Listen to the podcast of this post by clicking on the player below, and you can also subscribe on Apple, Spotify, or Audible.Â
One of the things I enjoy about my Apple Watch is the connection I have with others who also use an Apple Watch. For instance, I get notified when my wife has finished a workout, and one of the pre-set replies I could choose is, âIâve got questions!â Thatâs a funny way of me saying, âHow did you complete that workout?!âÂ
In Psalm 75 and Psalm 76, Asaph tells us how God will deal with the wicked. But then Psalm 77 begins with Asaph using words like, âMy soul refused to be comforted, my spirit is overwhelmed,â and then he launches into the tough questions like: âHow long is this going to last? Has God forgotten me? Have I fallen out of favor with God? Has His mercy dried up? Can God keep what He has promised? Is God angry with me?â When I read all this, I feel like saying, âAsaph, Iâve got questions!âÂ
Yet, these complaints of Asaph ring true to real life. Like when a friend called me last week and started our conversation by asking, âWhy canât things just go easy for me?â
Hereâs the simple answer: The Story isnât over yet. We are in a battle, and the enemy of our soul is still trying to take us out, or at least shut us up.Â
In Psalm 77, Asaph tells his story to Jeduthun (a Levite worship leader whose name means praising) in four chapters, with a Selah for each of the breaks between the chapters.Â
Chapter 1âDistress (vv. 1-3)
The word distress means confronted by an adversary. Ever been there? Every follower of God has been, so Asaph invites us to Selah: pause to contemplate things like (a) Is this distress causing me to reevaluate the foundation on which I stand? (b) What is it God is shaking in my life? When God shakes things up, it is to cause us to remember and muse about the ONLY sure foundation that can withstand any storm (see Matthew 7:24-27).Â
Chapter 2âQuestioning (vv. 4-9)Â
Notice the words Asaph uses: thought, remembered, mused, inquired. He is asking those tough questions, but he is asking them in a way that he can carefully consider the answers. That means he is really taking a Selah pause with each question. I think he has come to this conclusion: âArenât all these really just rhetorical questions? And isnât the answer to all of them a resounding âNO!â?â If you arenât sure the answer to all of these questions is no, please read Romans 8:31-39.
Chapter 3âRecalling (vv. 10-15)Â
Notice the continuation of the words: thought, remember, meditate, consider. He also asks another question in v. 13 which he then answers in the next two verses. His call to Selah here is another pause to reflect: âHas God lost His power? Has He changed His mind?â And once again the answer is a loud and clear, âNO!â (see Isaiah 59:1; Hebrews 13:8)Â
One of the important takeaways from this stanza of Psalm 77 is this: Looking back in gratitude at what God has done allows me to look forward in hope to what He is still going to do. My remembering what God has done in the past leads to:Â
- Release from the darknessÂ
- Renewed praiseÂ
- Recovered strengthÂ
- Refocused outlookÂ
Chapter 4âHope (vv. 16-20)Â
Asaph says, âLook what God did! And since He is the same today as He was yesterday, guess what Heâs still able to do!â We know this because the Bible says, âFor no matter how many promises God has made, they are âYesâ in Christ. And so through Him the âAmenâ is spoken by us to the glory of Godâ (2 Corinthians 1:20).Â
Remember I said earlier that God isnât done telling His story yet? God isnât done yet, He knows His Story, and His Story is still being told. But Heâs also already told us how His story will end (see Revelation 21:4-6). And the end of His story is really just the beginning of the Real Story!Â
C.S. Lewis said it this way in the closing words of The Last Battle:
âAnd for us this is the end of all the stories, and we can most truly say that they all lived happily ever after. But for them it was only the beginning of the real story. All their life in this world and all their adventures in Narnia had only been the cover and the title page; now at last they were beginning Chapter 1 of the Great Story, which no one on earth has read; which goes on forever; in which every chapter is better than the one before.âÂ
When you find yourself saying, âIâve got questions: How long is this going to last,â Selah to remember that the Story isnât over yet. The Storyteller knows how it ends, and He promises us: But what of that? For I consider that the sufferings of this present timeâthis present lifeâare not worth being compared with the glory that is about to be revealed to us and in us and for us and conferred on us! (Romans 8:18 AMP)
If you have missed any of the messages in our Selah series, you can find the complete list by clicking here.
âşâş Would you please prayerfully consider supporting this ministry? âď¸âď¸