“I will thank the Lord because he is just; I will sing praise to the name of the Lord Most High.”
Psalm 7:17 NLT
I can remember as a very young Christian singing one of the songs prevalent in the church at that time, “Praise the Name of Jesus”, and I can remember being puzzled and planned to ask the pastor why we were praising His name and not the Lord Himself directly. Then I found the answer in the Bible, “ I will sing praise to the name of the Lord Most High”. We know that the Jews revered God so greatly that they even took care in how they referred to God, and using His name was one way they did this. In some ways, it’s a shame that the same reverence and awe of God is so often absent in our services and prayers. But David, at the end of this Psalm, largely written because of his enemies and in particular one Cush the Benjamite, expresses his thanks and praise to God. David focused on one thing to thank God for and that was His justice. God is righteous as well as loving. He is just as well as forgiving. But having considered the activities of evil people, David relaxed into a muse of thanks and praise, happy to leave his problems in the hands of a just God.
We pilgrims have much to thank God for, but there will be many Christians who are being maligned and mistreated by people intent on causing them difficulties. It could be minor things like some form of low level persecution in the workplace, or more serious, as some of our brothers and sisters are facing in hostile regimes in other nations. And in it all, cries and prayers for deliverance are offered up to our God of justice. But to many the Heavens are silent and justice is delayed, apparently. David reached the end of this Psalm, acknowledging the evil present in his society, knowing that “God is an honest judge. He is angry with the wicked every day” (Psalm 7:11). But he didn’t stop in the negative territories of self-pity or worry. Instead, he thanked God for His justice. He knew that one day he would be vindicated and God would come through for him.
The prayer that Jesus taught to His disciples encourages us to ask God for all we need for life (“give us this day our daily bread”) and for forgiveness for our sins (“forgive us our trespasses”). And at the end of the prayer God is acknowledged for who He is, with His (“power and glory”). In response, we can do nothing else than follow His prayer with a symphony of thanks and praise, relaxing in the knowledge that God will look after us.
David’s evil persecutors didn’t disappear overnight – they were with him in one form or another for the rest of his life – but he had faith that God would bring justice, and deal with them one day. And so it is with us. Instead of fretting over the attitudes and hostility of those around us, we can bring the issues to God and then relax in the knowledge that he is just and will deal with evil people sooner or later. It might not always be as soon as we would like, but it will happen one day. God is faithful and we can trust Him, thanking Him with faith that He will bring justice. And, again in faith, we can thank and praise Him each and every day for His goodness and mercy.
Dear Father God. Thank You for Your care and protection, available to us every day. Amen.
