- What is the explanation of Psalms 42?
- What is the devotion on Psalm 42?
- What is the background Psalm 42?
- What does my tears have been my food day and night mean?
- What are the words of Psalm 42?
- What is the lesson of Psalm 42 Sunday School?
- Is Psalm 42 a lament?
- What is the commentary on Psalm 42 verse 5?
- Who is the author of Psalms 42?
- What is the commentary of Psalm 42 1?
- What is the commentary on Psalm 42 1 5?
- What is the commentary of Psalms 42 2?
- What does it mean that God will never suffer the righteous to be moved?
- What does it mean we can make our plans but the Lord determines our steps?
- What does it mean to gird your waist with truth?
- What does it mean he will come to judge the living and the dead?
- Why do the righteous have to suffer?
- What does God mean by suffering?
- Why is God close to the brokenhearted?
What is the explanation of Psalms 42?
The psalmist asks God why his heart is so sad and why he must go through a time of oppression by his enemies. God never asks us to understand, he asks us to obey and glorify him as we do so. He asks us to be mission-minded and to look at every situation as an opportunity to serve or evangelize.
What is the devotion on Psalm 42?
Psalm 42 is a prayer trusting that God cares for us in our weakness and forgives our sins. We can cry out to God with longing hope, praying that he will quench our thirst and knowing that he is near. Dear God, we long for you as the deer longs for streams of water. We thirst for you.
What is the background Psalm 42?
Psalm 42 is associated with the "Sons of Korah." These were probably groups descended from the infamous family punished after the exodus (Numbers 26:9–11). Some commentators believe the Sons of Korah became influential worship leaders during the time of David and Solomon.
What does my tears have been my food day and night mean?
d. My tears have been my food day and night: These tears can perhaps be understood in at least two ways. First, they demonstrated the grief that made the psalmist long for relief in God. Second, they showed the psalmist's grief over the perceived distance from God.
What are the words of Psalm 42?
Psalm 42 1
As the deer pants for streams of water, so my soul pants for you, O God. My soul thirsts for God, for the living God. When can I go and meet with God? My tears have been my food day and night, while men say to me all day long, "Where is your God?"
What is the lesson of Psalm 42 Sunday School?
He is thirsty for God and he wants more of God just like you want that sip of water when you're tired and thirsty. This verse reminds us that God refreshes us and restores us when we spend time with Him, just like water refreshes and restores us when we are hot and thirsty.
Is Psalm 42 a lament?
Psalm 42/43 Unlike many typical lament psalms, Psalm 42/43 (taken as a unity) features a series of complaints mingled with expressions of trust. But it remains at the end in a state of tension with no easy resolution.
What is the commentary on Psalm 42 verse 5?
After stopping to listen to his heart, he goes on to encourage himself in the Lord. “Put your hope in God.” He began to redirect his attention to God who is the source of true hope. Caring self-talk led to the ultimate One Who Cares.
Who is the author of Psalms 42?
Verses 42:1 – 43:5: These are teaching psalms from David. He wrote them when his son Absalom defected. From David, we learn that hope is most alive when everything seems hopeless. Psalm 42:1 “As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after thee, O God.”
What is the commentary of Psalm 42 1?
This psalm expresses intense desire to know God intimately. The psalmist compares his thirst for God to a deer's thirst for flowing water. The Hebrew term translated "pant" or "panting" implies an intense experience. This is not simple thirst, but rather a desperate need for something vital.
What is the commentary on Psalm 42 1 5?
Commentary on Psalm 42:1-5
A gracious soul can take little satisfaction in God's courts, if it do not meet with God himself there. Living souls never can take up their rest any where short of a living God. To appear before the Lord is the desire of the upright, as it is the dread of the hypocrite.
What is the commentary of Psalms 42 2?
What does Psalm 42:2 mean? [⇑ See verse text ⇑] The psalmist repeats his thirst for the Lord, whom he calls "the living God." The prior verse compared this desire to that of a thirsty animal who "pants" when desperately thirsty. This suggests a vital need which can only be helped in one way.
What does it mean that God will never suffer the righteous to be moved?
He will never let the righteous be shaken…
We will all face trials and difficulties in this life. Jesus never promised us an easy life, he actually promised the opposite. But for those who trust God those difficulties will not shake us, they will not destroy us. That's what the Bible promises over and over.
What does it mean we can make our plans but the Lord determines our steps?
Today's daily verse spoke to me — “We can make our plans, but the LORD determines our steps.” (Proverbs 16:9). It just reaffirmed that God is in control here, and that whatever my plans may be, ultimately God's will for me will happen.
What does it mean to gird your waist with truth?
So, what the soldiers would do is take a belt to fasten all the excess fabric more tightly to their body. That's why the older translations of Ephesians 6:14 will say something like, “Gird up your loins with truth.” What this belt did was free the soldiers' legs up to help them be ready for the fight, ready for action.
What does it mean he will come to judge the living and the dead?
The second coming is when Jesus returns to judge all mankind – the living and the dead. The living includes all who will be alive when he returns. The dead includes everyone else, all who have lived and died physically. Jesus said that everyone who has died will be raised from the dead and be judged (John 5:26-29).
Why do the righteous have to suffer?
It is because the righteous person failed to be zealous for God in chastising his wicked contemporaries.
What does God mean by suffering?
Suffering is a product of the fall, a consequence of human sin against God (Romans 5:12; 1 Corinthians 15:21). Suffering is in our lives because we are living in a broken world. Some suffering is due to our sinful and wrong choices, but some is due simply to the world being fallen.
Why is God close to the brokenhearted?
In essence, the verse means that God, the Lord above all, is fully with those who are distraught, and He saves those who fear Him and repent of their wrongs. He's with those who belong to Him who experience hardship and suffering, whose hearts are crushed by the tragedies and discords of life.