Reading: Psalm 23
In general Psalm 23 is optimistic. There is a trust in God that flows through David’s writing. It comes from experiencing God’s saving presence and from having an intimate relationship with God. David’s opening line reveals his trust: I shall not want. The next few verses tell of how God cares for him.
Does such a trust and faith come easily? Is a positive outlook always easy to maintain? Unfortunately the answer to these questions is ‘no’ for most of us. To have a faith and trust like David’s takes time and effort. To be in any good relationship, we must invest of ourselves. To walk closely with God, we first must spend time with Him. We do so by being daily in His Word, by worship attendance on a regular basis, by carving out time in our day for prayer. It is hard to do all these things consistently because it is so easy to sleep in, to make something else the priority, to wake up one day and to realize it’s been a while since we spent any time with God. To really build a solid relationship with God takes daily discipline.
We build trust much the same way. When we allow God to be in control or when we turn our burdens over to Him, we experience His presence, guidance, direction, comfort. Through these experiences we come to trust Him a bit more. Then we are more willing to trust and do so more easily. And trust grows. We come to believe that His plans for us are good. And trust grows.
David’s faith and trust grows to the point where he can confidently say that he fears no evil. He knows God has him. May we work and grow in our faith to experience the trust and faith that David lived out daily.