by: Donna Bucher
Have you ever felt
like the answer to your prayers involved adding more confusion, complexity, and
intensity to your already painful circumstances?
Navigating these
feelings in my current season of life revealed my growing need for God’s
guidance when my heart is overwhelmed.
Like many, I turn to the Psalms
for solace and language of expression when my heart is overwhelmed. Recently
reminded of the treasure of Psalm 25, I mined incredible wisdom from the
man after God’s own heart, enriching my relationship with God in troubled
times.
One of many times David entreats
God for deliverance while in desperate circumstances, Psalm 25 models
for us an approach to God which dispels fear and unbelief while gaining the
correct perspective of God and His ways in troubling times.
“Unto thee, O Lord, do I lift up my soul. O my God, I trust in thee: let me not be ashamed, let not mine enemies triumph over me. Yea, let none that wait on thee be ashamed: let them be ashamed which transgress without cause.”
(Psalm 25:1-3)
Notice how David approaches God:
before listing the situation driving him to God, he asks for something deeper.
David is not
making this about him; on the contrary, by asking God to preserve his integrity, he pleads for God to preserve HIS
glory.
David publicly
and repetitively declared his trust in God. If God allowed David to be put to
shame and defeated by his enemies, God’s name would be put to open shame.
David then moves into asking for the need of his
overwhelmed heart. With his life hanging in the balance notice what David’s
request contains:
“Shew me thy ways, O Lord; teach me thy paths. Lead me in thy truth, and teach me: for thou art the God of my salvation; on thee do I wait all the day. Remember, O Lord, thy tender mercies and thy lovingkindnesses; for they have been ever of old. Remember not the sins of my youth, nor my transgressions: according to thy mercy remember thou me for thy goodness’ sake, O Lord.”
(Psalm 25:4-7)
Transitioning from the first
three verses to verses four through seven, puzzled me. When my heart is
overwhelmed, my vision sees only the looming problem. Yet in these verses,
David mentions his enemies not one time.
David’s focus
steadfastly fixes on the Source of help, rather than the problem.
How many times I
approach God in fear, anger, or panic, engulfed in the problem rather than the
Source of help? As a result, my requests tend towards the removal of the problem and relief from the problem. David asks for neither!
David’s overwhelmed heart requested
only two things:
Guidance. Painful, confusing, and overwhelming
circumstances often leave us feeling unsure of how to act. Like us, David most
likely felt the same way, yet instead of asking for removal or relief, he asked
God to reveal His ways and His truths.
Humbling himself before the God of his salvation.
Forgiveness. David had an accurate view of himself
and his circumstances; he faced his guilt and sinful nature, seeking
forgiveness and God’s mercy upon him.
The most
revealing section of the whole psalm comes in verses sixteen to twenty-two. In
David’s prayer for his desperate situation, he relates his feelings at the very last. He first brings the problem to God,
then he petitions God for his need of wisdom and forgiveness, confesses his
deep faith in God, and finally shares the emotions swirling in his heart.
Sitting
with David’s words in this psalm, I believe the order in which he petitioned God holds great significance for us.
Confessing what
he believed about God before baring his emotions to God reveals David’s reliance on
his knowledge of and personal experience with God.
Accepting and
praying for trials and suffering we find overwhelming, confusing, and
troubling, becomes clear as we follow David through Psalm 25. When
my heart is overwhelmed, following the man after God’s own heart, I bring my troubles to the Lord, ask God for wisdom and forgiveness, confess my belief about God to Him, finally casting my anxiety, fear, and pain upon Him.
Learning to stir
up my faith through the rehearsal of God’s goodness and faithfulness gave me
the courage to subsequently cast my troubles upon Him rather than fixate on
them. Resulting in my resting in the knowledge that all His paths are steadfast
love, mercy, and faithfulness.
Reflection:
How does your perspective when facing trials differ from David’s?
What one step can you take today towards honoring God in the
midst of your trial?
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