Summer of Psalms - Part 3

Psalm 122 - Our Approach to Worshipping God

SERMON TRANSCRIPT

All right, we are continuing in our series in Psalms. I want to start by bringing us back to, I think, a common experience that we've all had. I want you to think back maybe to your childhood at some point, and maybe around Christmas or birthday, and the excitement that you felt about something that you were going to get, that gift, whatever you had in mind, and maybe it's a specific Christmas or birthday for me. I loved Legos growing up, and I only got Legos at Christmas. And every Christmas, there was a new, like, big set, and I was like, oh, this is the best. So, you know, the weeks leading up, I just started getting excited like I know there's a big Lego set that is gonna be underneath that tree And that was my Lego set for the year, but there's a process that as you anticipate something first is this Anticipation right this excitement that's building as the days get closer to that thing happening. You just get more and more excited And then maybe it's Christmas or your birthday But when you actually get that thing whenever you got it just the excitement was at its peak you're like it is here I this is it. I finally I get to enjoy this thing and And then for the next couple days, maybe weeks, the excitement is still up there. You're waking up like, "Oh, I can't wait to play. I have this new thing. This is fantastic." And then weeks or months go by and the excitement starts to dwindle. Maybe the enjoyment is still there. You still love to play with... You used to play with that thing and it was there, but you don't wake up with the excitement anymore. It's just like, "Oh yeah, I have that. I love it. It's great." But the excitement is gone. I say that thinking back to it, kids, but I still have things in my life right now that make me feel that way.

So maybe you do too. It's a feeling that we have, and it is, you know what it's like to have that excitement at one point, and then that initial infatuation or excitement just tapers off. And I think that happens not just with things in our lives, but also in our Christian life. Maybe you've experienced something similar in your walk with Jesus, where if you think back to when you were saved, and there's this initial excitement and just obvious joy that you feel, it's almost tangible. As you come to know and accept Jesus and this initial life change is invigorating, you have new habits, new rhythms that you are just welcoming into your life. And it's almost effortless of like, what else is there? I want to do it all, this is great, being a Christian. And then after a time, maybe it's months or years, the aspects of the Christian life can become routine and maybe not in the best way. You know, reading your Bible, you're attending church, but you're just kind of going through the motions. You're just doing it and it's there, it's good, but you're not excited. You're not excited about it anymore. Why does that happen? If you've experienced that, maybe you can think back to when that is, or maybe you're in the midst of it right now. Why does that happen? Well, I believe it's a heart issue. Initially, our hearts are being reoriented and they're being devoted and we're committed to God. And there's a desire and a commitment to worship God with our everything. But eventually, the heart begins to lean away from God, to stray and to get distracted, begins yearning for other things. Another way of saying this is that our hearts want to worship something else or someone else. It's really a matter of the heart. Our hearts are initially so focused on God, straining towards God, being transformed, but sin is still a reality. It's still present in our lives. It's still present in the world around us. And initially what was so effortless and so easy to be devoted, to be committed to God now takes more effort and more intentionality.

So how do we get that excitement and that joy back as we walk with Jesus? How should we approach a life of following and worshiping God? That's our question for today. You may be encouraged to know that it's not a new issue. This is not something that just the local church in the last couple of hundred years has been experiencing. No, this was a reality for the Israelites in the Old Testament too. Back then, for the Israelites, their life looked different than ours, but they also had spiritual practices of worshiping God, and some of those could become routine. And so David writes this Psalm as a reminder to help paint the picture of the ideal heart, the ideal approach for the Israelites as they come to worship God. We're gonna be in Psalm 122 today, and this is a Psalm of ascent, which means this is a Psalm that was meant to be sung as Israelites made their way to Jerusalem to worship God. Jerusalem was the center of worship. It's where the tabernacle was until they built the temple and then the temple was there. And so this Psalm has a lot of Jerusalem descriptions and language. It's a Psalm that if you can kind of picture this on a day where, you know, maybe some kind of feast where everyone had to go to the temple, you could just see everyone from outside the city to inside the city making their way, getting outside their homes, closing their doors and joining in the streets and walking to the temple. And they're all doing it together. And they could sing this song out loud as a chorus. And it would help them as they approached where God's presence was in the tabernacle, help their hearts get in the right place. So I think it can do the same for us today.

Let's go ahead and read. You guys can follow along on the screen. It says, "I rejoiced with those who said to me, Let us go to the house of the Lord. Our feet are standing in your gates, Jerusalem. Jerusalem is built like a city that is closely compacted together. That is where the tribes go up, the tribes of the Lord, to praise the name of the Lord according to the statute given to Israel. There stand the thrones for judgment, the thrones of the house of David. Pray for the peace of Jerusalem. May those who love you be secure. May there be peace within your walls and security within your citadels. For the sake of my family and friends, I will say, Peace be within you. For the sake of the house of the Lord our God, I will seek your prosperity." So this psalm, and I think it helps us, reminds us about our approach and where our hearts should be as we worship together. And that first reminder comes from the first couple verses. And it's that worship comes from joy. It's like that kid on Christmas who's excited about their gift, anticipation about what they're receiving, we should have this similar excitement, anticipation about worshiping God, about going to the place of worship. Now I know in other series we've talked about how worship is a more general term, and it means like all of our lives, Paul writes about this in the New Testament, that all of our lives are worshiped to God. But today I just wanna use that term like David is intending it, the place of worship, the house of worship. So we're talking about the temple or the tabernacle, or today we're talking about church.

And so that joy of going to church or going to this house of worship, and it first and foremost comes from recognizing who God is and what He has done. And for the Israelites, they praise God for being their savior, saving them from slavery in Egypt. And they recognize the grace that God had given them as He protected them and sustained them in the desert and helped them get into the promised land. They have all this in the back of their heads as they come to God, they say, "We couldn't have any of this. They were in the promised land with the tabernacle and the temple. We wouldn't be here without God." So many times Israel rebelled against God and yet He remained steadfast and faithful to them. The Israelites who were selfish and prideful, hard-headed, naturally bent towards serving themselves and who often got it wrong, they have been saved. And for a moment when they were at the tabernacle, they were accepted into God's presence. And that moment, as they approached, just thinking of that moment of being in God's presence, brought them so much joy. Now, today, for us, how much more joy do we have, knowing that we don't have to go to the tabernacle or to the temple, that we have the Spirit within us, God with us all the time. And that we, Jesus, gave us salvation and the grace that He gives us daily. He saved us from eternity in hell, gives us everlasting life. And we who are selfish and prideful and hard-headed and often bent towards serving ourselves, we were saved. And God loves us. And the Spirit is with us always. Just that, just that reality is enough for the believer to feel joy. Joy from God for what He has done for us. That reason, that joy comes from the truth. It's an act of redemption that Jesus has done for us so great that we will be rejoicing in heaven for eternity for what he has done. And so we believers, we can walk through anything. We can go through anything in life. A hard day at work, losing a loved one, shattered dreams, and we can stand firm, maybe even with tears in our eyes, and just say, "But I am saved. But I am a child of God loves me and I still feel joy.” We need to be reminded of that because as soon as we grow callous to the grace of God our hearts will begin to wander. Pastor and author Paul David Tripp says, "What a tragedy when we grow used to that grace. What a tragedy when it no longer has value to us. What a tragedy when we we begin to think that we actually deserve acceptance with God. And how important it is to remember that I will never have any other standing with God, but the standing I am given by means of His grace.”

As we approach church, as we approach God at any point, I hope that we feel this sense of joy as we remember what God has done for us. And the fact that we are even believers in the first place is owed to him, we owe him that glory. So we have joy because of God. David begins this Psalm with this all time important reminder that as we approach the place of worship, let us be filled with joy. And this is, all these points are kind of a chain reaction. So first we begin with joy, and then secondly, Our second reminder comes in verses three through four, and it's that we worship out of obedience. The Israelites were given a structure and a routine for them to obey. It says in verse four, "That is where the tribes go up, the tribes of the Lord, "to praise the name of the Lord "according to the statute given to Israel." This is referring back to in the desert, in Exodus and Deuteronomy, Jesus, or God, sorry, gave them instruction of how to be a nation, And part of that was how to worship Him. Israel had this history of being in Egypt. So they had seen how other nations had done. They'd seen how Egypt had worshiped. They've been in the desert, they've seen shins and how they worship their gods. And God is saying, "I don't want any of that. Do not worship Me in that way. I will tell you how to worship Me. And you will worship Me at this place and in this way." So Israel worships out of duty and out of obedience and responsibility, and it's because it's what is due God's name for what he has done for them. And at the root of this law is the command to love and worship the Lord their God and to keep his commandments. But as God gave this law to Israel about worshiping him, this isn't a new idea for the people of Israel, this idea of worship. Again, Paul David Tripp says, "Worship is your identity before it is ever an activity. You are by very nature a worshiper." See, God created humanity to worship Him. That's what He intended. Adam and Eve, He intended for them to worship Him, but then sin comes in, as we know this story, sin comes into the world and changes everything. And now, humanity can now, starts to worship the creation and start of the, instead of the creator. And whether we think about it or not, we, as worshipers, we are worshiping something or someone. And from that worship, we are drawing our purpose, our identity, and our security.

Those things are meant to come from God. God intended that you find your purpose, your identity, and your security in Him. But people who start to worship other things, that's where they draw their identity from. Oh, I'm really about this and I want you to know that. And so I'm gonna share this all about you. Everything about me revolves around this other thing. And I only feel secure if I'm good at this thing or if that is a success in my life and my purpose is to serve this other thing. That's how the heart naturally works. God intended that he would be that focus, that he would be that for our life and that we would find our purpose, our identity and the security in him. The Bible calls this having other gods, having idols in our lives. And we naturally, we're just good at making idols. You may not have heard that before, but you're good at it. And it's not a good thing to be good at. Pastor said this about John Calvin, theologian, says, "John Calvin saw that the human heart is relentlessly efficient, is a relentlessly," oh my goodness, sorry, let me start over. "John Calvin saw the human heart as a relentlessly efficient factory for producing idols. People want things to work better. They want a life that is more interesting. They want help through difficult times. They want meaning and significance in their ventures. They want a God in a way, but certainly not a jealous God, not the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. Mostly they want it their way. They want to stay in control, but have ancillary divine assistance for the hard parts. I read that and I mean, spirit started convicting right away. We want God, but we have these other idols that we still want to be attached to. These other things in our life that are drawing, we're giving our attention, we're giving ourselves too, but when life gets hard, we want God to intervene. God, now I need your help. I've been doing this other stuff and I kind of got myself into a pickle here. Can you please, can you help me out? We tend to make idols out of things in our lives, sometimes even good things. Idols don't have to be bad. We can make idols out of family, out of providing for our family. We can make idol, whatever it is, we can make an idol out of it. But a great way to avoid that is to be obedient, to remain consistent in our regular worship of God.

And so we do that out of obedience. And it's not a begrudging obedience. I don't like this. we think of obedience as contrasted to something we want to do. We can want to be obedient. We can find something good and just, I don't think there's people out there like, "I don't steal because I'm begrudgingly following the rule that says I can't steal." No, we just don't steal and there's joy in that. It's like, "Yeah, that's not something I should do and I don't want to do that and I'm happy to not do that." And we can obey God in worshiping and have joy as we worship Him. And again, this is a chain reaction. So first there's joy, and out of that joy comes obedience. Thirdly, the next thing, so we have joy, we obey, and then in verses five through seven, we see that worship of God leads to a caring heart. If our hearts are filled with love for God, if our hearts are aligned with God's heart, then we will care about what God cares about, His people, His kingdom, and to see His perfect will carried out here on earth. Israel was meant to be a nation that carried out God's love and truth. And first and foremost, people would see that in how they loved God and also how they loved each other. As that was happening, other people would notice, man, this Israel is different. and this God that they worship is different than any other gods that we have. And it would be a distinct reflection of who Yahweh is. And the church today is meant to have a similar role. As we love each other and care for each other and worship God, people will take notice and be like, this is different. But how do we do that if our hearts are naturally selfish and there's this focus on our own lives, our own success, our own advancement or comfort, our own peace. Well, David says elsewhere in the Psalms, in Psalm 51, he says, "Create in me a pure heart, O God, and renew a steadfast spirit within me."

So we know that it's the work of the Spirit within us. It's the work of Christ within us to lift up our heads from our own lives, from our own circle, to look up and to see others in the way that God sees them. How are we caring for those around us? Do we pray for them? Do you pray for the people in your life, not just your loved ones, which hopefully you're praying for the loved ones, but your neighbor who maybe is a cranky neighbor? Are you praying for your coworkers who you may not enjoy working with all the time? Are you praying just for the people in your life that need God? Do you meet their needs? Do you walk alongside them through whatever hardships they face? Do you pray for their peace and their prosperity that God would bless them? I know for me sometimes I prayed for them, but in a way that benefits me. God, can you help them be nice to me? Can you help them? Like my life is hard, God, so just help other people to make my life better. But that's not the prayers that David's talking about here. saying, "I want them. God, just bless them. Give them peace. Give them what they need to be closer to you." And so as we approach the place of worship, we should be reminded of those in our lives who we need to care for. Or for those as we are literally maybe even driving to church, as those who are passing. Those people need prayer too. Do we care for them? When we think about attending church on a Sunday, do you think about the people you are attending with? Do you kind of lift up your head from your, sometimes what we can do, just go to church by myself, I'm gonna say hi to people and do the small talk, but I'm just gonna go in, gonna worship, gonna listen, I'm gonna leave. We kind of keep our head down the whole time. Or maybe we should lift our heads up and interact with the people and care for them and pray for them and take an interest in their lives and want God to be a part of their lives. So maybe the prayer needs to start with, God, soften my heart towards other people, create in me a desire to care for your children, God. And this care for others also wonderfully fights against the consumer mentality that we have. Again, just slipping into church or these thoughts that are like, I just need to hear the sermon and the worship, just get the necessities and I'm gonna head out, I'm gonna be on my way. Got a busy week, I got a lot of stuff to do, so I know I need to do this, but it's about me. The church, if we're at the center of our church experience, we have a problem.

Part of true worship means seeing others. First we look at God and we recognize God, that's the joy, then we're doing this out of obedience, and then we're looking at others. God's people caring for them. And for the record, I think this church does a great job of that and I say this as encouragement of keep doing this. Let this be a strength of Spring Valley that people who visit would know that we genuinely care about each other. Not just in a, hey, I'm glad to know what's going on, but we are a part of each other's lives. So worship starts with joy. We do it out of obedience and it leads to a care for others. And lastly, worship of God creates community. Hopefully you see these dots connecting here. It says in verses eight through nine, "For the sake of my family and friends, "I will say, 'Peace be within you.' "For the sake of the house of the Lord our God, "I will seek your prosperity." David ends this psalm with the hope Jerusalem will prosper, that his people will prosper, and not for Jerusalem's sake, not for their sake, but for God's glory. And that can be our prayer too. There is unity and commonality found as we share our love for God. We all have this love for God. We are all being obedient to God. And if we all care for each other, we naturally are just, we're together now. We are a family. There's a community that's been formed. For Israel, that was the entire nation, the nation, all the people were heading to the temple. And as they look around, you can just imagine a very crowded space with smiles on their face as they get to be near the presence of God. This is a very unifying experience for them. Again, this is the reminder of what God has done for them from slavery to freedom. God has brought them blessing and fortune. God had given them the blueprint for how to live righteously together as a nation. And today we have the church, we have this family of believers from all different backgrounds, united in our love for God. And there is a deep sense of belonging, of family, of having a place and having a people. Some of you have a great support system outside the church. You have amazing family and friends, and that is truly a blessing.

For others, this church, this room, this is your biggest opportunity for community, for family, for connection. And this is why we love having moments like Morning Blend and Family Meals or the Popcorn Bar, just other opportunities for us to interact. But really, our desire is that it's beyond Sunday. It's beyond Midweek Group. We want you guys, we want all of us to be a family together that's interacting throughout the week, texting each other, grabbing coffees, grabbing meals, inviting people over for houses just to talk, going on walks around the neighborhood together, share life together, be a community together. And I guarantee you, people don't care if your house is messy 'cause of the kids, or if you have a dog that barks at every car that goes by. Welcome them in, bring them in, have people over. Be a community, be a family together. We wanna be a part of each other's life. as we worship God together. And it's not for our sake, it's not for selfish reasons, but it's for God's glory. So as we think about church and the Sundays and belonging to this church family, it's more than just one weekly occurrence. So much more than that. It's about a joy that comes from God's salvation and love for us. about being obedient to the life that God has called us to live. It's about caring for others as God cares for them. It's about living in community as a family.

I wanna paint this scene again. If it's helpful to close your eyes, close your eyes. Just imagine Old Testament Jerusalem and people from outside the city and there's a family waking up early and they're all excited because today they're going to the tabernacle. They get to go be near the presence of God. And as they leave their tent or their house, they see everyone else doing the same thing. And all of a sudden there's just this huge crowd. Every street is filled with people heading to the tabernacle. And there's a buzz around the city. And they start to sing this song. I rejoice with those who said to me, let us go to the house of the Lord. Our feet are standing in your gates, Jerusalem. Jerusalem is built like a city that is closely compacted together. That is where the tribes go up, the tribes of the Lord, to praise the name of the Lord according to the statute given to Israel. There stand the thrones for judgment, the thrones of the house of David. And as they're walking up, they're seeing these people, all of them, together, and they care for each other. Pray for the peace of Jerusalem. May those who love you be secure. secure him, or there be peace within your walls and security within your citadels. For the sake of my family and friends, I will say peace be within you. For the sake of the house of the Lord our God, I will seek your prosperity. They can't help but smile because they know that God has saved them, that he loves them, and so it's out of their obedience, not a chore, but just a joyful obedience that they come to the presence of God. And they worship him. And now we today don't have that same scene. We're not walking, if you walk today, that's fantastic, but we don't often walk to church, we're driving, we have a busy life, but it can be similar. And so I wanna paint this scene for you.

Maybe this is helpful. This is simply just an exercise that helps you in your walk with God great. But what if our weekly routine was this, Saturday night, and yes, it's important that church starts the night before, Saturday night, you start to think about the next day and what you're doing and attending church. And that gets you thinking about God and about what He's done for you. And all of a sudden that joy starts to grow within you. And as you're going to bed or waking up in the morning and you're thinking about church, you start to think about the people that you attend church with, the people in this room. You start to wonder, how's this person doing? I remember that person said this, and all of a sudden we just find ourselves praying for them now. We're caring for them. And then we're thinking of people who aren't here. The empty seats, the people who need to be here, who haven't gone to church yet. We start praying for them and we care for them. I pray that my coworker, man, I've been having those conversations about Jesus. I hope that he shows up. I invited him, I hope he's here. God, my neighbor, they need Jesus a lot right now. They're going through a hard time. So we're caring for people together. And then as we're here and out of joyful obedience, we praise God. And these songs that we sing, I mean, this is why we sing these songs, is to praise Him for what He has done for us, for the salvation that He brings. And we can have a deep joy, even if we've had a hard week, I think it's rare to come here and the week has gone just pure good. I mean, life is complicated, it's a mess, it's chaotic. So we can come here just as we are with all of those feelings and emotions, but within we have a joy, of a deep joy that comes from God. That's our prayer. That's what David desired for Israel and that's what God desires of us.