Why Are You Cast Down, O My Soul?
by Paul Tautges | March 27, 2019 5:19 am
Why are you cast down, O my soul, and why are you in turmoil within me? Hope in God; for I shall again praise him, my salvation and my God.
Psalm 42:5
Grief and loss can lead to many questions. But not all questions are bad. Psalms 42 and 43 include examples of the kind of questions which may flow from the activity of faith.
In Psalm 42, one of the sons
of Korah expresses his intense longing for God, longing which mimics a weary deer
panting for “flowing streams” (Psalm 42:1). Specifically, the singer laments
the loss of public worship, due to painful circumstances which became
hindrances: “My soul thirsts for God, for the living God. When shall I come and
appear before God?” As the song continues, he repeatedly asks himself why his
spirit is downcast. Each time, he answers by reminding himself to “hope in God”
as the one who will restore his countenance (Psalm 42:5, 11).
In Psalm 43, he does the
same, as he pleads for vindication. By repeating the habit of counseling himself
with scriptural truth, he is reminded of the faithfulness of God. Again he
instructs himself to “hope in God” (Psalm 43:5).
In his fresh translation of the book of Psalms[1], Alex Motyer points out that the writer of these two particular psalms asks God questions nine times. It is good, Motyer says, “to remind ourselves that questions are not doubts. So often a person can be heard to say, ‘I have so many doubts’ when, in fact, all they have is what we all have—‘so many questions’. And so it will be till we get to heaven…” However, in the asking of these questions lies a double remedy for the downcast spirit, provided they are “believing questions.”
First, help is found in transparent prayer, in the honest cries of a soul in anguish. For example, “My soul is cast down within me; therefore I remember you” (Psalm 42:6).
Second, help is found when
you renew your mind with truth about God. Rehearse scriptural truths about God.
For example, “By day the Lord
commands his steadfast love” (Psalm 42:8), or “you are the God in whom I take
refuge” (Psalm 43:2).
Is your spirit troubled? Are you downcast in your soul? Honestly cry out to God in prayer. Turn your doubts into questions, which flow from faith. Then deliberately turn away from the messages your emotions speak to you, by replacing them with the unchanging truths of Scripture.
[An edited version of this devotional is now published in A SMALL BOOK FOR HURTING HEARTS: Meditations on Loss, Grief, and Healing[2].]
Related
Endnotes:- fresh translation of the book of Psalms: https://www.cvbbs.com/products/psalms-by-the-day-a-new-devotional-translation-motyer-alec?_pos=1&_sid=d3944de2b&_ss=r
- A SMALL BOOK FOR HURTING HEARTS: Meditations on Loss, Grief, and Healing: https://www.wtsbooks.com/products/a-small-book-for-the-hurting-heart-meditations-on-loss-grief-and-healing-9781645070443?variant=31581389258814utm_source=ptautges&utm_medium=blogpartners
Source URL: https://counselingoneanother.com/2019/03/27/why-are-you-cast-down-o-my-soul/
Why Are You Cast Down, O My Soul?
by Paul Tautges | March 27, 2019 5:19 am
Grief and loss can lead to many questions. But not all questions are bad. Psalms 42 and 43 include examples of the kind of questions which may flow from the activity of faith.
In Psalm 42, one of the sons of Korah expresses his intense longing for God, longing which mimics a weary deer panting for “flowing streams” (Psalm 42:1). Specifically, the singer laments the loss of public worship, due to painful circumstances which became hindrances: “My soul thirsts for God, for the living God. When shall I come and appear before God?” As the song continues, he repeatedly asks himself why his spirit is downcast. Each time, he answers by reminding himself to “hope in God” as the one who will restore his countenance (Psalm 42:5, 11).
In Psalm 43, he does the same, as he pleads for vindication. By repeating the habit of counseling himself with scriptural truth, he is reminded of the faithfulness of God. Again he instructs himself to “hope in God” (Psalm 43:5).
In his fresh translation of the book of Psalms[1], Alex Motyer points out that the writer of these two particular psalms asks God questions nine times. It is good, Motyer says, “to remind ourselves that questions are not doubts. So often a person can be heard to say, ‘I have so many doubts’ when, in fact, all they have is what we all have—‘so many questions’. And so it will be till we get to heaven…” However, in the asking of these questions lies a double remedy for the downcast spirit, provided they are “believing questions.”
First, help is found in transparent prayer, in the honest cries of a soul in anguish. For example, “My soul is cast down within me; therefore I remember you” (Psalm 42:6).
Second, help is found when you renew your mind with truth about God. Rehearse scriptural truths about God. For example, “By day the Lord commands his steadfast love” (Psalm 42:8), or “you are the God in whom I take refuge” (Psalm 43:2).
Is your spirit troubled? Are you downcast in your soul? Honestly cry out to God in prayer. Turn your doubts into questions, which flow from faith. Then deliberately turn away from the messages your emotions speak to you, by replacing them with the unchanging truths of Scripture.
[An edited version of this devotional is now published in A SMALL BOOK FOR HURTING HEARTS: Meditations on Loss, Grief, and Healing[2].]
Related
Source URL: https://counselingoneanother.com/2019/03/27/why-are-you-cast-down-o-my-soul/