Tag: remember

  • Zayin

    Zayin

    Your Word Is a Lamp to My Feet

    NOTE: This psalm is an acrostic poem of twenty-two stanzas, following the letters of the Hebrew alphabet; within a stanza, each verse begins with the same Hebrew letter.

    אָשַׁר –

    from the root: אָשַׁר – a verb meaning to go straight, walk, go on, advance, make progress

    Each stanza posted last week is available. Please read & COMMENT on ANY.

    A brief review:

    Aleph

    119 Blessed are those whose way is blameless,
    who walk in the law of the Lord!

    Beth

    9 How can a young man keep his way pure?
    By guarding it according to your word.

    Gimel

    17 Deal bountifully with your servant,
    that I may live and keep your word.

    Daleth

    25 My soul clings to the dust;
    give me life according to your word!

    He

    33 Teach me, O Lord, the way of your statutes;
    and I will keep it to the end.

    Waw (Vau)

    41 Let your steadfast love come to me, O Lord,
    your salvation according to your promise

    Again, your comments are welcome and encouraged. We now continue in the next six stanzas this week:

    Zayin (Zain)

    49 Remember your word to your servant,
    in which you have made me hope.
    50 This is my comfort in my affliction,
    that your promise gives me life.

    Who is without affliction – sickness of mind or body or soul?

    Poverty of mind, body or soul – even misery of these, if you prefer. Is God not the giver of all good things? Therefore our prayer to Almighty God bows down our miserable moment to the Lord and Father of all hope.

    Remember your promises to me, O Lord, in which You have given me hope. Think now of me, dear Father. See the misery of my days and renew your hope in me; for I am your servant, dependent on You.

    The KJV in verse 50 states:  “… for thy word hath quickened me.”

    Let the word of God in scripture and the God’s Word, who IS Christ Jesus, give me life!

    51 The insolent utterly deride me,
    but I do not turn away from your law.
    52 When I think of your rules from of old,
    I take comfort, O Lord.
    53 Hot indignation seizes me because of the wicked,
    who forsake your law.

    Again, in the KJV, verse 53 states our woe even more pointedly:

    Horror hath taken hold upon me because of the wicked that forsake thy law.

    Who forsakes the God’s law and that which is right? From this we take our word, apostate,’ 0ne who turns from the salvation of God to do what is right in their own eyes. Do we not suffer at the hands of those who have done such wickedness? In fact, ‘wicked‘ is a description that no longer carries the weight of hell to which the punishment of the wicked without Christ Jesus will receive. Turning from God is a most serious offense. Christians true to the Law and the love of God our Father will suffer at the hands of the wicked, who are unto their own lawless ways.

    54 Your statutes have been my songs
    in the house of my sojourning.
    55 I remember your name in the night, O Lord,
    and keep your law.

    What is the house of our sojourning? It is this dying flesh and bones, decaying back to dust and ashes without the quickening and life of the Spirit of God.

    “I have remembered your name, O LORD…” It is the same remembrance of our petition to God which begins the stanza. Remember God and have blessing.

    56 This blessing has fallen to me,
    that I have kept your precepts.

  • A Picture of Heaven – Chapter 1

    A Picture of Heaven – Chapter 1

    A Picture of Heaven Chapter 1 (of 14 episodes)

    (Just in case you missed it, here is a link to the Prologue,)

    The day and the weeks of that time had begun like any other day in any other week of any other month of any other year.

    I say that they had begun that way, not because this day was any different, but because it was the same. We existed from day to day and week to week, alongside the same people in the same places doing the same things.

    Some of us went to church when the spirit moved us. Some of us went to church every week (some even more). And some of us would never be caught dead among people who tell us that ‘we have to change’ or we would ‘never get to Heaven.’  But as it turns out on this ordinary day, we all ended up at church.

    I recognized some of the people as they walked in the door. They were family and friends; young and old (with some even older). Their smiles were reserved and their embraces seemed more in need of embrace than gifts of hugs. A few held back tears.

    We were not the planners of this hastily arranged reunion, but all of us had broken the ordinary busyness of that day and dropped everything from our sacred schedules to meet here at this church on a day like any other: the day of the funeral…

    That’s what everyone kept referring to, for weeks and even years afterward:

    Do you remember the day of the funeral?

    Yes. We all remembered it. I could not put it out of my mind.

     +

    Years ago when I had traveled in Europe I became awestruck at the towering Cathedrals and intricate worn detail of these monuments of religion constructed centuries earlier.

    It must have been something of this which brings Jews to speak with some reverence of the Temple. I had seen pictures of many magnificent temples with this same opulence, built like palaces of kings in many lands of other countries with other religions.

    What had struck me most about these palatial places of worship was that they seemed to be built more for tourists and pilgrims, than for the poor family around the corner.

    And my experiences prior to the day of the funeral seemed to confirm that churches have way too many seats for the number of people who show up.

    These churches did, however, often look grand enough for the formal processions of a King or a beautiful bride.

    ... To be continued

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