THE REFORMED WITNESS HOUR
"To God, My Exceeding Joy, I Will Go”
Rev.
May 6, 2007; No. 3357
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Dear radio friends,
Turn with me today to the Word of God in
Psalm 43.
Please read the entire Psalm.
There are two
reasons why this little Psalm of five verses is very precious to us. The first is that it deals with the ultimate
goal of life: God. Verse 4:
“Then will I go unto the altar of God, unto God my exceeding joy: yea, upon the harp will I praise thee, O God
my God.” God, the true God, the glorious
God, our God by grace—He is everything.
To know and to serve and to worship and to belong to Him through Jesus
Christ is exceeding joy.
You can have the
world and all that is in it: money,
things, friends, power, booze, sex—but if you do not have God, the true God in
Jesus Christ, you are dead, you are miserable, and you are guilty. You can today have trial, disease, setbacks,
sorrows, troubles, but if you have Him, then you live, you have exceeding joy.
This Psalm reminds us of Jesus’ words when He said in
John 17:3:
“And this is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God,
and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent.”
The second reason
why this Psalm is so precious to us is that it gives us practical help when we
feel distant from God and when, in fact, we fear that we are being rejected of
Him. In verses 2 and 5 the psalmist
says, “Why dost thou cast me off? Why go
I mourning…? Why art thou cast down, O
my soul?” He is under the experience of
oppression. He is under attack for his
faith. He is enduring setbacks. We, too, sometimes, believe that everything
is contrary to the promises of God.
There are slanderous words being flung at us. In that situation we are led by the psalmist
to see that God, our exceeding joy, is the One to whom we must go and in whom is life and comfort.
Let me show you,
first of all, that the psalmist is writing out of a very common
experience. If we go to verse 1 we see
that he tells us what is going on in his life.
And then in verse 2 he tells us what is going on in his soul. We read in verse 1: “Judge me (or vindicate me—show me to be
true), O God, and plead my cause against an ungodly nation: O deliver me from
the deceitful and unjust man.” This
psalmist has enemies, men who misrepresented him, men who slandered him, men
who falsely judged his motives, so that the general opinion was against
him. Ungodly folks were making his life
miserable, making many problems for him.
That was his external, his outward, situation.
Verse 2 tells us
the inward condition of his soul: “For
thou art the God of my strength: why
dost thou cast me off? who go I mourning because of
the oppression of the enemy?” Inwardly
he believes that God has cast him away.
And what is very striking about the verse is that we see that his heart
is divided. The first clause of verse 2
sounds very hopeful. Here he is feeling
the need to be vindicated against his enemies and he begins his address to
God: “For thou art the God of my
strength.” In other words, he has not
let God go. He is still saying the right
things. So he begins very positively. But then, in the very next clause, he
complains of being rejected. “Why dost
Thou cast me off? Why hast Thou turned
Thy back upon me? It seems as if Thou
hast forsaken me, O God. If seems as if
Thou hast allowed the enemy to have the upper hand. I am oppressed, I am agitated. I have come many times to Thee for relief and
vindication. Thou art my strength. Why hast Thou cast me away?” He has a divided heart. That is a very common experience. He believes, on the one hand, that God is his
strength, but on the other hand he thinks that God has forsaken him. There are two things tugging inside of
him. “I know that Thou art my God, my
strength. But I feel, under this
prolonged oppression, that Thou hast cast me away.”
I believe the
Scriptures often bring to us this common experience of the people of God. Often in the Psalms we read of it.
Psalm 86:11:
“Teach me thy way, O Lord;
I will walk in thy truth: unite my heart
to fear thy name.” My heart is
split—part of it is going one way, part of it is going the other way. Take hold of my heart and make it one. Also in
Mark 9:24,
the father of the
demon-possessed boy said with tears:
“Lord, I believe; help thou mine unbelief.” So also the psalmist in
Psalm 43.
He has not given up,
he has not thrown everything away. He
has not said, “Forget it. I don’t
believe in God anymore.” No, God’s grace
has kept him back from that step. But he
is struggling with a divided heart.
“Lord, I know that Thou art my strength.
But why then do all of these things happen to me?”
As he cries out of
these circumstances, we see in verse 1, he at first focuses on vindication,
personal vindication. “Vindicate me, O
God, plead my cause against an ungodly nation:
O deliver me.” “Be a lawyer,” he
asks God. “Set the record straight. Be my lawyer.
Give me a public vindication.
Show that I am right. Elevate
me. Take away the opposition.”
Now, beloved in the
Lord Jesus Christ, it is not necessarily wrong to pray that way—to pray, “Lord,
deliver me from people who misrepresent.
Deliver me from cancer. Deliver
me from illness. Deliver me from the
hurricane. Deliver me from
problems. Deliver me from
difficulties.” But as we read this
Psalm, we see that the psalmist begins to understand that this is not the main
point. If you glance ahead to verses
3-5, you will see that he never comes back to this point of vindication. He begins:
“Vindicate me.” But as he draws
closer to God, he loses sight of that petition when he sees more important
things. Yes, you may ask God, “Vindicate
me from my problems, my woes, and my illness.”
But, you see, one does not need to be a Christian in order to pray that
prayer. There is nothing spiritual in
itself about that. In fact, the devil
wants that. The devil wants to be
vindicated, too. Everybody wants
that. That is a natural desire. Anyone desperate enough will pray: “Change this.
Deliver me. I don’t want this
anymore.” The devil and the world can
say that.
But what the
psalmist says in the next verses the devil never would, the unbelieving world
never will, and a mere outward Christian never does. For, as you go ahead in verses 3 and 4, you
will see that he asks God to lead him, not out of his oppression, but to God’s
holy tabernacle. He wants to appear
before God, his exceeding joy. And as he
considers God in his soul, the important thing comes to him: God, my exceeding joy. That is the important thing. He does not need so much the change of
circumstances, but he needs God. The
devil does not pray like that. Neither
do pretended Christians who go to church merely out of custom.
Now let us go
forward and see the very rich prayer that he makes in this Psalm: verses 3 and 4. I hope you have your Bible open to that. This is an amazing and rich prayer. It shows us how to pray when we believe that
God has forsaken us. As we enter into
the beautiful chamber of this prayer, let us look first of all at the whole.
“O send out thy light and thy truth,” we read. “Let them lead me; let them bring me unto thy
holy hill, and to thy tabernacles. Then
will I go unto the altar of God, unto God my exceeding joy: yea, upon the harp will I praise thee, O God
my God.”
That prayer reveals
much rich spiritual experience with God.
The vocabulary, the sequence of thought, the God-centeredness, the
intensity, the adoration oozes from the prayer.
It reveals a man who has known God, who has gone very deep with God, who
has a deep and rich walk with God.
And yet, he could
also have a divided heart. He was just
like us—he could know moments when he was beside himself. He was upset.
He was agitated. There are not
two men in this Psalm. There is one man. The man who begins praying, “Lord, set the
record straight. I believe that thou
hast forsaken me. Put an end to all of
this!”—the same man prays as he draws closer to God: “Send Thy light and truth, O God, my
God. I will praise Thee.”
Notice, as I said
before, that as he enters into the heart of his prayer in verses 3 and 4, there
is not even a whiff of any desire for personal vindication anymore. As I said, if you want to pray for the
vindication of the truth in your life, that is OK. But that is still not the main issue. Being proven right at work, being proven
right in your marriage squabble, defeating cancer, overcoming heart disease,
delivered from Katrina—yes, pray about that.
But where is your exceeding joy?
Being shown to be right ... or loving God? Beating cancer ... or knowing God? The devil wants to get well too. He wants to escape what is coming against
him. Unbelievers want to be proven
right. The world wants to beat
cancer. Unbelieving couples want to
overcome low income, move into bigger homes, have a
boat.
That is not the
main issue. We are all going to
die. What will we have then? The psalmist says, “God, my exceeding joy. O God, my God.” Do you know something about that?
In twenty years,
how many who are now listening to this broadcast will be dead? The main issue in your life is not
vindication. It is not health. It is not what other people are saying about
you today. The main issue in your life
is not your figure and what it looks like.
The main issue is not what things you have or do not have. The main issue is God. Who is God to you?
Now let us look for
a few moments at some of the details of this beautiful prayer. It stands out in three stages.
The psalmist
begins, “O send out thy light and thy truth:
let them lead me.” He is asking
for God’s Word to shine into his heart.
He needs God’s light because he is in the dark. He is asking that the power of God’s Word and
truth vitalize his heart. He is looking
around. He does not see God. He has taken refuge in God: “Thou art my strength.” But he is in the dark. He knows that God is a refuge and a rock, but
he does not feel that. He feels the
opposition of the enemy. So he
asks: “Send Thy clear, reinvigorating
light, Thy fixed truth. Let it sink into
the walls of my heart. I am blind to
something, O Lord. I can’t see. I feel that I am rejected. Lord, open the eyes of my heart (not my
physical eyes, but the eyes of my heart) that I might, through Thy Word, see
the riches of Thy grace. I know all
about that. My head understands all of
those things. My pastor has come to me
this week and said, ‘All things work together for good to them that love God.’ I know that.
But, Lord, send forth Thy light, send forth the
power of Thy Word to illumine my soul.
Send forth Thy truth,” he says, “the truth of the Bible.” That truth is real. The doctrines and the promises and the
precepts are truth. You can get your
hand on it. You can understand it. They are called creeds, confessions of the
church. “Lord, flood my heart with Thy
light. Baptize my soul with Thy truth.”
Then he goes on,
“Let them (that is, let Thy Word, let Thy truth) bring me unto thy holy hill,
and to thy tabernacles. Then will I go
unto the altar of God.” He says, “God’s
light, God’s truth in the heart, pulls me to a place.” It is called a holy hill. It is called an altar. It refers to the cross. The altar was placed in the tabernacle on
God’s holy hill. And what happened on
that altar? Blood. Lots and lots of blood. It was all pointing ahead to Christ and Him crucified. The altar on which our sins are washed away and the covenant of God
is established and confirmed.
That is everything to us. The
gospel, the cross of Jesus Christ, is the great and only good. That your guilt is purged away on the altar
on which His blood was shed is all that matters. The psalmist says, “Let thy light and truth
come, that it might reveal my sin. My sin—even in my prayer for vindication. And let it bring me to the altar of God on
Then he says, “Then
will I go … unto God my exceeding joy:
yea, upon the harp will I praise thee, O God my God.” “Bring me, O Lord, to Thee in Christ Jesus,
that I might know Thee as my God, the God who is my exceeding joy.”
The final goal of
the Christian life is not the forgiveness of sins. The forgiveness of sins is a means to bring
you to God Himself. God is the gospel. God is joy.
God is exceeding joy. The word
“exceeding” is joy of my joy, joy of my gladness. The psalmist is piling it up. No, he is saying, “I cannot really express
who God is—majestic, glorious, lovely—oh, joy of my
joy! God, my exceeding
joy!”
Do you know
God? The psalmist means that God is his
root joy, his core joy. All other things,
without God, are utterly empty. All joy
without God is bubble joy. It is
burst-on-the-first-sharp-thing joy. It
is floating-away-like-a-little-bubble joy.
But God is the joy
of my joy, the center of all truth. All
other joys (good food, home, car, friends, money, fishing, booze)—are they the
root of your joy? That is a hollow joy. No, it is worse than that. It is an addicting joy and it is going to
leave you gutted. It is going to leave
you empty. Not God. “Oh God, my God; my joy,
joy of my joy. Strip all away
from me and you have not taken away my joy,” says the psalmist. “I will go to Thy altar, O God, my exceeding
joy. How precious is my God.”
Here is the man of
God, now. He has been brought to prayer
before God. He is surrounded by
enemies. He is beleaguered. He has prayed, “Send forth Thy light and Thy
truth. Bring me to the altar of
The issue in your
life today is not your health. It is not
your job. It is not your IRA. It is not the rumors that are floating round
about you. It is not if you have enough
money. It is not how you look. It is not how your house is or if it needs
repair. It is not the state of the
furniture. It is not whether you have a
boat. The issue is: God.
Do you know God? For if you do
not, you have nothing. But if you have
God through Jesus Christ, by amazing grace, then you have joy of joy.
The psalmist goes
on to say, “I will praise Thee upon a harp.”
Bring out the most sweet, the most celestial
instruments, and I will enjoy God and I will praise Him.
But you say to me,
“OK, but I’m still troubled. All you
said is true, pastor. It’s God’s
Word. I can’t argue with that. But….”
If you read verse 5 you see that the psalmist was ready with his “but,”
too. He leaped very high in prayer. He confessed that God was his exceeding
joy. But his feet start coming back down
to the reality of life, to those enemies, to the slander, to the woe, and to
the problems. But then he takes himself
to task. He says, “Why art thou cast
down, O my soul? and why art thou disquieted within
me? hope in God:
for I shall yet praise him, who is the health of my countenance, and my
God.” He has been talking to God. And now, after he has been in prayer, he
comes back to talk to himself and to speak to his soul on behalf of God. He is talking to himself. He is talking to his soul back and
forth. The soul says, “I’m disquieted. I don’t like this.” And he speaks to his soul and says, “Why are
you disquieted? Hope in God.” The man is preaching to himself. Do you know that you can preach to
yourself? You can preach the whole
gospel to yourself every day. Do not be
easy on yourself. Do not pamper
yourself. Counsel yourself. Preach the gospel to yourself. Shall we do that?
As those who
confess the altar of God as our exceeding joy, as the power of our salvation,
shall we do that? Shall we counsel
ourselves? Shall we confess that God
Himself is exceeding joy? Soul of mine,
you are burdened with forebodings today.
You are stewing at the injustice of it all. Soul, you feel disquieted. You cannot seem to rest. You are driven. Soul, you are feeling sorry for
yourself. You imagine there is no friend
for you. Why? Is God dead?
Has God left His heaven? Has God
abdicated His throne? Has God laid down
the reins of His sovereignty? Did Jesus
Christ die upon
Hope in God! Rely upon God. Depend upon God. Cast yourself, by a living faith, into the
almighty arms of the living God. Soul,
stop it!
Look to the
cross. “Send forth thy light and thy
truth.” Do you see it? Look to God.
Oh, my God! Joy of all joys. He has not cast you away, child of God. Rest in hope. This is the issue of your life. The most important thing is not, vindicate
me. Here is the most important thing: Oh God, my God, give me to know Thee. Give me to love Thee. Give me to serve Thee. Give me to glorify Thee. Give me to rejoice in Thee, oh joy of my joy.
Let us pray.
We thank Thee, O Lord, for Thy Word. We pray that Thou wilt write it upon the walls of our hearts today. We pray in Jesus’ name, Amen.
Last modified: 06june2007