WHO DO YOU TRUST?
“God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble. Therefore will not we fear, though the earth be removed, and thought the mountains be carried into the midst of the sea; Though the waters thereof roar and be troubled, though the mountains shake with the swelling thereof. Selah.” Psalm 46:1-3
As I’ve said in recent weeks, these unprecedented times expose our deepest insecurities. They shine a spotlight on our vulnerabilities, at times making them the only things we can see. Before this pandemic, you may have had strained relationships with your parents, spouse, siblings, or children, yet now those hairline relational fractures are breaking apart, threatening to sever the bonds of love that tie you together. You may have known your financial safety net was not what it should be, yet that abstract knowledge is now painfully being experienced through the loss of a job or reduced income. And even within your own heart and soul, you find yourself encountering new forms of brokenness within, anger that you didn’t know was there, a need for control that rears its ugly head, or a weary cynicism that has taken root and settled in.
In light of this present moment, we are increasingly aware of our inability to resolve these challenges, not to mention the countless more that I haven’t named. We cannot simply snap our fingers and return to simpler days. The problems are too complex, the challenge too severe. And so we must look outside ourselves for hope and a way forward.
When I hear the news, this is exactly what our country is doing at this moment. We desperately look to the government, or corporations, or charities for solutions, hoping someone will have an answer, a way to see us through this impossible situation we find ourselves in. Yet I am convinced there is a very real threat, even for us within the family of God, to misplace our trust.
As the psalmist reminds us in Psalm 146:3, “Do not put your trust in princes, in mortals, in whom there is no help.” Apparently, this impulse to trust in the wrong people has been around for a long time! And misguided trust is not our only problem, it is also misguided hope. If our hope is simply for economic security or prosperity, then “princes” may be of some use. If a pandemic is our greatest concern, then looking to health care experts makes a great deal of sense.
Yet in this season, the psalmist helpfully reminds us of the temporal nature of these hopes. Princes and leaders, however wise or trusted they may be, will see their plans perish as their breath departs from them. If our hope is for something truly eternal, we must place those hopes in the hands of something, or someone, greater than death itself!
Our message tonight directly links happiness to hope. “Happy are those whose help is the God of Jacob, whose hope is in the Lord their God” (Psalm 146:5). If we hope correctly, we will be truly happy. And so tonight, place your hope in the one who overcame death itself, Jesus Christ our Lord, and trust that he will bring you unspeakable happiness as you place your trust in him.
Prayer
Father, thank you that no matter what we face in this life, we do so knowing that you have defeated our greatest enemy, death, and offer eternal happiness to those who put their hope in your son, Jesus Christ. Amen.
Application
Where have you misplaced your hope in this season of uncertainty?
Related Reading
Psalm 118:9; Psalm 120:1; Psalm 121:1-2; Isaiah 20:5; Jeremiah 17:5