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Lesson 1

WORD AND WORKS

Selected Scriptures: Psalm 33:1–9

THEME: TRUST, ADVOCACY, AND BOLDNESS

INTRODUCTION

Many churches include in their Sunday services what we typically call “praise and worship.” It may include prayer and Scripture reading, but we primarily think of it as a time when we sing, clap, and shout with joy to God for the great things He has done, both throughout history and in our personal lives. God’s people have been offering times of praise and worship to God for as long as creation.

BIBLICAL TEACHING EMPHASES

I. Offer Him Reverence and Praise

II. God’s Work Expresses His Nature

III. God Spoke

I. OFFER HIM REVERENCE AND PRAISE

Psalm 33 illustrates praise and worship in the life of the people of Israel at approximately the time of David’s kingship. A quick reading of the psalm presents us with the words “sing” (v. 1, NIV), “make music” (v. 2, NIV) and “shout” (v. 3, NIV). They are familiar words even today, and they show that what we do in contemporary worship is very similar to what the Israelites did in about 900 BC. We can learn much about how we should approach praise and worship by studying why and how Israel rendered appropriate praise to the Creator. Psalm 33 is an obedient response to the call for rejoicing. Reasons for rejoicing are a theme seen throughout the Psalms. These include God’s faithful work, His commitment to righteousness and justice, and His continued care for creation. Righteousness is itself a theme within this poem. The psalm doesn’t call just anyone to worship God. Only the righteous and upright can fully rejoice in God because they have come to acknowledge Him as the Almighty Creator and Lord of heaven and earth. They have given God the proper place in their lives, and have come to trust in Him as their Sustainer and Redeemer.

KEY VERSE: By the word of the Lord the heavens were made, and all their host by the breath of his mouth. (Psalm 33:6, NRSV)

II. GOD’S WORK EXPRESSES HIS NATURE

What God says is upright because He loves doing right and practicing justice. His work is seen in His abiding love for the entire creation. God’s love for the earth is seen throughout the Bible, but the combination of God’s Word and His steadfast love directs the reader’s mind to the days of creation. When God spoke, light came into being, and the sun and moon, and the waters were separated into distinct bodies, and so on, until the creation of people. God’s words create and sustain life. Because His words are upright, one can expect that true life comes only when one also lives an upright life.

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We often speak of the revelation of God that creation represents. The word revelation means “an unveiling.” Paul described how Moses hid his face behind a veil so the people could not see that the glory of God, which had shone on his face following his meeting God on the mountain (see 2 Cor. 3:12–13).

God created in order to unveil His nature to both the angelic hosts who watched in awe and to His created image-bearers, people. We know about God in part because we see His handiwork all around us. We see the immensity of the heavens, and we know the immensity of the power of God to which those heavens bear witness. We see the daily rising of the sun, sometimes obscured by clouds, but nevertheless visible by the coming of daytime, and we know that God is faithful. We see that the birds of the air and the beasts of the field are clothed in delicate feather and rich fur, and we know the extravagance of God’s grace.


WHEN WAS A TIME IN YOUR LIFE WHEN YOU WERE MOST MOVED BY THE GLORY OF GOD’S CREATION TO GIVE PRAISE TO GOD?

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God has unveiled His nature to us in part through His creation. The writer of Hebrews said, “The Son is the radiance of God’s glory and the exact representation of his being” (1:3, NIV). Jesus is the ultimate unveiling of the nature of God, but we can also see the handiwork of the Son in what God has created.

III. GOD SPOKE

There are two words in verse six that are very instructive: “By the word of the LORD the heavens were made, their starry host by the breath of his mouth” (Ps. 33:6, NIV; emphasis added). The first is the Hebrew dabar, meaning “word” or “proclamation.” In the Septuagint, the Greek translation of the Old Testament, the very familiar Greek word logos is used instead of the Hebrew dabar. This logos is, of course, the word that John used repeatedly to refer to Jesus. Jesus, the Word of God, is the One by whom the heavens and the earth were made (see John 1:1–5, 14).

The other word, also familiar to many Christians, is the Hebrew word ruach meaning “breath” or “spirit.” The Septuagint uses, in place of this Hebrew word, the word pneuma which is the word used when speaking of God’s Spirit. Just as Jesus was present at and instrumental in creation, so was the Spirit of God.

We can see the full disclosure of the Trinity in the description of the creative process provided in Psalm 33. The Father willed, the Son (the Word) acted, and the Spirit sustained the creative work of the triune God. We see this same relationship described in the very first verses of Genesis. Genesis 1:1–3 informs us that God created by sending forth His Word as the Spirit of God hovered over the creative process. In all of this process, the three Persons of the Godhead collaborated to bring into reality the good will of God the Father. The triune God made the intention of God reality.

DICTIONARY OF TERMS

Praise—to offer worship to God for who He is and for His great deeds.

MAKING IT RELEVANT

Read the creation story in Genesis 1–2 and provide reasons for humanity to render due praise unto the Lord.

What began in the mind of God was transformed into all that we know and see, by the working out of the process of creation.

The psalmist does not stop there but goes on to recount how God separated the land from the sea as the ongoing process of creation unfolded. Because of the work of God acting as the Trinity, He is worthy of all the praise we can possibly offer Him. Part of praising God is treating what He has created with respect. The psalmist tells his listeners to sing a new song. By this phrase, he may have intended to encourage those who praise God to avoid repetition of tired old phrases, repeated so often as to have long ago lost their meaning. He may also have intended those who praise God to look for new ways of expressing the praise felt in their hearts.

Verse eight says we are to fear the Lord. Usually we equate fear with being afraid, but that is not the true meaning of the word as it is used in the verse. A better modern word is respect, but that falls short of capturing the fullness of what the psalmist wants us to understand. We are to respect the Lord, for sure, but it is respect coupled with awe. It is respect in overwhelming quantities. This kind of fear results in praise to the One who is worthy of all honor and respect. God does not want His gracious gifts abused, disrespected, and wasted any more than you want your gifts treated so. That is true whether we are talking about the gift of His Son or the gift of creation.

Just as God put His word to work in creation, we can put the words of praise we offer to God on Sunday mornings into work by the way we live our lives the rest of the week. God forbid we praise Him for His justice on Sunday and then treat our co-workers unjustly on Monday. God forbid we praise Him on Sunday for the beauty of His creation and then drop our empty water bottles by the side of the road on Tuesday. God reveals His nature by the works of His hand. We reveal ours the same way and, if we wish to be righteous before God, what we reveal needs to match up with our words of devotion to God.

JOURNAL IT!

Write new lyrics to the tune of your favorite hymn.


Adult Enlightener:  Young Adult Bible Study

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