SOUNDING OUT:
God Will…
In the last three verses of Psalms 91 God makes an
emphatic declaration of what He shall do for His people. The Lord
himself, speaking of His own chosen ones, says:
Psalms 91:14-16:
Because he hath set his love upon me, therefore
will I deliver him: I will set
him on high, because he hath known my name.
15 He shall call upon me, and I will
answer him: I will be with him in trouble; I will deliver him,
and honour him.
16 With long life will I satisfy him,
and shew him my salvation.
Did you notice the beauty of the
structure of verse fourteen? It emphasizes God’s decision
to provide for His people. It says, “Because he hath,”
“will I,” “I will,” “because he
hath.” This introverted structure points like an arrow to
that which is emphasized — GOD HIMSELF. God says, ‘I
will.’
“I will,” is the strongest assertion we can
make in English. When I was in eighth and ninth grade I learned
what was then called a distinction between the simple future and
the emphatic future. With the first person singular and plural
the simple future was “I” or “we” “shall”
and then the verb. With the second person singular and plural
the simple future was “you” “will.” Lastly
with the third person singular and plural it was “he, she,
it, or they” “will.” Then if you wanted to emphasize
or state more absolutely your intention to act you would reverse
the helping verbs and say, “I or we will” and “you,
he, she, it, or they shall.”
Unfortunately today in our schools this distinction is
not always taught. However, in days gone by this distinction was
followed. In the KJV the translators used it routinely. Here at
the end of Psalms 91:14 we have God emphatically declaring his
absolute resolve with six uses of “I will.” “I
will deliver.” “I will set him on high.” “I
will answer him.” “I will be with him in trouble.”
“I will deliver him and honor him.” “I will
satisfy him, and show him my salvation.”
The words “hath set his love” come from the
Hebrew word, chashaq, which means “to love, be
attached to, long for.” It only occurs 11 times in the Old
Testament. Bullinger, in the companion Bible says it indicates
the deepest affection. The New American Bible and the New Jerusalem
Bible translates it as cling; “since he clings to me, I
rescue him.”
Chashaq emphasizes attachment to something or
someone. It is love, which is already bound to its object. It
denotes the strong desire of longing and attachment. This is the
love that will not let go. If a man has such an attachment toward
God he will be delivered.
Deuteronomy 7:7:
The LORD did not set his love [chashaq] upon you, nor
choose you, because ye were more in number than any people; for
ye were the fewest of all people:
God set His love upon us first,
we just respond in kind. We love Him because He first loved us
(I John 4:19). It is also used with the more common word for love
ahab, in Deuteronomy 10:15.
Deuteronomy 10:15:
Only the LORD had a delight in [chashaq; 11 times] thy
fathers to love [ahab; 208 times] them, and he chose
their seed after them, even you above all people, as it is this
day.
God attached Himself to His people
and will not let go. We use an expression today, which means the
focusing of all our energies to one end -- a ceaseless effort
after one object. We say, “I have set my heart on such a
thing.” That is what God wants from us -- an intense, single-minded
love. We must love him “with all our heart, and with all
our soul, and with all our strength, and with all our mind,”
so that, like Jesus, we may “delight to do his will.”
When we set our heart on something, we work for its attainment.
We sacrifice for it. We sacrifice our comfort, money, time, yea,
our very selves, freely for the sake of our cherished desire.
We see this similar phrase in God’s Word.
Deuteronomy 32:46:
And he said unto them, Set [with deliberate purpose]
your hearts unto all the words which I testify
among you this day, which ye shall command your children to observe
to do, all the words of this law.
I Chronicles 22:19a:
Now set your heart and your
soul to seek the LORD your God….
II Chronicles 11:16:
And after them out of all the tribes of Israel such as set
their hearts to seek the LORD God of Israel came
to Jerusalem, to sacrifice unto the LORD God of their fathers.
Temperaments differ, but all of
us in our own way must “set our love, our hearts upon”
God. That is deliberate and purposeful. We each know our capacity.
God also knows our frame, and requires our best. It is not because
the quality of our love is so great, but rather that we who love
are so tenacious. We cleave to God and never let go. It is the
will to love and serve -- it is the setting the heart to which
God responds. When we with full purpose of heart cleave unto the
Lord, He most certainly will deliver.
The second part of verse fourteen states: I [God] will
set him [the believer] on high, because he [the believer] hath
known My [God] name. How do we know God’s name. We know
it through His Word. God will set us on high in an inaccessible,
or lofty place. How elevated is the standing which the Lord gives
to the believer. Today, we are seated in the heavenlies.
To set on high was a figurative way to speak of protection.
Some of the translations handle it that way. The NIV says, “I
will protect him, for he acknowledges my name.” Knowledge
of God and His Word provide protection for His people.
Deuteronomy 28:1:
And it shall come to pass, if thou shalt hearken diligently unto
the voice of the LORD thy God, to observe and to do all his commandments
which I command thee this day, that the LORD thy God will set
thee on high above all nations of the earth:
Through obedience to the commandments
of God, Israel would be exalted above and protected from all nations.
Psalms 91:15:
He shall call upon me, and I will answer him….
The answer may not always be yes,
but He will respond to your call. I think we sometimes discourage
ourselves by a misconception of the exact meaning of “answer,”
taking it to mean only grant. Now, an answer is not necessarily
an acquiescence. It is just attention to our request expressed.
Jeremiah 33:3:
Call unto me, and I will answer thee, and shew thee great and
mighty things, which thou knowest not.
We should be conscious of God’s
presence at all times, particularly, times of trouble. God’s
commitment to be with us in trouble reminds me of Psalms 23.
Psalm 23:4:
Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,
I will fear no evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff
they comfort me.
Next God says, “I
will deliver him, and honour him.” The word for deliver in
verse fifteen is not the same as in verse fourteen. This one may
mean rescue and it has a homonym meaning equip for battle. Either
way God still provides what we need.
God continues His resolve asserting that He will satisfy
and show us His salvation. How many people do you now who are satisfied
with anything. God wants us to be satisfied. This then brings us
to the last one. “I will… show him my salvation. What
a climax for these three verses. That is what brings the satisfaction,
an ever-increasing awareness of our salvation, our wholeness.
Remember these are an emphatic declaration from God. To whom
did God commit Himself in these verses? These promises belong to
he whom God says “calls upon Me…” who “hath
known my name…” and who “hath set his love upon
me.” Let’s be deliberate and purposeful and set our
love upon Him and never let go.
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