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Enjoying God Blog

You can’t not worship. Ignore my use of the ungrammatical double negative and try to understand what I’m saying. You can’t not worship. Or to put it yet another way, “we can’t not love something ultimate” (James K. A. Smith, You Are What You Love, 20). You may choose not to sing. You may choose not to bow down. You may choose not to lift your hands. You may choose not to give any outward or physical expression to your devotion, but you can’t not worship. Continue reading . . . 

You can’t not worship. Ignore my use of the ungrammatical double negative and try to understand what I’m saying. You can’t not worship. Or to put it yet another way, “we can’t not love something ultimate” (James K. A. Smith, You Are What You Love, 20). You may choose not to sing. You may choose not to bow down. You may choose not to lift your hands. You may choose not to give any outward or physical expression to your devotion, but you can’t not worship.

Your heart and mind will always love something. It may be that you are so self-absorbed that you worship your own existence, your own soul, your own earthly abilities and accomplishments. It may be that you worship nature. Perhaps you are among those who believe the physical realm is in some sense divine or imbued with glory and you are drawn to elevate to a place of adoration, a place higher even than human beings, trees and mountains and streams and fields of lilies and gently flowing meadows and the ocean and all it contains.

Some of you, without even knowing it, worship money, or better still, you worship and are devoted ultimately to the pleasure and comfort that it can purchase for you. Everything else in life is subordinate to your endless pursuit of wealth and the joy that you are convinced it will bring you.

Simply put, you can’t not worship. Your heart and mind are of such a nature that they invariably look for something or someone into which you can pour yourself and to which you can devote yourself and for which you can make the ultimate sacrifice. It is in that something or someone that you look for meaning and value and a purpose for living. That is what I mean when I say you can’t not worship.

Maybe it’s the beauty of the human body, or the ecstasy of sexual intimacy, or the hallucinogenic high of a chemical stimulant, or the thrill of a Super Bowl victory or a championship in the World Series. It may be that you prize above all else continual promotion at your place of employment, or the endless praise of your peers, or the simple satisfaction that comes from finishing a project perfectly and on time. But the fact remains unchanged: You can’t not worship.

The loyalty and love and devotion and adoration of your soul will fix itself on something or someone. You have an ultimate and unrivalled treasure, even if you can’t always identify it. Believe me, it’s there.

So my question is a simple one. If you can’t not worship, why wouldn’t you worship the most worthy and glorious thing that exists? If you can’t not worship, why wouldn’t you devote yourself to the one thing in all the universe that is actually deserving of your ultimate allegiance? If you can’t not worship, why wouldn’t you pursue the one thing, the only thing that can bring eternal satisfaction and joy to your heart?

What possible reason could you possibly give for not devoting every ounce of physical, mental, and spiritual energy to the God of the Bible, the God who has Genesis 1 on his resume, the God who called everything into existence out of nothing, the God who is immeasurably great, unfathomably beautiful, limitless in power and knowledge and love and mercy and majesty?

That is what Psalm 145 is all about. It is a psalm in which David, King of Israel, does his best to explain why God and God alone is worthy of all praise and adoration and enjoyment and delight.

My aim is simple. I want to impress on your hearts that the “Thing” you were created to worship, that “Being” whom your heart was designed to adore and love, is God. You weren’t created to spend your time gazing on your own reflection in a mirror. You weren’t created to exhaust your energy trying to squeeze meaning and joy out of material stuff. You weren’t created to devote your mental, physical, spiritual, and financial resources in the pursuit of the countless “idols” in our world that cry out for your affection.

You were created for God: to see him, to know him, to celebrate him, to rest in him, to rejoice in him, to be satisfied in him, to be exhilarated with him, to be enthralled and captivated by all that he is for you in Jesus Christ.

And in Psalm 145 David only scratches the surface of an infinity of reasons why this God and this God only is worthy of your undivided and singular devotion of heart, soul, mind, and body. My approach to this psalm won’t be verse-by-verse or in recognition of some elaborate structure. I’d like simply to summarize what it is says, first, about the character of God and, second, our privilege and joy in celebrating him. So let’s begin.

David begins with God’s greatness (vv. 3, 6b), a word that is horribly overused in our day and applied to anything from deodorant to the most obnoxious professional athlete. Historically, many have taken the adjective Great and made it part of their name: Alexander the Great, Peter the Great, Catherine the Great, and in our own day the comedian Jackie Gleason simply went by the title, The Great One. And who could possibly forget the claim of boxer Muhammad Ali who declared himself to be The Greatest of All Time?

I beg to differ. God alone is Great! Furthermore, his greatness is unsearchable (v. 3). No one ever has or ever will fully fathom the depths of his greatness. Not all the minds of all the ages using the most advanced scientific equipment can capture all that God is. He is utterly beyond and immeasurably past finding out. Many have claimed to have spoken the “last word” on some event or experience. But there never will be a “last word” on God. For in saying that God’s greatness is “unsearchable” David is telling us that it is infinite. There is no boundary within which God’s greatness can be confined. You need never fear that a day is coming, not now nor in eternity future, when human beings will have discovered the last thing that can be said about God and his greatness.

This is one reason why the Bible is so precious. It isn’t simply a record of the religion of an ancient people. It’s not just a volume of fascinating stories. It is the infinitely and incomparably great God making himself known to you and me. The fact that the God who is by nature “unsearchable” has condescended and made himself “searchable” and “knowable” to hell-deserving people like you and me is almost too much for words.

David also points to his majesty (v. 5), or better still, the glorious splendor of his majesty. There is nothing remotely mundane about the majesty of God. There is a great light or luster or spiritual brilliance that emanates from the magnificence of his majesty. God’s majesty is blinding and breathtaking and beyond comprehension or calculation. This is the sort of majesty that mesmerizes and thrills and enthralls.

Ah, but he is also good (vv. 7a, 9a). Can you envision how horrific it would be if this great and powerful and awesome God were bad? Don’t take his goodness for granted, but joyfully celebrate it and declare it aloud and rest confidently in it. To say that God is good is to say something about both his nature and his activity. He is good in the core of his being, and therefore all he does is also good, never bad. That doesn’t mean you and I will always be able to understand how some of what he does is good. At times, it looks bad. But I assure you that it is good.

Our God is also righteous (v. 7b). To say that God is righteous is not to say he conforms to human standards of right and wrong. Rather he conforms perfectly to the standards of his own perfections. One of the reasons we struggle to embrace the righteousness of God is that we judge him by our standards instead of the standard of his own nature. But if he is wholly and altogether righteous, how can unholy and unrighteous people like you and me enter his presence? The answer follows.

According to v. 8, God is “gracious and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love.” Yes, God has a holy temper, but he has a very long fuse! Even those who deny and blaspheme his name are recipients of his patience and long-suffering. He permits his enemies to live, to spew forth their horrid sacrilege, all the while blessing them with food and air and earthly pleasures, affording them even more time and opportunity to repent (cf. Romans 2:4-5).

But look closely at v. 8b. God is not simply steadfast and unchanging in his love. He also abounds in it. You and I know what it feels like to run low on love. We love others, even the unlovely and those who don’t love us back, and we eventually run out of emotion. We find ourselves empty of affection. We lack the capacity to love beyond a certain limit.

But God abounds in his steadfast love. His love never scrapes the bottom of the barrel. His love never needs to be replenished. Every time you and I might be tempted to think that God’s love has run its course and met its limit, he proves us wrong as his love abounds and overflows and surprises us with new expressions of affection. So don’t ever think that one day you’re going to wake up and find that your sin has drained God’s love of its supply. His love is an infinitely deep well of refreshing water.

All these qualities of character inform his deeds and give shape to his providential oversight of creation. So let’s look briefly at what this great and majestic and good and righteous and gracious and merciful and longsuffering God does. In other words, let’s move now from what David says God is like to what David says God does.

For one thing, he works (vv. 4, 5b, 6a, 9, 12a). David goes even further and speaks of his mighty works, his wonderful works, his merciful works, and his awesome acts! God has never done anything mundane or boring or routine. All his works and acts partake of the magnificence of his nature and reflect the beauty and harmony and glory of who he is.

More specifically, he rules (vv. 11-13). But unlike every other ruler or potentate, God is in office for life (see Daniel 4:3, 34)! There is no transition team to move from one heavenly administration to another. There are no inaugural ceremonies (God has always been on the throne). There is no concern over the qualifications of a Vice-God should the Almighty be unable to serve out the full extent of his term. There are no tearful good-byes to the staff, no waving “so-long” from the steps of a helicopter, no cleaning out of the desk in the heavenly oval office to make way for his successor.

Among earthly kings, especially in British history, we hear of James I and James II and Charles I and Charles II and Charles III, etc. Not in the heavenly kingdom. There is no Yahweh I and Yahweh II, for God is first and last and there is no other. None preceded him and none shall succeed him.

The everlasting ruler upholds or sustains (v. 14) all who are weak and prone to falling. We should read this verse in connection with v. 13 and “admire the unexpected contrast: he reigns in glorious majesty, yet condescends to lift up and hold up those who are apt to fall” (Spurgeon, Treasury of David, III.b.380).

He also supplies (v. 15) food and life and satisfies the desires of his creation (v. 16). He is altogether righteous in his dealings with us (v. 17a). Of course, that’s easy for us to believe when things are going well. But God is righteous in all his ways, not just in the circumstances that favor us. Nothing is more difficult to acknowledge when we are in trouble, or when he afflicts us, or when we feel he has been unfair.

And we must never forget that he is not only righteous but also “kind in all his works” (v. 17b). We don’t typically put those two words together, for it’s difficult to be both at the same time. We swing to one or the other extreme and are either rigid and demanding or excessively lenient and tolerant. All too often the people we perceive as “righteous” are downright “mean” and inflexible. But in God righteousness and kindness find perfect harmony, as seen most readily in Jesus, who was simultaneously high and humble; both strong and tender; righteous, yet gracious; powerful and merciful; authoritative, yet tender; holy, yet always forgiving; just, yet compassionate; at times angry, yet also gentle; and firm, yet friendly.

Finally, he answers prayer (vv. 18-19), preserves the righteous (v. 20a), and destroys the wicked (v. 20b). Do you “call” on God in truth and sincerity? Do you “cry” out to him in prayer? If you do, you can be assured that he will be “near” to you. Your prayers may not always be answered in the way you think is best, but they are always answered in the way that God thinks is best!

When David declares that God “preserves all who love him” he doesn’t mean that the wicked can’t kill the righteous. We see all the time and throughout history instances where the “wicked” persecute, imprison, torture, and kill those “who love” God. But David’s point is that such is the worst and most they can do. They may take our lives physically but God preserves our lives spiritually in the sense that nothing done to us by evil people can separate us from God’s love.

To be continued . . .

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