This meditation is based on a passage for February 27, 2010 in the Daily Lectionary Year 2 from the Book of Common Worship for the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) (1993).
Text: Psalm 43
Reflection and Question: Because it ends in the same refrain found in Psalm 42 this cry to God is usually read as the last section of one poem full of wonderful images for God and our feelings about life. The psalmist’s experience of trusting in God, only to be disappointed, has happened to every faithful person. And the response of the poet can be ours, too: “Hope in God, for I shall again praise God, my help and my God.” That God’s faithfulness is deeper than surface circumstance is the psalmist’s and our consolation. When have you cried out with the Psalmist here?
Prayer: O send out your light and your truth; let them lead me;
Then I will go to the altar of God, to God my exceeding joy;
And I will praise you with the harp, O God, my God. Amen.
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- Genesis 24:67 Isaac takes Rebekah as his wife-the heart of marriage in Scripture. What’s the heart of marriage for you? http://t.co/NBSBsFw9 23 hours ago
- John 7:30 The authorities tried to arrest Jesus but failed because “His hour had not yet come.” Who's calling the shots?http://t.co/CAqCCOYj 2012/02/04
- My conversation with Andy Lang, executive director of the UCC Coalition for LGBT Concerns. http://t.co/BeP3F5hT 2012/02/03
- Hebrews 12:7 God disciplines us as parents train their children. How does God - not others in church - discipline you? http://t.co/TzCXcIfD 2012/02/03
- Genesis 23:20 When Sarah dies, Abraham purchases a cave & a field. Abraham is a sojourner no more. Whose descendants own Hebron? Why? 2012/02/02
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