As I prepare for ministry, I am struck by how often I am
looking to the Lord for strength. Or to put it another way, I am struck by just
how weak I am.
Thankfully, the Lord has much to say in his Word about
“strength.” One particular place I have been turning to much lately is Psalm
18, where the opening verse reads: “I love you, O LORD, my strength.” In what
sense did David mean that the LORD is his strength? There are three
senses in which he means this.
1.
David recognized that all his talents, gifts,
and strengths were from his LORD.
David was a mighty warrior, a great king.
He won many victories through his prowess, even slaying his ten-thousands
versus Saul’s mere thousands, as the local lyric went. But David recognized
that anything he possessed by way of might- either of a military kind or of
another- was from God. So he says in Psalm 18:32 that God is “the God who
equipped me with strength.” God had indeed imparted to David- and has imparted
to each of us- strengths and talents. It is not wrong to identify and use
these, but we must do so in the knowledge that we did not gain them on our own,
but were given them by the one who made us.
2.
David recognized that all his talents, gifts,
and strengths were nothing apart from his
LORD.
This is, as it were, the next step in
acknowledging the Lord as your strength. Not only did David recognize that
everything was from the LORD, he also knew that is was only by his God that he
would be able to employ his strengths with any success. So, in 18:29, David
declares, “by you I can run against a
troop, and by my God I can leap over
a wall. Notice, David did not say, “by the gifts and talents God has given me I
can do this and that.” No! It was by God
that he could do these things. All of our gifts and talents count for nothing
unless energized and supported by the LORD who gave them to us.
3.
David recognized that all his talents,
abilities, and strengths were not his
LORD.
Finally, David understood that at some
point it is not about his gifts or talents, even gifts and talents employed
using God’s enablement. At some point, we are completely out of the picture,
and our gifts are out of it with us. All that is left is the LORD himself. We
see this in verses 4-19. The picture is not one in which David wins the victory
by using the gifts God has given him in the strength that God supplies. Rather,
the picture is one in which David is totally helpless and weak, with “the cords
of death encompassed” about him. He is in deep “distress” and in need of being
“rescued.” God alone can act in such a time, and indeed he does. Verses 6-15
record a rather terrifying- though somehow comforting- vision of God coming
forth from his temple in furious might, a might bent in the direction of the
destruction of David’s enemies, a might bent in the direction of the salvation
of David himself. In those moments, David’s gifts and talents- even those
empowered by God- would not suffice. Only David’s God himself could rescue. The
LORD alone was his strength.
And, of course, where does this line of
thought ultimately end, biblically-speaking? Surely it leads our eyes through
biblical history to that ultimate demonstration of God’s strength and
deliverance on our behalf: the cross of Jesus Christ. There our God did what we
could not do, cannot do, and will never be able to do. There he won the victory for his
people, apart from them completely- we helped him none at all. He alone
suffered that day. He alone, “while we were still weak, at the right time…died
for the ungodly.” Let us say together, then, as ones this side of Calvary, “I
love you, Jesus, my strength.”
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