Sunday 21st August - Weekly Scripture & Reflection

Notices From_the_Vicar

Reflection: Sunday 21st August and for the week ahead:

Scripture:

“My eyes fail with watching for your word,
while I say, ‘O when will you comfort me?’

I have become like a wineskin in the smoke,

yet I do not forget your statutes.” (Psalm 119 vv 82-3)

Reflection:

The Psalms are the most personal and timeless ‘Book’ in the Bible, a collection of songs and poems composed for all sorts of occasions. At one time called ‘The Psalms of David’ they were by no means all written by the shepherd who became king, though some of the most moving speak of his inmost thoughts and feelings. Others were written for public use on ceremonial occasions. Psalm 119 (at 176 verses!) is the longest of the 150 and is focused on what are here called ‘statutes’, but have many other names – decrees, precepts, commandments, ways, law, word…

The Psalmist pours out the depths of his heart as he speaks of the ways in which he has experienced evil and suffering, while at the same time proclaiming that his knowledge of right and wrong is a gift that has come from God. Where we would keep wine in bottles in a cool cellar, his contemporaries kept it in skins hung by smoky fires, warming the wine but doing the skins no good – guarding one’s moral integrity may not be comfortable, but this Psalm encourages us to rejoice in knowing good from evil and to talk frankly to God in prayer.

David Harmsworth