Thursday, July 14, 2016

Taste and see...

Mud Pies in a Slum”

Psalm 34

Bruce R. Johnson
Exeter Presbyterian Church
Exeter, New Hampshire
July 10, 2016

* * * * * * *

I think that there may be as many as 20 sermons in this psalm. Surely there is more than one, but only one will be delivered this morning. That means that we won’t deal with all of the verses in the psalm. However, we will look very closely at some particular words and particular verses -- dissecting them, if you will, to aid in our understanding and to move our hearts.


I. Context

There are three contexts I want to consider. Originally only two, but then came all of the police shootings this week. I intended to talk about our context here in the sanctuary and that of the psalmist, but now I think that I must add the context of contemporary American culture.


Context A. Ours: To whom am I speaking? Who is listening? Who are you? Those who have been “ . . . delivered . . . from the power of darkness and conveyed . . . into the kingdom of the Son of His love, in whom we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins.” Col. 1.13-14

Rom 5.1-2 -- Listeners have peace with God. He’s not angry with you. Relax and enter into the joy of your Master.

The Lord is near to the brokenhearted and saves the crushed in spirit.” v. 18 Brothers and sisters, that describes us and the context in which we have gathered to hear the word preached.

We have a way -- I have a way -- of leading with my head when I pass through the sanctuary doors. Scholar Glenn Arbery says that the impulse of the intellect is to reduce everything as soon as possible to abstractions, concepts or teachings -- which leads people to look at literary works, which are by nature complex and bafflingly full of images and motifs and such -- and to want to find out what it means. “Summarize it and give me a takeaway.”

Patience is required to take in the whole form of something as its meaning instead of always wanting a tight, knowable summary of “bullet points.” “What the poet is trying to say is the whole poem.”

This whole poem (Psalm 34) reveals Christ. And, yes -- we will discover doctrine in the poem, but we will also -- and equally importantly -- talk about how this poem was written to affect our hearts.

Context B. This is a sweet psalm. How do we understand it in the context of the bitter violence of the past week? Verses 4-7 will aid our understanding.

Context C. David acted like a madman before Achish (his given name). In the title of the psalm, “Abimelech” is like “Pharaoh” -- a general title for kings rather than the name of a particular king. David has been busy fleeing Saul, and the word is out in Israel that he will even replace Saul as king. So the Philistine courtiers were acclaiming David as a king, which would have put him in jeopardy before Achish. Imagine: One king in another’s kingdom! David “pretended to be insane in their hands and made marks on the doors of the gate and let his spittle run down his beard.” 1 Sam. 21.13 The king’s courtiers must have been quite a cast. He sarcastically asked “Do I lack madmen, that you have brought this fellow to behave as a madman in my presence?” Id. v. 15 Achish let him go, and David escaped to the cave of Adullam. He may even have been in that cave when he wrote this psalm.


What was he feeling? Remember: He was often on the run during this phase of his life -- if not from Achish, then from Saul. I think he would have been exulting and experiencing a sense of relief. It’s probably becoming clear to him now that God is his deliverer.

So that’s the context. Now, here’s what we’re up to next (borrowed from John Piper’s God’s Passion for His Glory): Our task is to study reality as a manifestation of God’s glory, to speak about it with accuracy, and to savor the beauty of God in it. Particular emphasis this morning on savoring the beauty of God.

II. Hearing the call vv. 1-3

Let’s start with vv. 1-3. What do these words do to you? Do they stir your soul?

1      I will bless the Lord at all times;
          His praise shall continually be in my mouth.
2      My soul makes its boast in the Lord;
          let the humble hear and be glad.
3      Oh, magnify the Lord with me,
          and let us exalt his name together!


Bless at all times . . . continual praise . . . boasting soul . . . ”


David was probably rather foolish in letting himself get into a pickle before Achish. He’s a good “stand-in” for us as we consider the apparent foolishness of these first three verses. “I will bless the Lord at all times.” Really? “At all times” when I’m not muttering under my breath about the raw deal he’s given me with this aching tooth, that ungrateful child, that demanding boss, those tanked investments or whatever else is my complaint du jour?


His praise . . . continually . . . in my mouth”? Unlikely. There are far too many other subjects I’d rather hear myself talk about.


But wait -- are we taking these “big” words too much at face value -- words like “all times” and “continually”? Are you “put off” when you read words like that because you know that you couldn’t possibly live up to the standard they set?


Perhaps they are better understood as referring to a dominant mindset -- a heart and mind pointed toward God, His greatness and His praise; a heart and a mind which, in the muck and mire of daily living, quickly “rebound” to ongoing blessing and continual praise when they are reminded of the pre-eminence of Christ.


But how are we to think about boasting? As Christians, are we allowed to do that? Listen to what God Himself says about boasting:

Thus says the Lord, “Let not a wise man boast of his wisdom, and let not the mighty man boast of his might, let not a rich man boast of his riches; but let him who boasts boast of this, that he understands and knows Me, that I am the Lord who exercises lovingkindness, justice and righteousness on earth; for I delight in these things,” declares the Lord. Jer. 9.23-24 NASB

Knowing the Lord -- this specific Lord, who exercises lovingkindness, justice and righteousness on earth -- knowing this Lord is something to get puffed up about.


And how utterly fascinating that the Lord delights in lovingkindness, justice and righteousness . . . much, perhaps, as we are to delight in Him. He is worth our boasting. He is praiseworthy for these very qualities which delight Him. Do not leave this psalm behind in your private worship until God has given you a strong sense of how all of this “rotates” around itself. (“The glory that you have given me I have given to them,  that they may be one even as we are one, I in them and you in me, that they may become perfectly one, so that the world may know that you sent me and loved them even as you loved me.Jno. 17.22-23 ESV)

In many ways, the point of verses 1-3 is that Christ is eminently and always praiseworthy. Imagine a person -- any person -- who deserves blessing all of the time -- praise continually. This is the Person revealed to us by these three verses.


It is in these three verses that we find the doctrine of the psalm: Doxology is the duty and the delight of the elect.


Doxology” -- “duty” -- “delight” -- “elect.” Except for “delight,” these must seem almost unmanageable words to our unsaved friends and relatives.


C. S. Lewis once wrote that “I think we delight to praise what we enjoy because the praise not merely expresses but completes the enjoyment; it is its appointed consummation.”1 We just can’t keep it inside. An example from Jesus’ own life occurred when the Pharisees told Jesus to rebuke His disciples for rejoicing and praising God with a loud voice: “But He answered and said to them, ‘I tell you that if these [His disciples] should keep silent, the stones would immediately cry out.’Lk. 19.40 NKJV This is how great God’s glory is: It must find audible expression.


III. Examining our wants (vv. 4-7)


Key words in vv. 4 & 5: sought -- answered -- delivered -- fears -- look -- radiant -- ashamed.


Sought -- Although “seeking” is introduced here in verse 4, it will enter in again to the meaning of verse 8, where it is not found. We will not “taste and see” as verse 8 urges us to do unless we seek. This simple word reminds us that we are derived, dependent and contingent beings. We seek because we don’t have everything we need. Seeking serves to sanctify us in humility. And then we’ll see in verse 18 that it is the humble who are able actually to enter into the duty and delight of doxology.


Answered -- This is one of many arresting phrases in this psalm: “He answered me.” Surely here is one of those separate sermons. Just imagine that the God of the entire universe -- the One who spoke it into being -- this One would actually condescend to answer a mere mortal . . . and a sinner at that. “Answered” teams with “sought” -- sought/answered. Only the elect can apply to themselves the “answered” part of this verse. “He answered me” is part of our “holiday at the sea.” You don’t know what that means? Stay tuned.


Delivered -- At the root of “deliverance” is the idea of being liberated, being set free . . . so we learn about ourselves from this verse that we are in bondage.


To what? To sin, of course, in general -- but specifically to our fears. From Dr. Dan Allender and Dr. Tremper Longman III in The Cry of the Soul: “All of us fear what we cannot control. Fear is our response to uncertainty about our resources in the face of danger, when we are assaulted by a force that overwhelms us and compels us to face that we are helpless and out of control.” (p. 81) “We feel fear when core, life-giving dreams that are the basis for our identity are threatened with extinction.” (p. 83)


Don’t we fear the culture around us? Let me put it this way: Betsy and I dreamed in the 1950s and even into the 60s that we lived in a God-honoring culture. That the whole family going to church was normal (even though neither of us came to Christ until the 1970s). Baseball, hot dogs, apple pie, 4th of July parades, Mt. Rushmore, Norman Rockwell paintings -- these were all part of our identity.


And now we fear what America seems to have become. In losing our country, we feel like we’re losing our identity. But listen to the Psalmist:


I sought the LORD, and he answered me and delivered me from all my fears. Those who look to him are radiant, and their faces shall never be ashamed. This poor man cried, and the LORD heard him and saved him out of all his troubles. The angel of the LORD encamps around those who fear him, and delivers them.

Brothers and sisters: The gospel of peace has been entrusted to us. By the grace of God, we bear the fruit of the Spirit. What will our responses be in the hundreds of conversations we’ll all have about Dallas? Will we -- to borrow from Pastor Magee’s admonition of two weeks ago -- “unmuzzle” ourselves and tell the truth about the horrible condition of the human heart which leads to murder and about the glorious gospel which is the only cure for that ailing heart? Can we be content any longer just to debate the merits of gun control legislation?


Look -- This is “look” in the sense of “inwardly turn toward him (and, by implication, away from yourself) in reliance.” But there’s some degree of physicality in this looking -- not a mere internal or spiritual reliance. Because “those who look to him are…


Radiant” -- “beam with light.” “Radius” -- something which proceeds out from a center. That’s the light which falls on us from Christ, the center of the universe. This verse reveals to us that He is the center. And is part of our holiday at the sea.


Ashamed -- Allender/Longman: “Shame is a flight from intimacy. It is one of our deepest fears: [that] we will be isolated and mocked forever. . . . Shame is feeling exposed as ugly beyond words.” (p. 51). Not to be ashamed, then, might be like feeling beautiful beyond words in the sight of our Maker.


Look more closely: Whose faces will never be ashamed? “Those who look on him.” There could be at least two problems with taking these words at face value. First, we can’t see Him. We cannot use our material eyeballs to see Him as we normally see others. Second, this descriptive (“those who look on him”) seems related to an act which might be external and purely mechanical -- unrelated to heart conditions.


For clarification of “looking to him,” consider Christ’s words to Nicodemus in John 3: And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son of Man be lifted up, that whoever believes in Him may have eternal life.vv.14-15 ESV He was referring, of course, to the story of the bronze serpent, told in Numbers 21.4-9.


Clearly, then, “Those who look to him . . . shall never be ashamed” is both a description of believers and an invitation to look on Christ on the cross and receive Him as Savior and Lord, but in the context of examining ourselves, when we read of those who look on him, we are led to understand about ourselves that we need a Savior and a Lord.


Verses 6 and 7 seem to come right out of David’s immediate experience -- fleeing Achish and heading to the cave. This stanza ends with a second emphasis on deliverance.

IV. Investigating Christ (vv. 8-17)


This section, too, ends with a report of deliverance, but first comes this remarkable exclamation -- “Oh, taste and see that the Lord is good!” And this, too, is part of our holiday at the sea. “Oh, taste and see that the Lord is good!”


Don’t you find this verse arresting also? We live this out every time we celebrate the Lord’s Supper. That makes it easy to take the verse for granted. “Well, yeah, sure -- I ‘taste’ the Lord every Sunday in the Supper. And, yeah, that’s certainly a good thing. So-o-o -- will the Red Sox be on TV this afternoon?”


Do you know that it is actually possible to taste the Lord . . . and not just in the bread and the cup of the Lord’s Supper. How can that be?


First: I’m not going to try to lay before you everything which this “tasting” and “seeing” might be like. I don’t know everything myself; this is an aspect of the Christian life which I strongly suspect that God unfolds to us in increasing measure over many years of sanctification.


Second (paraphrasing Piper, p. 74): It is to no avail -- it is worthless, hollow -- merely to believe that God is good . . . that He is holy and merciful. For that belief to be of any saving value, we must “sense” His goodness, His holiness, His mercy. That is, we must have a true taste for it and delight in it for what it is in itself. Otherwise the knowledge is no different from what the devils have.


So -- does this mean that, from somewhere within ourselves, we must “gin” up this “true taste and delight” -- swallowing often enough, as it were, that -- with clenched fists and set jaws -- we unilaterally overcome any bitterness in the taste? No . . . because Christ is sweet to those who know Him and whom He has known.


Nor does it mean that we must put aside all the years of study which we in this room carry about in our bodies as we sit (or stand!) here this morning. Quoting Jonathan Edwards on the relationship between knowing and sensing: “The more you have of a rational knowledge of divine things, the more opportunity will there be, when the Spirit shall be breathed into your heart, to see the excellency of these things, and to taste the sweetness of them.” (Piper, p. 74)


What might “tasting” be in this setting? How about “experiencing” or even “embracing”? Whatever words seem to give “tasting” a proper biblical meaning, we must keep in mind that “tasting” is ultimately a material metaphor for an immaterial or spiritual phenomenon. And we must keep in mind that the world in which we live tends to dismiss such metaphors. “That’s just poetry. It has no objective ‘meaning.’ It’s only for your personal reading pleasure.” So we are not culturally conditioned to grasp the full meaning and beauty of such words. We must -- as in verse 4 -- actively seek out their meaning and their embodiment in the person of Christ.


In order to do this, I encourage you to engage scripture. “Engage” is not a Latin word; it comes from the French. The root (“gage”) is something which is thrown down (a glove, for example) to initiate a challenge to combat. Challenge the scripture; let it challenge you.


To be sure, all of this represents a very different way of “seeing” and a very different way of “tasting” from the usual. It is, as I’ve already noted, not a customary way of getting to know a person. Our human relationships grow from two-way conversations -- “sightings” -- hand shakes -- travels together -- tasks together (paint the fence) -- letters back and forth (even e-letters).


Instead, our relationship with Christ depends on a book (well, 66 books in a single binding) -- on “conversations” (prayer) in which we speak but do not necessarily hear back -- a washing with water (once) -- a weekly observance of a meal which never filled anyone’s belly. These are clearly the ordained means by which we come to “taste” and “see.” Has it ever occurred to you that it is precisely because we cannot see the “cause-and-effect” relationship between these means and the end of knowing Christ that God ordained these means?


But there is more, isn’t there? There is a body -- Christ’s body -- present in this very room. In a sense, if you speak with me, you speak with Christ; see Pastor Magee walking to his car, see Christ; embrace Lorraine Bailey, embrace Christ; sing a hymn with the Hendersons, sing with Christ.


V. Receiving Christ (vv. 18-22)


Doxology is the duty and the delight of the elect.

Having heard the doctrine, what do you do with it? What do you ever do with the doctrines discovered in the scriptures and revealed from this pulpit? Use doctrine to get to know Christ, as a person and not as -- Himself -- a doctrine for interesting discussions. Let the doctrine invade your heart -- even break your heart. “The Lord is near to the brokenhearted and saves the crushed in spirit.” v. 18

Listen again to the rest of the psalmist’s description of God’s people. In addition to being near to the brokenhearted and saving the crushed in spirit, “Many are the afflictions of the righteous, but the Lord delivers him out of them all.” v. 19

What’s up with all this oppression? “Brokenhearted,” “crushed in spirit,” “afflictions of the righteous.” Ah, but these are precisely the people who have it in them to “bless the Lord at all times,” to keep “his praise . . . continually in [their] mouth[s].”

It’s unwise of me, perhaps, to leave for the end (when your energy and attentiveness may be flagging) what may be some of the closest reasoning I’ve invited you to engage in all morning. (By “close reasoning,” I mean that you must pay close attention to each one of the next few ideas as I present them. “Miss” one and you’re likely to miss the whole “thread.”)

We probably do think of ourselves as brokenhearted and crushed in spirit and suffering the afflictions of the righteous . . . but we often have it backwards. Oh, yes, we are brokenhearted and crushed in spirit, but we tell ourselves that it’s because . . . well, we are driven by the clock. We have so much to do and so little time in which to do it. And all of our activities are “good,” or at least “necessary” -- our jobs, keeping the house clean and the electronic devices in working order and the children driven to and fro and . . . you see, we just haven’t the time for tasting and seeing that the Lord is good.

But that, my friends, is where our happiness lies -- our fulfillment, our satisfaction. Have we excused ourselves from the life of the Spirit and from the satisfaction which it brings? Let me borrow from John Piper again (page 80) and caution you to hear this carefully: You can’t love your own happiness too much. It is impossible that anyone can pursue joy or satisfaction with too much passion and zeal and intensity. Piper quotes Edwards: “I do not suppose it can be said of any, that their love to their own happiness . . . can be in too high a degree.” It can be directed to wrong objects . . . but it cannot be too strong. C. S. Lewis said the same thing:

If we consider the unblushing promises of reward and the staggering nature of the rewards promised in the Gospels, it would seem that our Lord finds our desires not too strong, but too weak. We are half-hearted creatures, fooling about with drink and sex and ambition when infinite joy is offered us, like an ignorant child who wants to go on making mud pies in a slum because he cannot imagine what is meant by the offer of a holiday at the sea. We are far too easily pleased.

Christ invites us to enjoy a permanent holiday at the sea . . . or a skiing vacation . . . or unlimited reading time. What would please you the most? That (whatever it is) is He, and His glory is your satisfaction.

VI. Conclusion

Fathers and mothers, brothers and sisters: This is your psalm; you own it. Will you claim it? Will you devour it? Will you allow the Christ of this psalm to continue -- right now, today -- His transforming of you by the renewal of your mind . . . or will you be content to make mud pies in that slum which is your old nature?

Taste and see that the Lord is good.

1 C. S. Lewis, Reflections on the Psalms (New York, Brace and World, 1958), p. 95 [quoted in Piper, God’s Passion for His Glory, p. 32, n. 30]