Psalm 103:1-22 · Psalm 103
Song of an Evangelist
Psalm 103:1-22
Sermon
by Gordon Pratt Baker
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The author of the One hundred and third Psalm is an evangelist who cannot refrain from telling the world of God’s goodness to him. Indeed, he is fairly bursting with joy at the very thought of witnessing to what the Lord has done. He is so filled with the spirit of praise and thanksgiving, in fact, that his song flows from his lips in an unbroken stream. Moreover, he is offering its testimony before the faithful gathered in the Temple for Sabbath worship; and the spiritual depth of its message can only have moved the congregation profoundly.

Out of the Depths

Interestingly enough, the psalmist does not address the people directly. Instead, he makes them eavesdroppers to a conversation with his inner self. For in his exuberance - as if he is speaking to an unseen companion - he bids his soul bow its knees, as it were, to laud the Almighty for his many and life-changing mercies.

Bless the Lord, O my soul;
and all that is within me,
bless his holy name!
(Psalm 103:1)

Admittedly, things have not always gone well for the poet. As with those in whose presence he stands, he has had his dark moments. Like them, he has sinned. But the Almighty has forgiven him. Like them, too, he has known illness and suffering. But the Lord has raised him from his sick bed and healed him. Thus, not only has he been spared a sinner’s dismal lot, but, like the eagle renewing its feathers and flying higher and higher toward the sun, he has been granted a new lease on life (Psalm 103:5b).

Bless the Lord, O my soul,
and forget not all his benefits,
who forgives all your iniquity,
who heals all your diseases,
who redeems your life from the Pit.
(Psalm 103:2-4)

No insignificant catalogue of blessings, these, particularly in view of the fact that the Pit is a synonym for Sheol, a dark and dismal place beneath the earth where the departed survive in a feeble and pointless state - hardly a Paradise to which to look forward.

In bringing his song to the sanctuary, however, it is not the author’s sole purpose to give thanks for what God has done for him. That he will do anywhere any time, for his spirit is too filled with gratitude for him to do otherwise. Rather, in bearing his testimony he seeks also to quicken the spiritual concerns and commitments of his fellow worshipers that they, too, may escape the depths.

A Broadening Vision

It is but one small step from a personal experience to a social vision, and the poet takes it with alacrity. By the very character of the divine nature, he concludes, all people are subjects for the divine grace. Does not God love his people as a father loves his children? (Psalm 103:13).

Granted, the psalmist first applies the concept to his own country.

The Almighty, he declares
works vindication
and justice for all who are oppressed.
He made known his way to Moses,
his acts to the people of Israel.
(Psalm 103:6, 7)

Historian that he is, he remembers how often the Eternal has come to Israel’s aid, raising up for her leaders matched to her many crises.

But having said this, the poet finds he must go farther. Nations, he realizes, are more than political entities. They are people magnified. That being so, God’s concern extends beyond Israel to humankind. For all "who fear him" - that is, who cling to him in loving reverence - whatever their name or sign receive his blessings, not for a passing moment, but "from everlasting to everlasting" (Psalm 103:17).

Hence it is grace with which the author of the One hundred and third Psalm is concerned. For it is grace, he recognizes, that gives meaning to life and significance to the individual. Moreover he sees that grace in terms of widening concentric circles providing a sure stay for those who love the Lord even after everything on earth has been swept away (Psalm 103:15-18).

Here, indeed, is a revolutionary thought, offering strong grounds for jubilation; for it lifts the faithful above transitory things so easily mistaken for reality. Consequently, unlike a number of other psalms which lament pain and sorrow, the poet’s psalm is an unbroken paean of praise that not only reflects the gratitude of the singer but likewise elicits the spirited response of the congregation to the overtures of the Almighty.

A Portrait of God

At this point the psalmist makes another striking discovery. He cannot think of God’s grace without seeing it is an intimation of God’s character. Here is a Deity who shares the human scene. For here is a Lord whose heart beats as one with our’s. God’s love is an endless love, his patience inexhaustible. Slow to anger, God harbors nothing against his own. Neither will he continually chide. For God is aware of his children’s frailties, and he does not deal with them according to the measures of their sins or requite them according to their iniquities. Instead, he waits for the power of a great affection to persuade the changing of their ways. And when they are penitent God wipes the slate clean of their transgressions. So there is no need for persons to brood over past offenses since there is newness of life in the Eternal’s mercy (Psalm 103:8-13).

Nor is the poet concerned here with the atonement procedures the priesthood has ascribed. So far as the Almighty’s wishes are involved, he declares, whosoever will may come whenever they desire; for the Lord’s blessing awaits only the individual’s willingness to receive it.

Amazing, indeed, observes the author, is the range of God’s grace. Not even the most astute can appraise it. Let the eye scan the heavens as high as it can see, yet it cannot plot the scope of the divine love. Let one gaze from horizon to horizon, and still one cannot gauge the dimension of the divine concern.

For as the heavens are high above the earth
so great is his steadfast love toward
those who fear him;
as far as the east is from the west,
so far does he remove our transgressions from us.
(Psalm 103:11, 12)

So far does the Eternal distance our sins from his heart. Surely such tenderness is overwhelming. But then, knowing our frame, "he remembers that we are dust" (Psalm 103:14).

A Foretaste of Heaven

How natural it is that such a portrait of God should bring with it a foretaste of heaven! Like Handel beholding the heavens open before him as he writes his Messiah, so the psalmist, composing his song in a similar burst of inspiration, sees them part to reveal the Lord "high and lifted up" (Psalm 103:19; cf. Isaiah 6:1). God is still the God of love, only now he is enthroned in an unchangeable realm above the vicissitudes of earth, surrounded by angels (Psalm 103:20).

Comforting, indeed, is the thought that from his royal seat beyond the sky the Lord who knows all, sees all, and governs all intercedes on earth in behalf of "all created things," whether they be on the land, or in the air, or at the bottom of the sea. For it means that, whatever their sphere, none are forgotten on high.

It is a seminal concept, emboldening the poet. For with a daring born of genius he proceeds to bring his song full circle by calling on the entire heavenly host to join him in his hymn of praise (Psalm 103:21, 22).

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Sweet Singers of Israel, by Gordon Pratt Baker