Psalms
132-134:
The Stage of Maturity
Introduction
and Review
As we come to the last stage of the Psalms of Ascent we should remember
that these psalms contain very few teachings and doctrines. Instead,
they are rich in experience. For this reason what we have been sharing
should not be taken as a doctrinal expounding of the Bible. Other
writers and expositors have interpreted these psalms differently,
but our desire is to share these psalms according to spiritual experience.
In our Christian life we are ascending from one stage of experience
to another. We have already covered the stages of vision, consecration,
enjoyment, and enlargement. Now we come to the fifth stage, the stage
of maturity.
| "The
maturity that is described in the last stage
of the Psalms of Ascent is different from the maturity we have
seen in the previous stages."
|
The maturity that
is described in the last stage of the Psalms of Ascent is different
from the maturity we have seen in the previous stages. For example,
the third stage, the stage of enjoyment, issued in a certain kind of
maturity. However, that maturity was very individualistic. In the stage
of enjoyment we became a blessing to the Body, and we were even appreciated
by the other saints, but we may not have actually seen the Body. Instead,
we felt that we ourselves were quite high and important. This is why
we needed to go through the fourth stage, the stage of enlargement.
In order for us to be enlarged the Lord caused us to be brought low.
We experienced difficulties and afflictions in our environment which
forced us to spend more time in the Lord's presence. In the light of
His presence we saw who we really were. We could no longer think of
ourselves so highly. We realized that without the Lord's mercy we were
capable of committing any sin. We could no longer be so proud or so
haughty, and we no longer desired to do great things. Instead, we became
as a "weaned child," humble and submissive to the Lord and with a proper
attitude towards the church life. This means that we entered into a
healthy and greater maturity.
By the time
we reach the fifth stage of the Psalms of Ascent we have learned to
tell the Lord, "I dare not do anything, nor can I do anything. Lord,
all of my past spiritual ambitions, and all of my desires to be used
by You in a great way, are gone now. I realize that I am nothing. I
just want to be a child in Your presence." This is the result of our
healthy growth in life. In the past we were once filled with "arrows,"
and thus able to deal with all kinds of situations. We became a supply
of life and joy to the church life. But then the Lord came in to bring
us down. The Lord plowed on our back and produced furrows for more life
to grow. By our growth in life we were enlightened about our real condition
before the Lord. We saw that we were only a sinner, even the chief sinner,
and that we were utterly dependent on the Lord's mercy. This caused
us to be enlarged and brought us into a quiet restfulness concerning
the Lord's testimony. It is in this restfulness, after being enlarged,
that we are able to exercise according to our maturity.
Now we come to the
final stage of our growth in life as portrayed in the Psalms of Ascent.
Psalm 132 portrays our exercise in maturity for the sake of the Lord's
testimony. Psalms 133 and l34 are the manifestation and display of the
church life in maturity. We will see that eventually our maturity is
no longer an individual experience, but a corporate one.
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Long version of this message
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Other
messages of the Psalms of Ascent
The
Exercise of Maturity - Psalm
132 shows us a mature saint who knows how to rest, how to be in
submission, and how to wait on the Lord. Yet in this situation of
restfulness the writer still has a desperation. What is it that
we are desperate for? We are desperate for the substance of the
Lord's testimony to be produced. The psalmist describes a matured
person's consecration, my house is God's house.
The
Testimony of the Church Life in Maturity (1) - Psalm
133 is a display of the maturity that results from all the previous
experiences in the Psalms of Ascent. We
can only have the genuine oneness when we lose our individuality.
Oneness comes from our maturity in life. For this we must have the
headship, the person, the maturity, and the serving life of Christ.
The
Testimony of the Church Life in Maturity (2) - Psalm
134 does not speak of the maturity of one individual but of the
entire Body of Christ. When we enter into the experience of this
psalm, it is not only we ourselves who are different, but all of
the saints are different. Here at the end of the Psalms of Ascent,
the church as the Bride has made herself ready and is awaiting the
Lord's return. |
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