The Bible Recap - Day 148 (Psalm 111-118) - Year 8
Episode Date: May 28, 2026FROM TODAY’S RECAP: - Video: 1-2 Kings Overview - Help Page Note: We provide links to specific resources; this is not an endorsement of the entire website, author, organization, etc. Their views ma...y not represent our own. SHOW NOTES: - Follow The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | TikTok | YouTube - Follow Tara-Leigh Cobble: Instagram - Read/listen on the Bible App or Dwell App - Learn more at our Start Page - Become a RECAPtain - Shop the TBR Store PARTNER MINISTRIES: D-Group International Israelux The God Shot TLC Writing & Speaking DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible Recap.
Today we covered eight Psalms. In our first chapter, Psalm 111, there were two words that jumped out
at me and reminded me of what we're doing here. The first is in verse two. It says,
Great are the works of the Lord studied by all who delight in them. We're studying his works.
And I bet you're finding more and more to praise him about, discovering more of his greatness
along the way. And did you notice the word delight in there? That connects us with the other thing that
jumped out at me, which was in verse 10. It says, the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.
All those who practice it have a good understanding. I will continue to point out that the fear of the
Lord is comprised primarily of delight and awe. And this verse says that viewing God rightly is where
wisdom begins and that those who practice the fear of the Lord have good understanding.
I made a little note in my journal that says,
What does it look like for me to practice the fear of the Lord?
Psalm 112 points out again that delight is one of the components of the Lord.
Verse 1 says,
Blessed is the man who fears the Lord who greatly delights in his commandments.
And that word blessed can also be translated as happy.
There's a happiness in this pursuit of God.
Those who delight in God's laws will surely be living them out, right?
This is how righteousness takes over a person
life. It starts in the heart and works its way out through our actions. We don't create our own
righteousness. It happens when God changes our hearts. Verse four is so encouraging. It says,
light dawns in the darkness for the upright. I hear from so many of you who are going through
dark times or even feeling the weight of the darkness of your own sin. This verse reminds us that
God sends his light and brings the dawn at just the right time. And for those who walk in the commands
that they delight in, the words of verses 7 through 10 serve as guideposts, reminding us that
he keeps us steady in the meantime, and that nothing can shake us when we're rooted in Christ.
Part of this section says, he is not afraid of bad news. His heart is firm, trusting in the Lord.
His heart is steady. He will not be afraid. The wicked man is even angered by how steady the
godly man is in the midst of trials, because it doesn't make sense to him or to the rest of the
world. Psalm 113 rightly positions God as high above the earth, superior to all of it,
sovereign over all of it, the ultimate authority. Through verse 5, we see how distinct and set
apart he is from everything on earth, but then things shift in verse 6 where we see him coming down
to connect with his people on earth. Here's where that change happens. It says,
Who is like the Lord our God, who is seated on high, who looks far down on the heavens and
the earth. He raises the pore from the dust and lifts the needy from the ash heap to make them
sit with princes with the princes of his people. From high above us, he turns his eyes toward us,
he looks down, then he doesn't just look down, he reaches down, lifts us up, and seats us with royalty.
Wow, and that's exactly what he's done by letting us share in the inheritance of King Jesus.
In Psalm 114, we look back at the story of the Israelites. God carried them out of Egypt, he gave them
water from a rock, he parted the Red Sea when they left Egypt and the Jordan River when they
stepped into the promised land. The mountain shook when God appeared on them to meet with Moses.
It's all such poetic imagery that it made me forget all the hardship they endured. It seems clear
that the stories that got passed down to the generations weren't the ones about dehydration
or how hot it was or that time they had a quail tornado. The stories that got passed down,
the ones that lodged in their collective memories, but the stories of God's provision.
want those to be the stories I tell too. In Psalm 115, Israel is being taunted by the nations around
them who don't see the God they worship. Unlike other nations, Yahweh doesn't have a statue or an idol to
represent him. It seems like Israel is worshipping nothing. So when the nations taunt them about this,
Israel responds in verse 3 with, our God is in the heavens. He does whatever he pleases.
To me, this is one of the most comforting verses in scripture, because I know God's
heart can be trusted. For him to do whatever he pleases isn't a threat to me. It's a blessing to me,
because what pleases him is also good for his kids. And the psalmist knew this too. He taunted back,
basically saying that their gods are lifeless and that we become like what we worship, so they're
destined for death. Then he calls on Israel, the priests, and the people, to trust in God,
because he is their help and he will bless them. He's alive and he makes his people to be alive too.
The psalmist who wrote Psalm 116 recounts a time when he desperately needed God's help,
and God came through for him.
He's looking back at that time and seeing God's deliverance and praising God for the way
he delivered him out of that situation against all odds.
He realizes there's no way to repay God for what he has done,
but still he commits to praising and serving God forever out of the overflow of gratitude
in his heart.
Psalm 117 is short and sweet, but it points us to the greatness, faithfulness,
and steadfast love of God, and to his affection for people from every nation, not just Israel.
Psalm 118 has so much going on that I don't have time to cover it all, but there are a few things
I want to point out. First, I love that the psalmist praises God for disciplining him, especially
since he calls it severe discipline. But when our hearts understand God's purpose behind any
kind of righteous discipline, we truly are grateful for it. Usually not until it's over, though.
My Godshot also comes from this chapter.
There are a few places where we see prophecies of Jesus in this Psalm.
In John 10, verse 9, Jesus calls himself the gate, and he says,
Whoever enters through me will be saved.
So when verses 19 through 20 are painting an image of the gate of righteousness,
the psalmist was definitely talking about the gates in Jerusalem,
but retrospectively we can see the picture of Christ here.
Verse 20 says,
This is the gate of the Lord,
the righteous shall enter through it.
Jesus is the way in.
He's the gate to the father.
Verse 22 also has this kind of imagery.
It says,
the stone that the builders rejected has become the cornerstone.
This is like saying,
the guy who got cut from the high school football team
is now the MVP of the Super Bowl.
Or, the girl who was left to die in an orphanage
is now the queen of England.
It just turns everything on its head.
And that's what Jesus did.
He was rejected by the religious leaders of his day.
They found him worthless, or worse than worthless, detrimental to their cause.
But he is the very foundation, the cornerstone of our faith.
It's all built upon him and his work, and he is the only solid foundation.
He's the only thing worth building on.
Everything else will crumble, but he's solid and steady.
He's reliable, and he's where the joy is.
Tomorrow we begin the book of First Kings.
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