The Bible

 

Psalms 29 : The Voice of the Lord

Study

1 (A Psalm of David.) Give to the Lord, you sons of the gods, give to the Lord glory and strength.

2 Give to the Lord the full glory of his name; give him worship in holy robes.

3 The voice of the Lord is on the waters: the God of glory is thundering, the Lord is on the great waters.

4 The voice of the Lord is full of power; the voice of the Lord has a noble sound.

5 By the voice of the Lord are the cedar-trees broken, even the cedars of Lebanon are broken by the Lord.

6 He makes them go jumping about like a young ox; Lebanon and Sirion like a young mountain ox.

7 At the voice of the Lord flames of fire are seen.

8 At the voice of the Lord there is a shaking in the waste land, even a shaking in the waste land of Kadesh.

9 At the voice of the Lord the roes give birth, the leaves are taken from the trees: in his Temple everything says, Glory.

10 The Lord had his seat as king when the waters came on the earth; The Lord is seated as king for ever.

11 The Lord will give strength to his people; The Lord will give his people the blessing of peace.

Commentary

 

The Importance of the Church

By Bill Woofenden

"Give unto the Lord the glory due unto His name; worship the Lord in the beauty of holiness." Psalm 29:2

Additional readings: Isaiah 60, Luke 2:25-40

The Temple with its appointments was built to represent something of the beauty and glory of the Lord. The description of it as given in the Word is a parable telling of the beauty and Harmony of the Divine Life and of the temple that should be built in our souls that the Lord may dwell in us.

It is good for us and it is good for our children and friends to come to worship where inward things are mirrored in the outward. It is a beautiful setting for our children. The importance of first beginnings, of first contact with the Church should be better known. It is an inspiration to us and to others who come to have our surroundings a symbol of the beauty that life may attain.

The human race began in the innocence and happiness of the Garden of Eden. Christianity began with a perfect life of Christ, and the simple beauty of the Apostolic Church. So every life begins with the vision and beauty of youth and should be filled with joy and holiness. We need such visions and should know that the highest life is always religious and that the gate to this life is a beautiful gate by which we should enter in childhood. Religion is very real with children, first impressions are lasting, and they should prepare for and lead to the happy devotion of the mature religion of the grown man and woman. For the Church is our spiritual home. It is dear to us because we belong to it and it to us.

Yet the true glory of a Church is its wisdom, its truth which it receives from God for the enlightenment of men. Here we learn the story of life—how God so loved the world that He came into it and lived here and died here to help everyone to live in happiness. No education can be true or fruitful which leaves the Lord out. No one can act wisely or well toward others if he does not know that the Lord also is caring for them and that His kind Providence is also over them.

In the church there is need of absolute truthfulness and religious teaching. There is no beauty in falsity; it is always deformed. In the light of the Second Coming it is possible to be truthful. No longer is it necessary to teach our children what we really do not believe, for we can have full and intelligent faith in our doctrines. If we do not, our teaching will be insincere and ineffective, for a man cannot teach what he only half-heartedly believes. The bright eyes of children will see through him. And further it is wrong to the children, who will find out someday that what they have been taught is not true.

The world is in a transition period. There is a legitimate dissatisfaction with the religion of the past, and a demand for something more definite, clear, and practicable, something that will carry on, growing with our growth through all this life and into life beyond. There is a difference between a child's religion and an adult’s religion but it is not a difference between falsity and truth.

Today we hear much about the precocity of children. Never have children been able to get ideas so freely from the freest contact with the life about them, and never has their need of the Church been greater.

As we read history we realize that people owe to religion nearly every liberty and privilege that they enjoy, and while they may criticize the Church, they are loaded with the benefits which it has brought about.

No one can be happy who is in falsity and evil. The Lord is Life Itself, and this life goes forth from Him as love and wisdom, or goodness and truth, and these as received from the Lord constitute the life of men. At the time of the Lord's Advent the world had lost all knowledge of spiritual truth. The Lord saw the tragic disaster of the way of life which men were pursuing, and that life would be filled with beauty, joy, and blessing if only His kingdom were established in their hearts. So He came into the world and established the Christian Church and started mankind again on the upward path. The world owes much to the Church. The first teachers were religious teachers, the first schools were church schools, the first attempt to break through the appalling ignorance of the masses of the people was made by the Church.

In Jesus Christ and His teaching came the light of the world, and even those who deny Him are living today in that light, which from Him has filled the whole world. The Christian Church is from those who seek this light and mediate it to the world.

And then the Sabbath day when we come to his Temple! Do those who criticize the institution of Sunday ever think what a blessing this day is? Suppose there were no Sabbath day, but instead every seventh day were a day for indulgence in material pleasures. Suppose there were no churches, no services of worship, no Sunday schools, and that public houses kept open and business went on as usual. Would there be more enjoyment or happiness in this freer Sunday? Take the churches out of our land, and ask your cold reason where would be found any increase in happiness.

Religion is still the highway of life. The days of irreligion are a delusion and a shame, whether looked back upon or looked forward to.

Again, contrast the effect of religion and irreligion on the characters of the world's rulers. Note how those of religious character have shown out in dark and has trouble sometimes.

The highway of life must be kept open for us, and if once our churches were gone, this way would be closed.

There is, too, the personal aspect. The highway of life is for us individually. It is the straight road to the kingdom, the way of soundness, and truth, and right. While we may not give as much time and thought to our religion as we should, yet we ought to realize that it is keeping us on the highway and out of the muddy and crooked by-paths. There is protection for us in our church. There is a safeguarding, reforming, and regenerating work that quietly and surely though oftentimes unconsciously goes on within us and within the world by means of our religious worship. It is good that much of it is unconscious, for goodness would lose its quality if it were paraded or noted down for reference.

"The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh and whither it goeth: so is everyone who is born of the spirit" (John 3:8).

By the Lord's help we are instinctively, as it were, kept from the evil and led security along the highroad of life. We would not wish to walk without knowledge of God or without His help. Is not this true? Do we wish to be in a state where religion is absent, where the Lord, the light of the world, is absent, where there is no law but self and no one to serve but the world and the kings of Mammon, where everyone is limited to what seems right in his own eyes?

So we come to Church in gratitude to the Lord that He has given to man the love of His Word, of His Church, and of His service—to keep always open to men the highway of life.