How do I trust God in the Middle of a Season of Loss? Psalm 74

Have you ever seen a church building repurposed as a new business, restaurant, or bar? I have seen this many times while visiting family and traveling in Europe. One church I remember had gorgeous stained-glass windows but was converted into an Indian restaurant. I found it strangely unsettling, and loss is firmly attached to it in my mind.

There is a special rite or service within Anglicanism known as The De-Consecration of a Sacred Space. The liturgy is designed to make room for lament for those who experienced some of the most joyful moments in their lives inside the walls of that church. A wedding day, a child’s baptism, or a loved one’s memorial service becomes tied to those sacred spaces in our hearts and minds. Recently, a pastor told me of an unfortunate situation in the Austin area. When a nearby church’s attendance dwindled, the denomination closed the church building. Next, families who had placed their loved ones in the church’s columbarium were contacted. The families were asked to come and pick up their loved one’s cremated remains. His church was in a growth cycle and recently built a new columbarium. They began receiving regular requests to purchase niches for these homeless remains.

In Psalm 74, the worship leader cries out to God on behalf of an entire congregation in lament over the destruction of their sanctuary. While most church-going Americans have never experienced the tragedy of having a foreign power destroy their church, some know a fair bit about church splits and church attendance decline. While I realize some churches might be building bigger buildings and moving to new spaces, that is not always the case. Like divorce, church splits and dwindling attendance create financial havoc and loss.

A Cry for Help

1 O God, why do you cast us off forever? Why does your anger smoke against the sheep of your pasture?
2 Remember your congregation, which you have purchased of old, which you have redeemed to be the tribe of your heritage! Remember Mount Zion, where you have dwelt.
3 Direct your steps to the perpetual ruins; the enemy has destroyed everything in the sanctuary!
(Psalm 74:1-3 ESV)
  • Does God need me to remind Him?
  • Does God need me to direct Him?
  • Does God need to hear my status update?

No

When faced with loss, I feel compelled to line it out for God as if it might have escaped his notice. The truth is that God knows all about my losses. He knows what I lost before, and He even knows what I will lose in the future.

A List of Violations

4 Your foes have roared in the midst of your meeting place; they set up their own signs for signs.
5 They were like those who swing axes in a forest of trees.
6 And all its carved wood they broke down with hatchets and hammers.
7 They set your sanctuary on fire; they profaned the dwelling place of your name,
bringing it down to the ground.
8 They said to themselves, “We will utterly subdue them”; they burned all the meeting places of God in the land.
9 We do not see our signs; there is no longer any prophet, and there is none among us who knows how long.
(Psalm 74:4-9 ESV)

Losing a place of worship strikes at the heart of a community. Destroying beautiful things like art, worship spaces, or rare books feels deeply personal. In this psalm, the author writes about the additional loss of a prophet. Prophets serve a community by providing wise guidance. They speak the truth and call a people group to the next steps in the restoration process.

In times of disorientation, seeking a spiritual guide gives necessary support. Ask the Lord to provide a pastor or mentor for you.

When and Why Response

10 How long, O God, is the foe to scoff? Is the enemy to revile your name forever?
11 Why do you hold back your hand, your right hand? Take it from the fold of your garment and destroy them!
(Psalm 74:10-11 ESV)

Sooner or later, I always arrive with God at the “when and why moment.” I want to know the timeline because it might give me an illusion of control. If I only knew when this would be over and the restoration would come, I could deal with this. These are the lies I tell myself.

I also want to know why, and I have even fallen into the trap of assigning motives to other people’s actions, which leads to more offense on my part.

Releasing my need to have every question answered might be the best pathway to healing after a loss.

But God

12 Yet God my King is from of old, working salvation in the midst of the earth.
(Psalm 74:12 ESV)

A turn in the lament occurs at this halfway point in Psalm 74. God works “in the midst of the earth” amid loss and tragedy.

I must choose to take this turn to reorient my perspective. Recently, a friend of mine went through a particularly dark and painful season. She chose daily to ask the Lord to show her himself in the middle of the loss and the pain. Slowly, she began to see a flickering candle of God’s presence. She kept a journal and noted each point of light along her journey. Four years later, she has a powerful testimony of seeing God’s presence in one of the hardest seasons of her life.

Prayer

Lord,

Please help me trust amid loss, allow me to release my need to know it all, and help me see you working each day. In Jesus’s name, amen.  

How Am I Hard-Wired To Worship? Psalm 95

Our arms were raised. Our voices united in song. Suddenly I felt a shift in the room as the Holy Spirit flooded the sanctuary with His presence. While I detected fresh power moving about, I found myself utterly focused and engaged in worshipping God. Nothing else mattered. No longer multi-tasking.  I no longer considered the schedule of the event I led. I became keenly aware of the closeness I felt to God. When I picked up the microphone, I couldn’t help but testify to what I just experienced. 

Worship can become contagious in all the best possible ways. Others attending the service that evening also felt the change. Some were ushered into God’s presence. 

Donald S. Whitney in his book, “Spiritual Disciplines for the Christian Life” says, 

To worship God is to ascribe proper worth to God, to magnify His worthiness or praise, or better to approach or address God as He is worthy. As the sovereign judge, to whom we must give an account, He is worthy of all the honor we can give Him and then infinitely more. 

Worship is a spiritual discipline hard-wired into the core of our being. It is what God’s creation is designed to do. However, God wants us to choose and offer it freely. Worship requires intentionality and focus. Each participant can choose to actively take part or be distracted by other activities. 

Psalm 95 calls God’s people to worship. 

1 Come, let us sing for joy to the Lord; let us shout aloud to the Rock of our salvation. 
Psalm 95:1 NIV



Sing and Shout  

God gifted me with a voice that I can use to sing or speak or even shout. Singing and shouting to the Rock of our salvation, singing along with hymns or contemporary Christian music can provide an easy way for me to worship God. The lyrics help me recall God’s character and ways of doing things. Musical worship can be done in a church service in a building with great acoustics. It can be done in my living room with my small group. It can also be done with me alone in my car singing as loud as I would like. 

2 Let us come before him with thanksgiving and extol him with music and song. 
Psalm 95:2 NIV

Give Thanks 

Another way to worship God is to spend time giving thanks for all He has done for me and my people. I tend to easily make a list of all I don’t have. However, what a wonderful way to focus on God by giving thanks to God for all He has done today, this week, or recently.   

One practical way to create a thanksgiving list is to go through the alphabet and try to think of a thing to give thanks for featuring each letter of the alphabet.  

1.     Avocados 

2.     Beautiful weather 

3.     Cameras to capture photos of those I love… 

3 For the Lord is the great God, the great King above all gods. 
4 In his hand are the depths of the earth, and the mountain peaks belong to him. 
5 The sea is his, for he made it, and his hands formed the dry land. 
6 Come, let us bow down in worship, let us kneel before the Lord our Maker; 
Psalm 95:3-6 NIV


Bow Down in Worship 

Physical activities help remind me of certain truths. When I bow or kneel before God, I remember that He is God, and I am not. Bowing or kneeling can be physical acts of surrender. While I certainly am not required to kneel or bow, sometimes it is a wonderful way to focus my attention. It is much harder to try to check my phone or take notice of those around me when I am kneeling or bowing with my head down. The Lord my maker knows the struggles I have with distraction and anxiety. He offers this posture to help me with my heart’s desire to wander off. 

7 for he is our God and we are the people of his pasture, the flock under his care. Today, if only you would hear his voice, 
8 “Do not harden your hearts as you did at Meribah, as you did that day at Massah in the wilderness, 
9 where your ancestors tested me; they tried me, though they had seen what I did. 
10 For forty years I was angry with that generation; I said, ‘They are a people whose hearts go astray, and they have not known my ways.’ 
11 So I declared on oath in my anger, ‘They shall never enter my rest.’” 

  Psalm 95:7-11 NIV


Listen with My Ears and a Tender Heart 

After they left Egypt, the Israelites wandered in the desert at Meribah where they ran out of water. Fear and anxiety fed a wave of grumbling and complaining that cascaded through the camp. Grumbling hardens hearts and stops up ears. God’s people couldn’t hear the clear directive God gave in His provision of water to come from a rock. Moses was asked to bring water out of a rock for the people and the livestock. (Numbers 20)  

Moses chose not to listen to God and allowed his heart to be hardened by the people’s complaining. In anger, Moses tried getting water out of the rock in his own way. His disobedience and failure to worship God for what he was going to provide had long-lasting consequences.  

Worship matters because it shapes our souls.  

Lent can be a wonderful season to try different spiritual disciplines. Worship could be an ideal one to work on this week by reading and praying through a worship psalm like 95. Some other worship psalms to examine would be:  

24, 27, 36, 98, 102, 103, 104 & 110 

Psalms provide a beautiful blueprint for praise and worship. Try one on for size this week and watch to see how your heart and mind might be transformed.  

Far more often than I care to admit, I do not prioritize soul care. Worship can be a great way to access some soul refreshment. I would love to hear how you practice worship this week.

Prayer 

Lord, expand my capacity for greater worship. Help me to spend time alone and with your people giving honor and glory to You. Cause me to hunger and thirst for more worship in my life. 

In Jesus’ name, 

Amen. 

How Do I Talk to God? Psalm 96

(In the photo is a woman’s face reflected in a mirror)
  • What are three words that describe you?
  • What is something that most people don’t know about you?
  • Who is someone you admire and why?

Conversation starters like these can cut through the space and tension at a table when I find myself sitting with strangers. It might be a work event or a ministry meeting. I might be sitting alone with my thoughts surrounded by tablemates. I need to connect.

Questions, provided by a kind host, can help break through the ice that might form between those thrown together in purpose and place but with little commonality. The free-flowing conversation might begin as a trickle and rapidly move into a torrent of laughter and shared experience. Once it gets started.

Sometimes meeting with God feels like arriving at a table set for two and sitting down and not knowing how to start the conversation. My default setting is to move into a drive-thru mode and place my order and drive away into the rest of my busy day. “Please watch over my granddaughter today in her new class, please heal my friend who had surgery, and help my husband with a difficult situation at work. Thank you and amen.”

All for the sake of efficiency, I have “cut to the chase” and saved the small talk. I made my petitions. God knows what I need, and I can check daily prayer off my list. Right?

What if I had prayer conversation starters, like those questions I began with, available at my fingertips? How could I use those to enter conversations with God at a deeper level? Could I have discussions where I listen as much as I talk? Could I avoid moving with lightning speed to my goals and my own agenda?

The book of Psalms can provide prayer prompts. Psalm 96, likely written by King David, because it contains some direct quotes from him from 1 Chronicles 16:23-33 ESV. That passage reports about how David praised God when he brought the Ark of the Covenant into Jerusalem.

This psalm is a liturgy for worship and praise. It is designed to be declared aloud because sometimes we need to actively participate in praising God with every part of us.

This psalm is constructed like a set of concentric circles that grow larger. It first speaks to the people of God, then to all the nations, and finally to creation itself. This psalm takes the one who prays it and interacts with it on a journey that can shift perspective.

Why not join me on the journey as I process through Psalm 96? Read through each set of verses and then write out a response.

1 Oh sing to the Lord a new song; sing to the Lord, all the earth! 2 Sing to the Lord, bless his name; tell of his salvation from day to day.

Thank you, Lord, for putting a new song in my heart today. I will choose to sing your praises today. Open my eyes to the opportunities you have placed in my path to share stories about what you are doing and have done in my life.

3 Declare his glory among the nations, his marvelous works among all the peoples! 4 For great is the Lord, and greatly to be praised; he is to be feared above all gods.

How can I help another person catch a glimpse of your glory, today? What can I do to be more faithful to testify about what you are doing for me and my people?

5 For all the gods of the peoples are worthless idols, but the Lord made the heavens. 6 Splendor and majesty are before him; strength and beauty are in his sanctuary.

Lord, you are the creator of the heavens, and yet so many people do not see that. They are lured by what the world worships instead of you. What idols do I allow to distract me? Do I worship at the altar of people-pleasing? The icon of busyness? Lord, examine my heart to reveal anything or anyone I am putting before you.

7 Ascribe to the Lord, O families of the peoples, ascribe to the Lord glory and strength! 8 Ascribe to the Lord the glory due his name; bring an offering and come into his courts!

Thank you for working in my family to bring more members into your kingdom in recent months. What a joy it is to live to see answers to prayer after years of praying. Help me to continue to be faithful to living a generous life. Guide me to be quick to give sacrificially and according to your will.

9 Worship the Lord in the splendor of holiness; tremble before him, all the earth! 10 Say among the nations, “The Lord reigns! Yes, the world is established; it shall never be moved; he will judge the peoples with equity.”

Give me the courage to lift my voice to worship you, Lord in all places and with all people. Thank you that I can rest today in the truth that you reign. You have authority and do judge fairly and justly even when I don’t understand. Thank you for your work and reign that rolls out even when I can’t see it all working out.

11 Let the heavens be glad, and let the earth rejoice; let the sea roar, and all that fills it;12a let the field exult, and everything in it!

Show me each and every day your creation praising you. Help me to take note of the sunset reflecting your majesty across the sky, and the fields transformed from one season to another with vivid colors. Help me boldly call attention to these displays.

12b Then shall all the trees of the forest sing for joy 13 before the Lord, for he comes, for he comes to judge the earth. He will judge the world in righteousness, and the peoples in his faithfulness.

Lord, you started your story with a tree, and trees continue to point to your presence. Open my ears to hear the songs of praise that trees are singing for you. Thank you, Father, for seeing the righteous and the faithful. When you do come back, let me be found keeping company with these saints. Thank you that your judgments are wrapped in your faithful nature. You, Lord, see my heart completely and still love me well.

Have you ever used a Psalm as a conversation starter with God? If you try it, I would love to hear about your experience.

I created a simple worksheet for Psalm 96, feel free to download it.