LET ME BE SINGING
READ:
Psalm 150
Let everything that has
breath
Praise the LORD. –Psalm
150:6
When I asked a friend how his mother was getting along, he
told me that dementia had robbed her of the ability to remember a great many
names and events from the past. “Even so,” he added, “she can still sit down at the piano and, without sheet music,
beautifully play hymns by memory.”
Plato and Aristotle wrote about the helping, healing power
of music 2,500 years ago. But centuries
before that, the biblical record was saturated with song.
From the first mention of Jubal, “the father of all those who play the harp and flute” (Genesis 4:21), to those who “sing the song
of Moses, the servant of God and the song of the Lamb” (Revelation 15:3),
the pages of the Bible resonate with music.
The Psalms, often called “the Bible’s songbook,” point us to the love
and faithfulness of God. They conclude
with an unending call to worship, “Let
everything that has breath praise the Lord.
Praise the LORD!” (Psalm 150:6).
Today we need God’s ministry of music in our hearts as much
as any time in history. Whatever each
day brings, may the evening find us singing, “To You, O my Strength, I will sing praises; for God is my defense, my
God of mercy” (59:17). –David McCasland
Lord, I don’t know what
will come this day or
Farther into the
future, but I’m grateful that You’re
By my side. Grant me a spirit of praise and
Thanksgiving in
whatever lies ahead.
******************************************
Praise to God comes
naturally
When you count your
blessings.
INSIGHT
The last five songs of
Israel’s hymnbook are also known as Hallelujah Psalms, because each of them
(Psalms 146-150) begins and ends with the refrain “Praise the LORD” (Hebrew
Hallelujah). Psalm 150 answers three
important questions: Who should praise
God? (vv.1,6). Why should God be
praised? (v.2). How is He to be praised?
(vv.3-5). The psalmist calls on “everything
that has breath” to worship God (v.6)-including creatures on earth and angels
in the heavens (v.1). We should praise
God for what He has done (“His mighty acts” v.2) and for who He is (“His excellent
greatness” v.2). We are to praise Him
with our voices, with the accompaniment of all kinds of instruments, and with
dancing (vv.3-6). “Let everything that
has breath praise the LORD” (v.6) is indeed a fitting final doxology to God.
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