Psalm 28
When was the last time you found yourself at a crisis moment in your life?
When was the last time you said or thought, “I’m not Okay!”
A crisis is defined as an extremely difficult or dangerous point in a situation where there is some degree of confusion, argument, or suffering and in which a solution is needed — and quickly.
Within a psychological context, a crisis situation is a stressful time in an individual’s life when they experience a breakdown or disruption in their usual or normal daily activities or family functioning.
Crisis moments for us come all shapes and forms.
Some of us experience crisis moments due to things like the loss of a job, a car accident, loss of health insurance, conviction and imprisonment, and the inability to pay the bills for things like rent and groceries.
Some of us experience crisis moments due to the extremes of physical abuse, mental abuse, verbal abuse, emotional abuse, and/or spiritual abuse.
Some of us experience crises moments due to illness, either in ourselves or in family or friends, such as a cancer diagnosis or the need for surgery.
Some of us experience family or relational crisis in the form of intense arguing, cheating partners, filing for divorce, custody battles, suicide, homicide, miscarriage, death, and addiction.
In all of these times we know we need to get out of the situation as fast as possible but often feel trapped. In these moments we are left with feelings of anxiety and panic.
All that being said, I once again ask you, what was your last real crisis moment, or what is your real crisis moment this morning?
Today, we are looking into the book of Psalms. In this Biblical text, we hear from King David during a real crisis moment in his life.
We are hearing the words and emotions of a man who feels trapped with no way out that he can see or understand. He realizes that his own mind and reasoning are no help at all. He is having a moment of anxiety and panic as he knows things are really bad and can possibly and my possibly get worse.
Let’s hear King David’s words and thought process in his crisis moment as found in Psalm 28.
Psalm 28 says this:
[1] To you, O LORD, I call;
my rock, be not deaf to me,
lest, if you be silent to me,
I become like those who go down to the pit.
[2] Hear the voice of my pleas for mercy,
when I cry to you for help,
when I lift up my hands
toward your most holy sanctuary.
[3] Do not drag me off with the wicked,
with the workers of evil,
who speak peace with their neighbors
while evil is in their hearts.
[4] Give to them according to their work
and according to the evil of their deeds;
give to them according to the work of their hands;
render them their due reward.
[5] Because they do not regard the works of the LORD
or the work of his hands,
he will tear them down and build them up no more.
[6] Blessed be the LORD!
For he has heard the voice of my pleas for mercy.
[7] The LORD is my strength and my shield;
in him my heart trusts, and I am helped;
my heart exults,
and with my song I give thanks to him.
[8] The LORD is the strength of his people;
he is the saving refuge of his anointed.
[9] Oh, save your people and bless your heritage!
Be their shepherd and carry them forever. (ESV)
Right out of the gate, David’s words tells us that he was in a crisis moment.
This crisis moment happened after David became the second King of Israel.
Many years into his reign, after a very turbulent relationship with his oldest son, Absalom, Absalom ran a coup and declared himself King and sat himself on David’s throne as the king of Israel.
Absalom gathered his own followers and set out a military campaign against his Father, David, who was the actual anointed King of Israel.
So, David found himself running from and hiding from his son.
Would he live?
Would he die?
Would he be King again?
Would he be imprisoned and tortured?
Would he live out the rest of his days struggling to survive in the wilderness?
David was full of anxiety and panic.
David felt backed into a corner.
David felt like he didn’t know if he was going to be ok today, tomorrow, or in the end.
David felt:
- Hopeless
- Helpless
- Lost
- Confused
- Powerless
- Scared
- Fearful
- And stuck.
And, to make it worse, it seemed like God, in whom he had trusted all of his life, had abandoned him in his moment of need. It seemed like God was silent to the evil, wickedness, and suffering that he was experiencing.
This leads David to cry out in his crisis moment, asking God to not be quiet any longer.
David knows, as he mentions in verses 1, and 3-5, that if God remains silent to his cries for help, David will experience the effects of his immediate physical crisis — David will most likely be found and killed by his son and his son’s army.
David also knows, as he mentions in verse 1, that if God remains silent and doesn’t intervene in his life, David will experience the effects of his spiritual crisis — he will be punished for his sin and will be separated from God and God’s Kingdom of Heaven forever.
Back in September of 2015, a British Airways jet caught fire at the Las Vegas airport, sending smoke billowing into the air, after suffering what the pilot described as a “catastrophic failure” of the left engine. The plane—a Boeing 777 heading from the U.S. city’s McCarran airport to London Gatwick—could be seen with flames around its fuselage.
The pictures of a burning jetliner in Las Vegas were certainly riveting. But as the plane burst into smoke and flames, some observers saw something even more startling: People stopped during their evacuation to grab their luggage. Authorities are certainly concerned about planes that burst into flames, but they’re also worried that we’d risk our lives to grab our carry-on bags.
So what’s the big deal with grabbing one carry-on bag? The FAA requires planes to be evacuated within 90 seconds, but as a Chicago-based air traffic controller wrote:
Let’s say the average delay time per bag is 5 seconds. This includes the time needed to reach up to open the overhead compartment, pulling the bag down, and the extra delay hauling it through a crowded aisle. If half of the 170 people on board Flight 2276 took the time to take their bag the evacuation would have taken an additional 7 MINUTES longer than necessary. Imagine being the last one to exit the smoke-filled cabin knowing that your one minute evac time is now over 7 minutes!
One veteran pilot with a major U.S. airline said, “We’re always shaking our head. It doesn’t matter what you say, people are going to do what they do.” Or as one blogger summarized this news story: “People love their carry-ons more than life itself.”
The Bible warns us that there are many things beside God that we can place our trust in when we are in need of help — many idols, as the Bible calls them.
Just like some people worry about their luggage instead of their own life in the case of an airplane emergency, some of us place our trust in money, logic, reason, family members, friends, techniques learned in therapy sessions, advice given in self-help books, the words spoken from a mystic using a crystal ball or tarot cards, instead of of the God who is alive and active and can help us in our moments of need and crisis.
But, as the Bible tells us, when the rubber meets the road, all of those things are powerless and leave us hopeless because they are dead and cannot hear, answer, or respond with the help we need.
Psalm 115:4–8 says:
[4] Their idols are silver and gold,
the work of human hands.
[5] They have mouths, but do not speak;
eyes, but do not see.
[6] They have ears, but do not hear;
noses, but do not smell.
[7] They have hands, but do not feel;
feet, but do not walk;
and they do not make a sound in their throat.
[8] Those who make them become like them;
so do all who trust in them. (ESV)
In Psalm 28, in his crisis moment, David immediately reached for, grabbed, and held onto the only thing that could save him — David reached out to, grabbed onto to, and held onto God, the Father in Heaven.
And, what happened in David’s crisis moment?
God, who promises to hear, answer, and help those in need, heard, answered, and helped, David in his moment of need, in his moment of crisis.
One commentator writing about Psalm 28 speaks these words of hope to you:
Jesus is our own Word of promise, and it is this Word from God that we cling to. It is like Paul says about Abraham: “No distrust made him waver concerning the promise of God, but he grew strong in his faith as he gave glory to God, fully convinced that God was able to do what he had promised” (Romans 4.20-21). And Paul says about himself: “For I am certain that neither death nor life nor angels nor rulers…will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Romans 8.38-39).
So far so good. But this truth does not automatically end our inner wrestling match with doubt and despair, does it? Often the suffering that is part of our lived experience threatens to loosen our grip on this Jesus in whom we trust. Sometimes, in this life, God’s work is incomprehensible. Sometimes, in our individual lives, circumstances seem to deny the fact of God’s love.
This voice in Psalm 28, a prayer to God but also words from God for us to pray, invites us to cry out against this death-dealing God and plead that he make known the salvation the he has promised. We certainly know that in the past our God has intervened to save his people. He has acted in history to deliver them, and he has acted most decisively by sending his son in human flesh. In Jesus, God made his future plans for us clear. Jesus’s resurrection is our future, but it is also what we want to experience now. With the Psalmist, we want God to break the silence and bring us the salvation promised in Jesus and given to us personally in our baptism and in holy communion. In the terms of the Somme, we pray for the not yet to become the now, and we pray for an end to the tension between these two in which we presently live. If nothing else, the voice in Psalm 28 lives within the attention and teaches us how to live within it well.
But until that day how are we to live when the wait becomes so long that we can’t forget what we are waiting for?
When it becomes so long that we may forget what God has promised? But even as we stand in the waiting line, God has promised not to leave us. Jesus sent his Holy Spirit to minister to us in the meantime. The spirit is the one who strengthens us through the promises of God so that we can live by faith and not by sight, as the poet David dead. The spirit is the one who helps us make the words of psalm 28 our own.
Through the strengthening of the spirit, we can pray Psalm 28.6-8 with the certainty that God hears our cries. This reality gives us the ability to sustain our joy in this broken world. “We rejoice in our tribulations, knowing that tribulation produces endurance, and endurance produces character and character produces hope, and hope does not put us to shame, because the love of God has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit, who has been given to us” (Romans 5.3). It is also why we can pray Psalm 28.9: “Save your people and bless your inheritance, and shepherd them and lift them up forever.” With these words, we pray that the salvation that is already ours in Jesus will come in its fullness for us all.
The lines of one of the hymns from The Lutheran Service Book is a companion to Psalm 28.
Hymn #732 sings like this:
When with sorrow I am stricken,
Hope anew my heart will quicken;
All my longing shall be stilled.
To His lovingkindness tender
Soul and body I surrender,
For on God alone I build.
Well He knows what best to grant me;
All the longing hopes that haunt me,
Joy and sorrow, have their day.
I shall doubt His wisdom never;
As God will, so be it ever;
I commit to Him my way.
If my days on earth He lengthen,
God my weary soul will strengthen;
All my trust in Him I place.
Earthly wealth is no abiding,
Like a stream away is gliding,
Safe I anchor in His grace (LSB 732:4-6)
In a daily devotional, a book that has Biblical scripture and a small explanation for each day of the year, that I read on Thursday, I read what I am about to share and I want you to hear Jesus saying this to you as well.
Jesus says to you:
Accept each day exactly as it comes to you. By that, I mean not only the circumstances of your day but also the condition of your body. Your assignment is to trust me absolutely resting in my sovereignty and faithfulness.
On Sundays, your circumstances and your physical condition feel out of balance: the demands on you seem far greater than your strength. Days like that present a choice between two alternatives – giving up or relying on me. Even if you wrongly choose the first alternative, I will not reject you. You can turn to me at any point, and I will help you crawl out of the Meyer of discouragement. I will infuse my strength into your moment by moment, giving you all that you need for this day. Trust me by relying on my empowering presence.
And, then the author reminds of this truths from Scripture.
Psalm 42:5–6 says:
[5] 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 [6] and my God.
And, Jeremiah 31:25 says:
[25] For I will satisfy the weary soul, and every languishing soul I will replenish.” (ESV)
So, the next time you find yourself experiencing a crisis moment, and I can promise you, there will be another time, and you find yourself thinking or saying, “I’m not Okay!,” remember that Jesus Christ died on the cross in the most extreme crisis moment ever, for you.
And, because Jesus experienced that crisis moment, your sins are forgiven, eternal life is yours, and you will be today, tomorrow, and forever, 100% Okay, as God welcomes you into His family and Kingdom of Heaven through the faith you have in Him, His Son, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit.
This is the Word of God for you today.
This is the Grace of God for you today.
Amen.
Reverend Fred Scragg V.
May 4, 2025.
Prayer:
Heavenly Father,
We live in a frightening world. In our fear, we often forget that you are powerful and loving and are devoted to your children. When we hear of wars and terrorists, we are tempted to turn to politicians to rescue us, and we panic despairingly if we feel we can’t trust them. When faced with illness and mortality, we turn to doctors, diets, and frenetic health strategies in order to avoid the inevitable. When friendships fail and relationships disappoint us, we struggle with bitterness, anger, and depression because we have looked to other weak sinners to find comfort and meaning in life. When our plans don’t work out, we scramble to construct self-salvation strategies in order to calm our fears and give us a measure of confidence and peace. Father, forgive us for forgetting that you love us, for stubbornly laying all our hopes and dreams at the feet of our idols, for despising you when you lovingly interfere with our self-salvation campaigns in order to rescue us from our pride and self-trust.
Thank you for your great patience with weak sinners like us, who refuse to turn to you until all else has failed. Thank you for bringing suffering into our lives and for letting our sinful hearts pour out of us, so that we can see our sin and repent before you. Thank you for causing our best plans to fail so we will learn that you are wiser, stronger, kinder, and more loving than we ever dreamed possible. Thank you for Christ, who faced fear and suffering with great dread, and yet turned to you in his moments of terror and temptation, trusting in your plan in spite of his horrible feelings. Thank you that his faithful determination to fix his eyes on you and to trust you in spite of the evil that he faced has now been credited to our account, and that you welcome us as perfect trusters. Thank you that you hold this world in your hand and promise that all will be well in the end. Thank you for the Holy Spirit, who lives in us and is at work every moment to help us grow, to comfort us, and to help us look away from our scary world and scary hearts so that we may see the beauty of our remarkable Savior.
Help us to remember your promises, to believe them, and to run to you in the midst of our fears with hearts that are bursting with gratitude and growing confidence in you alone. Amen.