
My wife and I are reading through the Psalms in our evening reading and occasionally a nugget of the Psalms jumps out of the page. Don’t you love it when, after years of reading the “Old Book” passages become alive, reinforcing old teachings or simply warming your heart.
This is the book of Psalms, and it is rich.
I pray I can communicate a portion of the blessing we receive from this wonderful book.
Psalm 69 is a psalm of sorrow, of apparent defeat and deep emotional stress, of a distress in the heart and of being overwhelmed, of a weariness of soul, and of a waiting for an answer from God. It is a psalm that speaks of loneliness, of disappointment and of extended trials.
As we venture through the psalmist’s deep confession, his pain and his sorrow, we will encounter passages that will be referred to in the New Testament, providing a recounting of the sorrow of Jesus.
Psalm 69:9 For zeal for your house has consumed me, and the reproaches of those who reproach you have fallen on me.
Psalm 69:10 When I wept and humbled my soul with fasting, it became my reproach.
Psalm 69:11 When I made sackcloth my clothing, I became a byword to them.
Psalm 69:12 I am the talk of those who sit in the gate, and the drunkards make songs about me.
In the last post, I apologized for getting a bit long winded with my time in verse 9. Dang it, I tripped and fell into verse 10 last post, but I refuse to apologize. I am enjoying this time in Psalm 69 more than expected.
Let’s try to look at verse 11 & 12 in this post.
Psalm 69:11 When I made sackcloth my clothing, I became a byword to them.
To be considered a byword is a strange concept. What is David speaking of? The Hebrew word is מָשָׁל mâshâ, and is typically translated as parable or proverb. A definition byword likens it to be similar to a pithy maxim, an adage, a saying describing some wisdom.
This makes no sense to me. In the midst of this trial, when he was in sackcloth, denoting repentance and sorrow, his enemies considered him to be but a parable or proverb. A byword.
Might this proverb, spoken by the enemy, be describing the failure of the life of faith, the disappointment that seemed so obvious at the time of David’s suffering? His life of faith led to his loss of the kingdom, his own son seeking his head. Surely in the eyes of the enemy, this occurrence in David’s life proved God couldn’t be trusted, or that God didn’t care, or that there was no God. This could be huge news for those who hated God.
Psalm 69:12 I am the talk of those who sit in the gate, and the drunkards make songs about me.
For this period of apparent failure, David’s enemies surely spread the story of his downfall, of how his God had failed him, and of his deep reproach and shame he went through. All from the city leadership, those who sit in the gate, repeat the story, spreading the news.
This byword (or saying) would surely find ample audience to receive it, repeating the mockery of David’s life, the shame he experienced, the failure of his God. The rumor mill was on high alert, gossipers waiting for then next juicy nugget of misinformation, chugging out the news they wanted to hear!
For David, the spreading of this byword of failure surely damaged his reputation.
Mark 15:31 So also the chief priests with the scribes mocked him to one another, saying, “He saved others; he cannot save himself.
Jesus also experienced the appetite of the gossip monger, the rumor mill, even at His lowest time, hanging on the instrument of death, with the killers at his feet, spreading the slur that He could not save Himself. You do understand why that is a slur, that what the priest’s said for the rumor mill was incorrect? It is not that he could not save Himself but that He would not save Himself.
And the rumor continues throughout the ages, that Jesus is not powerful enough to save.
Both David and Jesus were the subject of a rumor mill, both men claiming to experience the failure of their faith, of their God, of their lives. At each of those times in these men’s lives, all appearance supported the rumor. Men could surmise their understanding of the situation and make statements that would seem to be true.
But we know better don’t we? Trust in God when all the world is spreading untrue rumors about you. God is the God who saves us, even from rumor mills!
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