Scripture: Psalm 8
Audio Link: https://soundcloud.com/tawabaptist/sermon-10-jul-2022-murray-lucas
Message by: Murray Lucas
Structure:
- Introduction
- Past
- Present
- Future
- Conclusion
Introduction:
The book of Psalms speaks of a wide range of human emotions and many of you will have a favourite Psalm which you identify with and helps you to work with God through life’s circumstances, both its challenges and its moments of joy.
The Psalm that I have found to be a huge help is Psalm 8. Let us read it from the New International Version…
Psalm 8
1 Lord, our Lord,
how majestic is your name in all the earth!
You have set your glory
in the heavens.
2 Through the praise of children and infants
you have established a stronghold against your enemies,
to silence the foe and the avenger.
3 When I consider your heavens,
the work of your fingers,
the moon and the stars,
which you have set in place,
4 what is mankind that you are mindful of them,
human beings that you care for them?
5 You have made them a little lower than the angels
and crowned themwith glory and honour.
6 You made them rulers over the works of your hands;
you put everything under theirfeet:
7 all flocks and herds,
and the animals of the wild,
8 the birds in the sky,
and the fish in the sea,
all that swim the paths of the seas.
9 Lord, our Lord,
how majestic is your name in all the earth!
Psalm 8 is unique for two reasons.
Firstly, it is the first hymn one encounters when reading the Psalms straight through. The psalms that immediately precede it are prayers spoken by people who are suffering or persecuted (Psalms 3-7).
Secondly, this Psalm is the only hymn in the Psalter spoken entirely to God. The focus of the psalm on the great and special privilege given to humanity occurs within the overarching focus on the sovereignty and majesty of God.
I would like to look at 3 parts of the Psalm that have helped me. I have related these passages to our Past, Present and Future.
Past:
One of the most dramatic shifts in the psalm happens between verses 1 and 2. We move from ‘You have set your glory in the heavens’ to ‘through the praises of children and infants God has established a stronghold against God’s enemies to silence the foe and the avenger’. We are moving here from God’s glory in the heavens to God’s glory in children and infants.
Jesus put a huge value on infants and children and rebuked his disciples for ignoring them and not valuing them enough. It is worth noting that Jesus himself cited this psalm on the day of his triumphant entry into Jerusalem when the children cried out, “Hosanna to the Son of David”.
A key aspect I want to bring out is that young children can teach us the value of wonder.
What is so special about wonder and children?
Children inhabit a world rich in beauty and full of wonder. As an example, it is children who find their way to the wonderful world of Narnia, from CS Lewis’ classic book series, “Chronicles of Narnia”.
A healthy and happy childhood is filled with wonder for the simple reason that, through the eyes of a child, beauty is abundant and mystery is everywhere. A Monarch butterfly emerging from its chrysalis, a puddle in the street or the moon in the sky at night have more than enough beauty and mystery to evoke wonder. For a child his own backyard and some imagination are sufficient for hours of wonder … until he or she grows up.
I am grateful to my three year old grandson, Micah, for rekindling in me a sense of wonder. His joy and delight at watching diggers in action or watching a ladybug on a leaf is contagious and it has reignited the joy of wonder in me.
I acknowledge the author, Brian Zahnd, for his insights into wonder.
One of the tragedies of growing up is that we lose this capacity for childlike wonder. The loss of wonder is what we experience as boredom and boredom is a real problem.
Let us look at boredom more closely. Boredom is dangerous and deadly. Wonder is a feeling. Boredom is the loss of such feeling. Sometimes we are led to believe that feelings are unimportant and I suppose that’s true for a machine, but we are not machines.
People devoid of human sensation and passionate feeling will often engage in dangerous and destructive actions in a desperate bid to feel something. Behind the evils of addiction and many other forms of self-destructive behaviour lies the culprit of boredom.
One of my favourite singing groups is Pink Floyd and not because they sang ‘We don’t need no education’. One of their other songs is ‘Comfortably Numb”. Its words have this theme – we grow up, lose wonder, and settle for being comfortably numb, but it really is a kind of death.
Wonder is a feeling. The loss of wonder is a loss of feeling. And when we lose the feeling of wonder, life just gets hard. The simple act of growing up and leaving childhood behind should not be such a catastrophe for our ability to wonder and be enchanted by mystery and beauty, but it seems that it is.
God-given wonder is an essential ingredient if life is to be made liveable. God-given wonder is the cure – the cure for life-killing boredom. God-given wonder is the natural drug without which people may turn to alcohol or narcotics.
Sure, most people bravely soldier on without wonder, and even do so without drug addictions and self-destructive behaviour but is that the point of life? That’s not life, that’s life with all the wonder crushed out of it and compressed to mere existence.
Wonder is what we’ve lost. Wonder is what we miss. Wonder is what we want. God-given wonder is our hidden Narnia into which we long to step and explore.
Joy Cowley captures this beautifully in her poem entitled ‘Bless Us, Lord’
Lord, when you blessed little children
You blessed every adult,
For childhood is not in our past but the pure state we carry with us,
Still connected to you our Source.
And so, Lord we ask you to bless us.
Bless the vision of the lovely heart
That sees the world as fresh and beautiful.
Bless the trust that neither judges nor condemns.
Bless the quick sense of awe and wonder
That opens up wider than wide
Bless the lack of fear that makes space for love.
Bless the lightness of foot, rhythm of dance
And music of every present moment.
Bless the laughter that rings in us like birdsong.
Above all bless our childlike curiosity.
The challenge to me, and to all of us, is to reclaim a child-like wonder that adds to the thrill of living.
Present:
The second part of the Psalm that has impacted me greatly is: ‘What is mankind that he is mindful of them. Human beings that he cares for us’.
After considering the cosmic nature of God who sets in place the moon and the stars, we have this verse which states that God cares for us. I believe that means all human beings, irrespective of their background or opportunities. In fact, other Psalms will clarify that God has a special heart for the oppressed.
This is a dignity given by grace, a dignity given to every person, and constantly renewed as each person is the object of God’s particular care and concern. Among all the creatures, only humanity is crowned with glory and humanity.
Let us briefly consider the largeness of God in terms of the heavens. With the naked eye, one can see about 5,000 stars. With a four-inch telescope, one can see about 2 million stars. With a 200-inch mirror of a great observatory, one can see more than a billion stars. The universe is so big that if one were to travel at the speed of light, it would take 40 billion years to reach the edge of the universe. Considering the heavens makes us see the greatness of God.
It is a source of wonder that God who created all this values and cares for us. The Psalm goes on and states that God created us a little lower than the angels. Biblical scholars argue about the translation of the word ‘angels’. I prefer the interpretation that the word translated ‘angels’ is Elohim, and most often refers to God Himself. There are some Biblical scholars who believe that David said that man is a little lower than God, stressing the idea that man is made in God’s image.
I want to return to the word ‘mindful’. Mindfulness is the basic human ability to be fully present, aware of where we are and what we’re doing, and not overly reactive or overwhelmed. Just as God is mindful of us, I believe that God or Jesus can be at the centre of our mindfulness.
It means abandoning technology and just being fully present to God. One simple exercise I have been introduced to is saying the statement ‘God is Love’ and sitting with it for a period of time, turning it over in your mind. Then saying, ‘God is’ and sitting with that for a period of time and then simply saying the word ‘God’ and doing likewise.
Firstly, the challenge of Psalm 8 is to recapture the wonder of the past.
Secondly, the challenge of Psalm 8 is to be fully present, embracing God-centred mindfulness and to value all people irrespective of their background or opportunities.
Future:
The latter verses of Psalm 8 steer us to the future. It outlines our responsibility as stewards for creation. In the Psalm it states we have a duty of care for domestic animals, wild animals, birds and fish and these creatures can only first survive and then thrive if we have a healthy ecosystem.
I want to honour those in Tawa who are working tirelessly to improve our local ecosystem: groups such as Friends of Redwood Bush, Friends of the Willowbank Reserve and those that work in the local community gardens at Tawa and Linden.
This year the Tawa schools have been part of a programme entitled KETE- kids enhancing Tawa Ecosystems. They will be involved in tree planting, monitoring water quality and pest control. One of our own young people, Delta, is a student leader in this worthwhile initiative.
Psalm 8 asks us to seek to protect, sustain, and restore creation. As part of this authority, mankind has the responsibility to wisely manage the creatures and resources of this earth in a way that gives God glory and is good for man.
This means that it is wrong to see man as merely part of the ecosystem (thus denying his God-ordained dominion). It is also wrong for man to abuse the ecosystem, thus making him a bad manager of that which ultimately belongs to God (Psalm 24:1). The mandate of dominion asks man to use the creatures and resources of the earth, but to use them wisely and responsibly.
Recently I was loaned a book entitled ‘The Good Ancestor’. It challenges us all to be good ancestors and to have empathy and love for those that will be living in 100 years’ time and even longer, way beyond our lifetimes.
The author correctly states that we live in an age dominated by the tyranny of short-term thinking but the reality is future generations of all living creatures, including humans, are going to be profoundly influenced by how we act to-day.
We have some excellent examples of people who have planned for the future. An example is the polder water management system in Netherlands. Its aim was to protect land from flooding by dikes. The oldest existing polder dates from 1533.
Another is the London’s sewers. This was built following the great stink of 1858 and the deadly cholera outbreaks. Chief Engineer Bazalgette took 18 years with 22,000 workers and 318 million bricks. The scale of his planning showed that he was thinking beyond the present to the future. The system is still in use to-day. In fact, to this day the Thames is the cleanest metropolitan river in the world.
How can we be good stewards of the natural world that God created? Biologist Janine Benyus says that we should draw our lessons for long-term survival from the 3.8 billion years of research and development that nature has to offer.
“The secrets to a sustainable world, are literally all around us. If we choose to truly mimic life’s genius, the future I see would be beauty and abundance and certainly fewer regrets. In the natural world the definition of success is the continuity of life. You keep yourself alive and you keep your offspring alive. Success is keeping your offspring alive for ten thousand generations and more, so what organisms have learned to do is take care of the place that is going to take care of their offspring.”
What does that mean with regards to caring for place? It means caring for the rivers, the soil, the trees, the pollinators and the very air we breathe. It means respecting the intricate relationships that sustain the web of life. If we overshoot nature’s bio capacity, we are failing in the task of taking care of the place that will take care of our offspring. If we want to be a ‘good ancestor’, we don’t foul the nest.
It is interesting to note that the Psalmist, in Psalm 1, talks about the life of a man who delights in the law of the Lord. In verse 3 he uses the metaphor of a tree to describe this person. That person is like a tree planted by streams of water which yields its fruit in season and whose leaf does not wither. Note the value the Psalmist places on planted trees and water quality and the importance of predictable seasons.
We need to think long-term and particularly in the area of care and stewardship for our ecosystem. I would like to conclude by reading a statement by a leading Christian Climate Scientist, Katherine Hayhoe:
‘I believe in God. I believe he created this amazing platform to live in, and gave us responsibility, stewardship and dominion over it. I believe God delights in his creation and wants us to delight in it as well. And I believe we are here to love others, especially the poor, the vulnerable and those most in need- just as Christ loved us.’
Conclusion:
Firstly, let us recover the God-centred wonder of our past childhood.
Secondly, let us be fully present, embracing God-centred mindfulness. Let us celebrate that God cares for each one of us.
Thirdly, let us think long-term and strive to be good ancestors, particularly in the area of stewardship of our ecosystem.
‘Lord, our Lord how majestic is your name in all the earth.’
This is the message of Psalm chapter 8.
Questions for discussion or reflection:
- What stands out for you in reading this Scripture and/or in listening to the sermon? Why do you think this stood out to you?
- What is wonder and why is it important? How can children teach us about wonder? What can you do to foster or renew your sense of God-centred wonder?
- Why is boredom dangerous? How can we guard against boredom?
- Slowly re-read Joy Cowley’s poem, ‘Bless us Lord’. What are you in touch with? E.g. a memory, a feeling, a challenge, an inspirational thought, or something else?
- Reflect on / discuss the ‘dignity’ of being human. How do you feel when you consider the place God has given human beings in his created order?
- What does it mean to be a good ancestor? What practical things can you do to be a good steward of the natural world God has made?
- Make some time this week to be fully present to God by trying the exercise Murray suggests. That is: Say the statement, ‘God is Love’ and sit with it for a period of time, turning it over in your mind. Then say, ‘God is’ and sit with that for a period of time and then simply saying the word ‘God’, sitting with that.