
Psalm 131 Commentary
Simple Trust In The LORD
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KEY THOUGHT: O Israel, hope in the Lord [Psalm 131:3a NKJV]
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Psalm 131 NKJV
Simple Trust in the Lord
A Song of Ascents. Of David.
131 Lord, my heart is not [a]haughty,
Nor my eyes [b]lofty.
Neither do I [c]concern myself with great matters,
Nor with things too [d]profound for me.
2 Surely I have calmed and quieted my soul,
Like a weaned child with his mother;
Like a weaned child is my soul within me.
3 O Israel, hope in the Lord
From this time forth and forever.
Footnotes
a. Psalm 131:1 Proud
b. Psalm 131:1 Arrogant
c. Psalm 131:1 Lit. walk in
d. Psalm 131:1 difficult
New King James Version (NKJV)
Scripture taken from the New King James Version®. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Psalm 131 Commentary
When David killed Goliath, he became a national hero. He was a well-respected army general. As a shepherd boy, David had incredible experiences with the sheep. Of course, he became the leader of God’s people, but not until numerous near-death experiences while on the run from an enraged King Saul.
Yet it is in the quietness of his soul, away from these great experiences, that David finds his peace in the LORD.
There is pride that is imposed on us by the titles that we hold. Probably age, the color of skin, height, intelligence, skill, money, or gender add their own layer of sophistication to the saint. David leaves all of this behind. He is simply David in the presence of the LORD – a child at his mother’s breast. Content. Trusting. Secure.
Breast milk is not T-bone, but it is a complete meal for a David in his mother’s arms – something to ponder.
“I’ve cultivated a quiet heart,” he says. “I have kept my feet on the ground,” he adds. No fantasized grandiose plans. He won’t concern himself with great matters. It is a decision he makes. He has defined the word closet for us today.
You have not closed the door to your prayer room if titles, big projects, complaints, and worries find their way into your prayers. Again, here is something to ponder.
The story of David is often read in isolation from the great prophet Samuel’s time as a judge. Or independent of the times of the other Judges that ruled Israel, like Samson. This disconnect forces us to miss the fact that David also worked under the power of the Spirit of God, just like Samson. It is under this kind of anointing that David killed both the bear and the lion when they attacked his sheep at different times.
These spiritual achievements, regardless, David is simply a child at his mother’s breast; content, secure, and trusting. Let not the gifts from the LORD elevate you above the simple trust in the simple care of the LORD.
The message to the Body of Christ is this: “Put your hope in the LORD both now and forevermore.”
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