Yesterday's Bible Study |
Psalms 140-144 are songs of prayer, and they are followed by six songs of praise, beginning with Psalm 145, from which we take today's verse. This structure shows us that after we have spent time in prayer, the natural response is to praise the Lord! Today's verse focuses on some of the reasons that we praise God. He is gracious, compassionate, not easily angered, and merciful. We'll think through those characteristics and how we should respond to them.
The Lord is gracious--full of grace. This means He is not looking for us to do something wrong or waiting for us to mess up. Instead, He sees the good and gives us grace for sin when we repent of it. The Lord does not hold our wrongdoings over our heads, but rather, forgives us once we recognize them. He does not want us to be afraid to come to Him. His throne is a throne of grace.
The Lord is full of compassion. Jesus knows exactly what it is like to live in a fallen world and to suffer under its cruelty. Jesus knows what it is like to be tempted and misunderstood. Think about the word compassion. It has two parts: co, which means with or together, and passion, which means emotion. Jesus feels with us. This means He will not respond harshly to our faults and failures, but instead, accepts us with compassion.
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The Lord is slow to anger. While He is holy and we should fear Him because He is all-powerful and mighty, we can also take comfort in the fact that He is not waiting for an excuse to exercise that power against us. He uses wrath only to help us turn back to Him; He never becomes angry to alleviate Himself of stress as we humans do. When He finally displays His anger, He does it for our ultimate benefit.
Finally, the Lord is of great mercy. He knows that we are weak and living in a world that makes it very difficult to be holy and to serve Him well. He does not want us to walk around in fear, afraid to approach Him. He showed His mercy to us by sending Jesus to die on a cross for our sins. A God who does something like that is powerful and takes sin seriously, and this action shows that He also loves us immensely and is full of mercy. For this--and countless other reasons--He is worthy of our praise.
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