Psalms
134:
The Testimony of the Church Life in Maturity (2)
In Maturity
the Saints Become the Servants of the Lord
Psalm 134 is the final psalm in our spiritual ascent up Mount Zion.
It begins, "Bless Jehovah now, all you servants of Jehovah who stand
by night in the house of Jehovah" (v. 1). After all of the previous
experiences the psalmist is full of feeling, because he has come so
far in his ascent. He can remember that once he was such a low person,
in constant distress and full of deception. But now he has become
different. By his growth in life he has entered into maturity, so
he says, "Bless Jehovah!"
Furthermore, the psalmist's exercise has helped bring the Lord's testimony
into maturity. This is the significance of "all you servants of Jehovah."
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.
The entire church life is different. By their enjoyment of the divine
anointing and the freshness of Christ's resurrection, all of the saints
possess a certain degree of maturity. Psalm 134 does not speak of
the maturity of one individual but of the entire Body of Christ. The
servants of the Lord here are not just the leading ones. When the
church life is brought into maturity every saint becomes a servant
of the Lord.
| "The
Lord
will only come back when the entire church has entered into maturity
and has expressed the desire for Him to return." |
TThe
Church in Maturity Awaits the Lord's Return
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. It seems that
all of our experiences from the previous Psalms of Ascent are over.
The afflictions and difficulties are over. Even the experiences of growth
and maturity are over. We are just here in the church life waiting for
Him to return. The servants of the Lord "stand by night in the house
of Jehovah." The dawn has not yet come and it is still night outside,
because the Lord has not yet come back. We have no other hope in this
world. The only thing we can look forward to is for the Lord to return.
The servants here are standing in "the house of Jehovah," which today
is the church life. The Lord will not come back because of one individual's
maturity. The Lord will only come back when the entire church has entered
into maturity and has expressed the desire for Him to return. In Psalm
134 all the saints in the church life display maturity. They are all
servants of the Lord. They are all crying out together, "Lord, come
back! The night has been too long!"
By Our Maturity We Become a Blessing to the Lord
The psalm continues, "Lift up your hands in the sanctuary, and bless
the Lord" (v. 2). To lift up our hands is to pray. In the church life
we should be those who pray and who bless the Lord. This phrase, "Bless
the Lord," is precious. When we are immature it seems that we are always
asking for the Lord to bless us. But after all of our previous experiences
there is now a corporate testimony. There is a display of maturity in
the church life in which we lift up our hands, interceding and praying
for the Lord to come back. As we pray for the Lord's return we say,
"Lord, we bless You." By our maturity we have become a blessing to the
Lord.
The Lord Blesses Us from the Church Life in Maturity
Psalm 134 ends, "May Jehovah, who made heaven and earth, bless you from
Zion" (v. 3). This is the conclusion of the Psalms of Ascent. At the
beginning of these psalms Jehovah was the Creator. Now at the end of
these psalms this very Creator blesses us out of Zion. He blesses us
out of a glorious church life where He and His people are one. May we
all become such a blessing to the Lord, and may the Lord bless us from
the glorious church life in maturity. Praise the Lord!
This concludes the messages on the Psalms of Ascent.
Back to top

Do you have a question
or comment about this message?
Long version of this message
To
purchase the book Journey of Life; the Psalms of Ascent and Song of Songs
|
Other
messages of the Psalms of Ascent
The
Stage of Maturity - Psalms 132-134: 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. We will see
that eventually our maturity is no longer an individual experience,
but a corporate one.
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. |
|