. Therefore, we assume that God, if he really knew us, would reject us
too.
When we are feeling rejected, I think it is good
to remember that Jesus also experienced rejection. Psalm 118:22 was picked up
by the first Christians and applied to Jesus: “The stone that the builders
rejected has become the chief cornerstone.” If you want to see how much
rejection Jesus experienced, just read the Gospels. He experienced it from the
beginning of his life (no room for him in the inn) all the way through to a
bloody end on the cross.
However, as we know, that was not the end of the
story. If the accounts in the Gospels and the rest of the New Testament are
true, God raised Jesus from the dead. Jesus experienced rejection so that we
would never have to know the rejection of God. He was raised to new life so
that we might know a life of love that will never end.
The bottom line is: God loves us, you and me. God
loves us in our excellence and in our imperfections. God loves us in our joys
and in our sorrows. God loves us in our true-blueness and our quirkiness. God
loves us in our moments of wholeness, however few, and in the long stretches of
our fractured living where we choose less than the best for ourselves. God
loves you and me right now, regardless of what we are getting right or wrong,
and his love will see us through forever.
I hope you will accept this truth for yourself
today and every day. Embrace it. Revel in it. Steep yourself in the love of
God. God’s love changes everything, maybe not all at once, but over a lifetime.
And even if you don’t accept God’s love for you
today, or even believe in his existence, that does not change the fact that God
does exist, and that God does love you, now and always.
If you want to learn more about the love of God,
I have a whole book on the topic. You can read more about that here: http://willvaus.com/god_s_love_letter.
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