Table of Contents
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Main Page
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Weekly Meditation
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Meditations from the Old Testament
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Meditations from the Psalms
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Psalm 2:1-12, The Whole Package
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Psalm 11:1-7, To Trust in Our Refuge
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Psalm 23:4, Comfort in the Valley
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Psalm 42:1-11, Faith Controlling Emotions
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Psalm 43:1-5, Why Am I in Despair?
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Psalm 46:1-5, The Nature of God's Might
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Psalm 62:1-12, A Lifestyle of Faith
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Psalm 63:1-8, No Matter What the Circumstances
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Psalm 84:1-12, Individual Miracles
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Psalm 86:1-17, Just to Know You're There
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Psalm 91:1-16, Faith!
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Psalm 103:1-22, Depths of God's Grace
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Psalm 104:10-24, God in the Normal Days
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Psalm 108:1-9, Giving Thanks with Abandon
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Psalm 114:1-8, Sustaining Love
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Psalm 121:1-8, Help Is Standing By
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Psalm 138:1-8, Lord, Provider, and Friend
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Psalm 142:1-7, Life in a Cave
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Psalm 143:7-12, Teach Us to Follow
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Psalm 147:1-11, Living in Debt
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Meditations from the Prophets
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Meditations from the Gospels and Acts
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Meditations from the Letters
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Other Illustrations and Meditations
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My Philosophy
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Back to Spirittone home page
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Teach Us to Follow
Psalm 143:7-12
Hurry to answer me, Yahweh.
My spirit fails.
Don't hide your face from me,
so that I don't become like those who go down into the pit.
Cause me to hear your loving kindness in the morning,
for I trust in you.
Cause me to know the way in which I should walk,
for I lift up my soul to you.
Deliver me, Yahweh, from my enemies.
I flee to you to hide me.
Teach me to do your will,
for you are my God.
Your Spirit is good.
Lead me in the land of uprightness.
Revive me, Yahweh, for your name's sake.
In your righteousness, bring my soul out of trouble.
In your loving kindness, cut off my enemies,
and destroy all those who afflict my soul,
For I am your servant.
World English Bible
As we read the Old Testament accounts of the life of David, we see repeated challenges and adventures from his
adolescence to his old age. He was the youngest son of Jesse, fighting wild animals as he tended the sheep, and using those skills to kill
Goliath. We see David fleeing from an enraged King Saul, and living in the wilderness, exiled from his homeland. We repeatedly find
David in battles, even as King, and even when the battle is against his own son, Absalom. Certainly, then, of all the Biblical characters,
we can believe David would understand what to do in a crisis.
In this psalm, David is deep into a crisis. He's struggled with this unnamed threat for so long, he's running out of options, his spirit has
fallen, and he's "as good as dead" if help doesn't come. In this circumstance, David is praying to God for deliverance, not
out of desperation but out of confidence that God will deliver him, even though it has taken longer than David would have preferred.
For most of us, there are levels to the crises we face. At the top level, things are "bad," but we can see a way out of them if we work
at them hard enough. At the next level down, things are "really bad," but we still have a plan to get out of them if we can get enough help. When
we hit the bottom, though, things are completely desperate, our plans are useless, our efforts are futile, and all we can do is pray to God
to save us.
There is a purity of focus when we get this desperate—extreme circumstances make it easier for us to let go of anything
that isn't completely important. This is a perspective we aren't brave enough to consider when we are comfortable and the
situation is normal, but it is a perspective we need to remember and sustain once we stumble into it.
In David's desperation, he repeats his focus three times: "teach me the way I should go," "teach me to do your will," "lead me." David has
gone past "bad" and "really bad" to the point where David sees the futility in following his own plans, and what he wants most of all is to
follow God's plan. It won't be enough for David to follow God's plan simply out of the crisis, for he wants to learn how to follow God's
plan always and to learn how to set aside his will for God's will. There's a simplicity and trust in his prayer, not that God would point
out the direction and send him on the way, but that God would lead him. There is a liberating humility in denying ourselves the
knowledge of the long term direction and following the steps of our Guide. It frustrates our selfish tendencies not to "know," and at
times, we can sound like children in the back seat of a car on a long journey, asking every fifteen minutes, "are we there yet?"
David, in the deep end with this crisis, no longer cared about the destination, and found contentment in simply following the
Guide. We all need that contentment, too, to let God's good spirit lead us on a level path. Let that be your prayer in good times as well
as crisis times, that God would teach you how to simply follow as God leads.
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