PSALM 128:
The Enjoyment of a Mature and Life-giving Labor

After Experiencing Transformation, We Can Enjoy the Fruit of Our
Labor
Psalm 128 begins, "Blessed is everyone that fears Jehovah, who walks
in His ways. You will indeed eat the labor of your hands; you will be
blessed, and it will go well with you" (v. 1-2). At the beginning of
Psalm 127 we labored in vain. Now in Psalm 128 we eat the labor of our
hands. Because we have slept, and because we have been equipped and
prepared unto every good work, we can rise up and serve the Lord effectively.
Then we can enjoy the fruit of our labor.
The psalm continues, "Your wife will be like a fruitful vine in the
innermost parts of your house. Your children will be like olive shoots
round about your table" (v. 3). This verse is not meant to be taken
only literally. Instead, we should apply it to ourselves. After we have
experienced what has been described in the previous psalms, we are like
a "house." Furthermore, within our house there is a table. A house is
for resting, while a table is for standing. This means that we are able
to give others rest, and we are able to help others to stand.
In our house there is a "fruitful vine." Not only do we have wine, we
produce wine. Furthermore, we also have olive plants. We produce wine,
and we also produce oil. This is marvelous. When the good Samaritan
took care of the wounded man, he ministered oil and wine (Luke 10:34).
Oil and wine represent the life supply from the Lord for anointing and
for enjoyment. The Lord as the good
| When
there are brothers in the church life who are as a wine tree and
an olive tree, then there is peace. |
Samaritan
healed the wounded one with these two items.
After we learn how to sleep, and after we become like a mighty man with
arrows, then we are able to labor. Within ourselves we produce oil and
wine for others to enjoy. We become like a vine tree and an olive tree.
Wherever we go, oil and wine go with us. We are just as the Lord was
in His ministry. As we labor, wounds can be healed, and people can be
restored. We can bring people to joy.
Our Life-giving Labor Makes Us a Blessing for Many Generations
The psalm continues, "Thus will the man be blessed who fears Jehovah.
Jehovah bless you from Zion; and may you see the prosperity of Jerusalem
all the days of your life" (v. 4-5). Now we are blessed, and we become
a blessing. When we live such a life, we become a profit to the Lord's
testimony. The next verse says, "May you also see the children of your
children" (v. 6a). Our being a blessing to the churches is no longer
limited. The blessing here is for generations to come. When a true servant
of the Lord departs there is still a blessing for many generations.
The psalmist concludes, "Peace be upon Israel." When there are brothers
in the church life who are as a wine tree and an olive tree, then there
is peace. May the Lord have mercy on us that we would all become such
a blessing.
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Long version of this message
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Other
messages of the Psalms of Ascent
The
Stage of Enjoyment Psalms 126-128: The Psalms of
Ascent are a picture of the Christian life. As we follow the Lord
we "ascend" in our experience. These psalms form a progression which
can be divided into five stages of three psalms each. In previous
messages we have seen the stage of vision and the stage of consecration.
Now we can come to the next stage, the stage of enjoyment.
The Enjoyment of Being Freed from Our Self-life
Psalm
126 shows the psalmist has already come out of captivity positionally.
He is no longer in Babylon but has come to the Lord's testimony.
Positionally he is released, but experientially he has not been
released in full. When he realizes this he then prays, "Lord,
turn again my captivity."
The
Enjoyment of Transformation Psalm
127: All our labor is in vain until we surrender to the Lord and
rest in Him. For us to go to sleep can mean one of two things. First,
it can mean to stop our working. Second, it can mean to accept the
Lord's environmental arrangement for us. When we stop our striving
and rest in the Lord's arrangement we begin to be transformed and
bear fruit. |
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