Timothy Keller Sermons Podcast by Gospel in Life - Finding God

Episode Date: November 6, 2024

For physical health, we have trainers and doctors. Through nutrition and exercise, trainers help you get further than you were. And when you get sick or injured, doctors help get you back on track. It...’s the same thing spiritually.  There are spiritual disciplines that are like training and spiritual disciplines that treat problems. We look now at a discipline that is a way of dealing with a problem that can be disastrous. Let’s look at Psalm 42 and 43 and see 1) there’s a condition that is certain to come upon you, 2) there’s a set of causal factors, and 3) there’s a set of cures. This sermon was preached by Dr. Timothy Keller at Redeemer Presbyterian Church on April 21, 2002. Series: Psalms: Disciples of Grace. Scripture: Psalm 42:1-43:5. Today's podcast is brought to you by Gospel in Life, the site for all sermons, books, study guides and resources from Timothy Keller and Redeemer Presbyterian Church. If you've enjoyed listening to this podcast and would like to support the ongoing efforts of this ministry, you can do so by visiting https://gospelinlife.com/give and making a one-time or recurring donation.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Thanks for listening to Gospel in Life. Today, Tim Keller is preaching through Psalms, the songbook of the Bible. This Old Testament book shows us how we can turn to God through every season of life, in joy, in sorrow, in doubt, and praise. After you listen, we invite you to go online to Gospelinlife.com and sign up for our email updates. Now here's today's teaching from Dr. Keller. The scripture for tonight is Psalm 42 and 43. As the deer pants for the water brooks, so my soul pants for you, O God.
Starting point is 00:00:45 My soul thirsts for God, for the living God. When shall I come and appear before God? My tears have been my food day and night, while they continually say to me, where is your God? When I remember these things, I pour out my soul within me, for I used to go with the multitude. I went with them to the house of God with the voice of joy and praise, with the multitude
Starting point is 00:01:09 that kept a pilgrim feast. Why are you cast down, O my soul? And why are you disquieted within me? Hope in God, for I shall yet praise him for the help of his countenance. O my God, my soul is cast down within me. Therefore, I will remember you from the land of the Jordan and from the heights of Hermon and from the hill Mazar. Deep calls unto deep at the noise of your waterfalls.
Starting point is 00:01:36 All your waves and billows have gone over me. The Lord will command his loving kindness in the daytime and in the night his song shall be with me a prayer to the God of my life I Will say to God my rock. Why have you forgotten me? Why do I go mourning because of the oppression of my enemy as with a breaking of my bones? My enemies reproach me while they say to me all day long. Where is your God? Why are you cast down on my soul? And why are you disquieted within me? while they say to me all day long, Where is your God?
Starting point is 00:02:05 Why are you cast down, O my soul? And why are you disquieted within me? Hope in God, for I shall yet praise him, The help of my countenance and my God. Vindicate me, O God, and plead my cause Against an ungodly nation. O deliver me from the deceitful and unjust man, for you are the God of my strength. Why do you cast me off? Why do I go mourning because of the oppression of the enemy?
Starting point is 00:02:34 Oh, send out your light and your truth. Let them lead me. Let them bring me to your holy hill and to your tabernacle. Then I will go to the altar of God, to God my exceeding joy, and on the harp I will praise you, O God, my God. Why are you cast down, O my soul, and why are you disquieted within me? Hope in God, for I shall yet praise him, the help of my countenance and my God." This is God's word. When it comes to physical growth and physical health, you've got sort of two
Starting point is 00:03:15 kinds of practices or disciplines. You've got trainers and you've got doctors. You have trainers because through nutrition and exercise, trainers and you've got doctors. You have trainers because through nutrition and exercise, trainers help you get further than you were. They help you make progress physically. But when you get sick or maybe injure yourself, you need a doctor to get you back on track. So you need trainers to get you forward from where you were. You need doctors to get you back on track. So you need trainers to get you forward from where you were. You need doctors to get you back to where you were physically. Same thing spiritually. There are spiritual disciplines that are more like training.
Starting point is 00:03:56 And we've been looking at them. We're in a series on the Psalms looking at what are the spiritual disciplines by which you grow into the person God's meant you to be. And there are some disciplines that are more along the lines of training. They tell you things like scriptural. We've been talking about some of the meditation and prayer, and we're going to be continuing to look at them. But there are some disciplines, spiritual disciplines, that are defensive. That is, they are ways of treating problems and difficulties. And tonight we're gonna look at one, the Psalm 42 and 43,
Starting point is 00:04:34 a way of dealing with a condition that will come on you if you are in any kind of spiritual pilgrimage at all. And if you don't know how to deal with it, it can be disastrous. It's not, well, let me just tell you that this is, there's a condition described here. There is a set of causal factors, and then finally, there are a set of cures.
Starting point is 00:05:00 There's a condition that is certain to come upon you. There are causal factors and there's a set of cures. And this, for you to become skilled at dealing with this condition is absolutely critical if you're going to make spiritual progress. So let's take a look at the condition. What is the condition? Well, verse one gives it in metaphorical form, and then verse two explains the metaphor.
Starting point is 00:05:22 First of all, it says, as the deer pants for water brooks. Now, just keep this in mind, deer aren't stupid. They don't wait till they're dying of thirst before they go look for water. A panting deer is not just a thirsty deer. A panting deer is a deer that's literally dying of thirst. And therefore, a panting deer is a deer that has come dying of thirst. And therefore a panting deer is a deer that has come down to the place, the river bed or the stream bed where it's used to in the
Starting point is 00:05:51 heat of the day assuaging its thirst through cool, clear streams of water and finds the river bed dry. And you see the psalmist is saying, I'm like the deer and God is like the dry river brook, the dry riverbed. And then verse 2 explains my soul thirst for God for the living God. It's not that he doesn't believe in God anymore but the psalmist can't sense God as a living God. The personal sense of dealing, a personal sense that there's a God who's there that I'm dealing with and he's dealing with me. The give and take, it's gone. Keep going on the verse. When shall I come and appear before God? Which literally is, when shall I see the
Starting point is 00:06:39 face of God? And over and over and over again in verse 5, it says, hope in God I will yet praise him for the help of his countenance. He's lost the countenance of God. He's lost the face of God. That doesn't mean he doesn't believe there's a God who is everywhere. It means that he's lost his relational experience of God's presence. He has no more taste, no more feel, no more sight, no more sound of God in his soul. You know what we mean by that? Thoughts about God that used to comfort him, sweeten, soften, strengthen him,
Starting point is 00:07:20 they don't resonate. They don't strike. They're not striking. They don't do it anymore. When he says, pardon me, the condition he's describing is he's lost the reality of God. Not belief in God. He's lost the reality of God. He's lost the presence of God, the sense of God's presence on his heart and in his soul. He no longer feels like he's got hold on God. He no longer has a sense that there's a God who's there who he's in a personal relationship with.
Starting point is 00:07:50 He's experiencing, it's a spectrum here, he's experiencing spiritual dryness, spiritual drought, spiritual darkness, spiritual deadness. Nothing resonates. And what's important to see here is there are other Psalms in which the spiritual dryness and deadness coexists with a sense of guilt. There are numbers of Psalms, and we'll be looking at one of them in our series, where the reason why the psalmist has lost God, lost God's, his presence,
Starting point is 00:08:24 and lost the sense of God's reality is because the psalmist has lost God, lost God's, his presence and lost the sense of God's reality is because the psalmist has done something wrong and therefore the psalmist feels guilt and then he has to confess his sin and he has to repent. But did you notice that's not happening here? This psalmist, this speaker, this writer is experiencing deep dryness, a deep spiritual drought, deep spiritual deadness and he's done nothing wrong. It's come upon him. Now this is very important. I'm gonna, this is very important because Americans,
Starting point is 00:08:54 and therefore Americans who are Christians, Americans, if something's wrong, they wanna know who so they can sue them. It's in other words, nothing should be wrong. If something is wrong, there's somebody who I can sue. And it's the same thing that happens with Christians who are Americans. When something goes wrong like this,
Starting point is 00:09:14 when I start to experience spiritual deadness and drought and dryness, I must be, I'm sure there's some button I'm not pushing. I'm sure there's something on my Christian to-do list I'm missing. And unfortunately, I'm not pushing. I'm sure there's something on my Christian to-do list I'm missing. And unfortunately, we're very moralistic about this. It's, I would say one of the reasons why it's tough for Christians to admit to their Christian friends
Starting point is 00:09:38 just how deeply dry they are, is because the Christian friends might say, what, you don't have the reality of God in your life? You're not experiencing his presence? You're experiencing spiritual deadness? Well, they say, have you prayed in faith? Have you confessed all known sin? Have you claimed the promises?
Starting point is 00:09:54 Have you rebuked the devil? Have you pleaded the blood? Have you thanked God for all your many blessings? Surely there'd be nothing wrong if you were doing your entire daily Christian to-do list. Obviously, you're doing something wrong. But this guy's not doing anything wrong. And he's dying of thirst.
Starting point is 00:10:16 He's dying of spiritual thirst. There is no confession in here. There's no, I am sorry for my sins. I hide them no longer. I repent. He doesn't say that. Because you see, and this is the point, this condition will come upon you. This will happen to you. And though, of course, spiritual dryness and deadness can happen
Starting point is 00:10:39 as a result of you doing something wrong, that you're violating your conscience, of course, but the point, it can happen without that. And therefore, it will happen to you. Even if you're doing your daily Christian to-do list, it will happen to you. Now, the reason why you need to know that here is, let me just real briefly point this out to a few different groups of people that are probably here.
Starting point is 00:11:03 If you're a newer Christian, and one of the joys of Redeemer is that there's always so many people around that are new in the faith. If you are a new or Christian, this is particularly a problem. The first time you experience this, it can really, really freak you out. First of all, nobody explains it to you. Nobody tells you it's going to happen. Secondly, now this is what I mean by culture. I'm sorry if I'm going to be beating up on Americans. After all, I like Americans, I am American,
Starting point is 00:11:31 I married American, I begat three Americans. I have, you know, I'm sort of irrevocably American, but I'm going to talk to you about some of the downsides of our culture night here. And automatically, because of the culture in which you were raised, you don't expect this thing to happen unless you do something wrong. You know, unless you are really violating one of the rules or something like that, this shouldn't happen.
Starting point is 00:12:01 And when it does happen, you freak out. And one of the big problems is that new Christians in particular, on top of everything else, you start to doubt whether the whole thing, you start to say maybe the whole thing was a dream. You know, you haven't been with it long enough and there can be a real insecurity on top of everything else. So if you're a newer Christian, you better learn that this is coming and you better learn how to deal with it.
Starting point is 00:12:24 That's what we're here to do tonight to help you with. Secondly, all of us, whether we're new or not, all of us really have to be careful about this because in general, when spiritual drought happens, we do not treat it very well. You know, a lot of you busy New Yorkers, you're really good at working out, but as soon as a cold or a flu bug comes along, you can't miss work, you can't stop anything, you can't miss any of your appointments. Next thing you know, you're in the hospital. Because you're really good at, you know, in other words, you're really good at moving,
Starting point is 00:12:56 you're good at the positive physical disciplines, but you're not very good at the defensive ones. This is true in this case too. Another stupid metaphor. Let me give you another stupid metaphor. You know if you're an outfielder, it used to happen to me all the time. Actually when I did play baseball, I was an outfielder. You know and you're really pulling for your team and next thing you know you see a ball sailing into the outfield, they got a hit. And you know that we, and this is terrible, I used to get so demoralized, oh no, they got a hit. And so and then then suddenly realized oh gosh the ball has just gone by me And it would have been bad for it to be a single, but now it's a triple and that's how it is with spiritual dryness It's it's bad when it happens, but by and large we boot the ball
Starting point is 00:13:40 It comes to us and it's bad enough, but because we don't act on it We don't know how to deal with it. we don't react the way we're going to see here we should be reacting, the singles turn into a triple, you know, instead of one run scoring, three runs score on us and that sort of thing. One more thing, there are probably people in this room who have been almost have been off the rails for maybe years because you were a Christian, you understood yourself as a Christian, and one of these times a spiritual dryness came and you couldn't see where it was coming from.
Starting point is 00:14:18 You didn't do anything wrong, you didn't know what was going on, and in a sense you misplayed the ball. And you see at first this is not, you can see this here, this is not a set of intellectual doubts. In the beginning, it's not a set of intellectual doubts. Notice he doesn't say, I don't believe in God. He says, I can't feel him. But if you don't do the right thing with it,
Starting point is 00:14:41 if you don't treat it properly, it will become, God will become so unreal to you It'll start to overtake everything including your beliefs including your your intellect And I know I continually meet people that I think this is what's happened that years ago They they can remember being Christians and they still don't know now what they are. They they can't completely jettison the Christian faith They can't completely get rid of it. They have such deep and profound reservations about God, about the faith, about themselves. They're sort of in the twilight zone. They're not sure whether they're Christians or not. Nobody is. I'm not. They can ask me and say, am I a Christian? I don't know, I say. And usually it's because years ago this
Starting point is 00:15:18 happened and they never got themselves back on the rail. And what started out as a kind of subjective existential alien, you know, sense of alienation from God became something much more, something much more serious, something much more pervasive and sustained. So you need to know how to deal with this condition because it will come. Now, secondly, what are some of the causal factors? And I, I'm using the word causal factors carefully because the things I'm about to tell you don't have to automatically cause this condition. But in this passage, as I've seen in life as a pastor,
Starting point is 00:16:00 they tend to go along, they tend to be associated with this condition. Do you understand? I'm not trying to say if this happens, automatically this will happen, they tend to go along, they tend to be associated with this condition. Do you understand? I'm not trying to say if this happens, automatically this will happen, but in general, these conditions, these causal factors tend to be associated with the condition of spiritual dryness, spiritual drought,
Starting point is 00:16:17 spiritual darkness, and spiritual deadness. Number one, a disruption of community. Disruption of community. Disruption of community. Notice verse four, I used to go with a multitude, I went with them to the house of God with a voice of joy and praise, with a multitude that kept a pilgrim feast. Then down a verse, two verses I mean,
Starting point is 00:16:40 my God, I will remember you from the land of the Jordan, from the heights of Hermon, from the hill Mazar. Now, we don't know why this happened, but he used to be in the southern part of Judah. He used to go to the temple, he used to regularly be part of the temple worship, be part of the feasting, be part of the joy and praise, but now he's in the northern part,
Starting point is 00:17:03 he's away from the people of God, he's away from the congregation, away from the temple, away from the worship. He's up in the north. He's up on the mountain range, of which Mount Hermon is the peak, but it's a kind of long mountain range, and he's in the north and he's away from all that.
Starting point is 00:17:20 We don't know why. We don't know if he was captured, we don't know if he was exiled, we don't know if he moved there, we don't know why. We don't know if he was captured, we don't know if he was exiled, we don't know if he moved there, we don't know why. But here's the point. There's individual Bible study, and then there's corporate Bible study,
Starting point is 00:17:35 community Bible study. There's individual prayer and contemplation, and then there's corporate prayer and praise. And they are not the same. You need them both. Again, for example, he longs for, he remembers fondly, the Pilgrim Feast, for example. What was the Pilgrim Feast?
Starting point is 00:17:58 The Pilgrim Feast is something very similar to what we're doing tonight. The feasts were times in which the people of God corporately remembered the great and mighty acts of God that he did in order to make them a people. So for example, the Passover was maybe the prime, but one of the feasts. And what did you do at Passover?
Starting point is 00:18:17 The people came together. It was, see, it talks about a pilgrim feast. They came from all over the country, and they came together and they read the scriptural passages about the exodus and about the great things that God did, and they remembered how he made them a people and how he saved them by bringing them out
Starting point is 00:18:34 under the blood of the lamb. And then they recommit themselves and they praise God together. Now, you see, it's group Bible study, it's group prayer and praise, and Americans underestimate the importance of communal spiritual disciplines. Now here I am beating up again.
Starting point is 00:18:55 I told you this was gonna happen tonight, but just as Americans tend to be moralistic, that is they tend to say, well, if something's wrong, I must be doing something wrong. They're also individualistic. Over and over and over again, surveys show that 80 to 90 percent of Americans say, I can be a good Christian or a good Jew or a good Muslim, I can be a spiritual person without going to a mosque, a synagogue or a church.
Starting point is 00:19:22 I can be a spiritual person without being part of another institution. I can be a spiritual person, a very good spiritual person, all by myself. 80 to 90%, year after year, say that. And of course, that is totally antithetical to all of Islam, all of Judaism, all of Christianity, and I have to tell you the common sense too. How do you know you're right? All by yourself.
Starting point is 00:19:50 How can you stay hot all by yourself? How can you... This man doesn't underestimate it. But I'll tell you this, we tend to, and as a result we fall into very often spiritual dryness because We we want to come as individuals We want to get our little fix we want to get our sermon or we want to get our Our you know our music want to get our fix go home Maybe talk to one or two friends. We really don't want to make ourselves accountable We really don't want to become part of a regular community study a regular community prayer
Starting point is 00:20:23 Big community small community tight community. We don't want to do that. We're busy. Or we're just private. You'll not get away with it. And by the way, let me just say one other quick thing. You say, well, I go to Redeemer and I'm very active and very busy. I want to tell you, as a person who's been a Redeemer for a long time, in New York City, this is probably true of most of the country, but especially in New York, people are constantly coming and going, coming and going, coming and going.
Starting point is 00:20:50 And if you're just here year after year after year, you're gonna find that unless you are actively reconstructing your community almost every two or three years, you're suddenly going to be lonely calling from Mount Mazar wondering where did everybody go? You can fall into spiritual dryness because you lose your community. They're gone. They leave.
Starting point is 00:21:09 You have to reconstruct. You have to work on the new friendships. You have to work on building. Who are you going to be accountable to? Who are you going to be talking to about your spiritual walk? Who are you going to be learning with? Who are you going to be praying with? Or else?
Starting point is 00:21:23 Number two, second causal factor is not just disruption of community, but disillusionment at the events of life. Disillusionment at the events of life. Where is your God? See verse three, the enemies of this chapter of this psalm are not like the enemies of many other psalms. Many of the other psalms have enemies who are after the person's life, after the author or the psalmist's life, trying to kill him. In this case, you notice, the enemies are taunting him.
Starting point is 00:22:00 The enemies come along, he's living with them, so these aren't the same kinds of enemies. They're taunting him and they're saying, where is your God? And it's going to his heart. Because in verse nine, he asked the same question. Verse nine, it says, I will say, why have you forgotten me? Now what's that question mean? Again, we don't know the specifics.
Starting point is 00:22:19 But what we know is very, very disappointing, disillusioning events are happening. So you don't ask that question, where is your God, unless things are happening that don't fit in, don't fit in with the idea of a good, loving, holy, just, wise God. See, what's the question, where is your God? It goes like this. If he's your God, if he really is for you, if he's really the God you say he is,
Starting point is 00:22:49 why is this happening? Why is this happening? And it's not just a question from outside, like in verse three and verse 10, it's a question from inside. Because the psalmist himself is saying, why have you forgotten me? And of course, this is a second very, very normal
Starting point is 00:23:06 causal factor involved with these times of spiritual dryness. Things go wrong and it's very hard to explain, very hard to understand, they're inexplicable. Like, you just committed yourself to Jesus for the first time in your life and the next two years of your life are the worst that have ever happened, the worst your life has ever been.
Starting point is 00:23:29 More awful things have happened, and you sit there and you say, and you know, by the way, there's some people who say, well, I committed my life to Christ and everything fell apart. Why did that happen? Of course, one of the answers is, imagine if your life had fallen apart
Starting point is 00:23:43 and you weren't committed to Christ. But that's not how you think about it. You say, why would God have allowed that? And therefore it's the normal second causal factor. So there's disruption of community, disillusionment with the events of life, and lastly, deprivation physically. This month we're excited to let you know about a brand new resource based on Tim Keller's best love books.
Starting point is 00:24:10 Go Forward in Love, a year of daily readings from Timothy Keller, features a short passage each day from one of Dr. Keller's books to use for daily reflection. Each day's reading offers deep insight, biblical wisdom, and spiritual encouragement. The passages are meant to lead you into worship, help you reflect on God's attributes, and encourage you to live more missionally. Go Forward in Love is our thanks when you give to Gospel in Life in November. To receive your copy, just visit Gospelinlife.com slash give. That's Gospelinlife.com slash give.
Starting point is 00:24:44 And thank you for your generosity, which helps us share the love of Christ with more people. Look at verse 3. Verse 3. Most commentators miss this, but one commentator in particular who was a physician picked it up. Verse 3. My tears have been my food day and night. Ah, now think about this for a second. Notice what he's saying? and picked it up. Verse three, my tears have been my food day and night.
Starting point is 00:25:05 Ah, now think about this for a second. Notice what he's saying? My tears have been my food day and night. First of all, he's saying, I'm not eating. Tears is all I'm eating. The only thing I eat is my tears. So the first thing he's saying is I have no appetite. He's stopped eating, he's lost his appetite,
Starting point is 00:25:24 a sign of clinical depression. But notice something else. He's not sleeping. Because he doesn't just say my tears have been my food all day. My tears have been my food day and night. I'm weeping all night. And you don't weep all night unless you're, if you're asleep. So he's not eating and he's not drinking. Pardon me, and he's not sleeping. And what does that mean? What it means is you're not gonna be able to deal with the overall condition if you ignore the fact that there's now a physical aspect to it. It could be the disillusionment,
Starting point is 00:25:57 it could be the disruption, it could be other things led him to this situation, but now you're not gonna pull yourself out of it because the physical, the tiredness and the lack of eating and sleeping is aggravating the situation. David Martin Lloyd-Jones, who was a physician before became a pastor, preached a very famous sermon on this text, on this passage, years ago. And this is what he says about verse 3, which is interesting. He says, does anyone hold the view that as long as you are a
Starting point is 00:26:25 Christian, it doesn't matter what the condition of your body is, you'll soon be disillusioned if you believe that. There are some in whose cases it's clear to me that the cause of their depression is mainly physical. On the other hand, people who are physically weak are more prone to attacks of spiritual discouragement and depression. But if you recognize that the physical may be partly responsible for the spiritual condition and make allowances for this, you'll be better able to deal with the spiritual issues. Now this is extremely important. I'll just take a minute or two on this.
Starting point is 00:27:00 Dr. Lloyd-Jones is saying something very important, and by the way, even though he was British and he preached 50 years ago, it's another, I have to say, it tends to be another critique of American culture. Because American culture is not just moralistic, and it's not just individualistic, it's, and now this isn't a very familiar word, it's dualistic in that it pits the body and the spirit against each other.
Starting point is 00:27:24 And American Christians tend to, when you look at spiritual discouragement Familiar word. It's dualistic in that it pits the body and the spirit against each other. And American Christians tend to, when you look at spiritual discouragement, or somebody who says, I just don't feel God, we have a tendency to ignore the physical, but you shouldn't. Lloyd-Jones says, if you don't see that the physical is very often involved,
Starting point is 00:27:41 because you've got a physical aspect as well as a spiritual aspect. In the early 90s, I can't remember what year, maybe one or 92, I had about two months, about eight weeks in which every single sermon was like, was agony because all during the sermon, all during the sermon, all the way through, I would almost essentially hear a voice saying, they're never going to believe you. Just shut up. Why would they believe you? That was a stupid point.
Starting point is 00:28:17 That was unclear. Just accusation, accusation, all through the sermon for about eight weeks. And, you know, at the time, the way I looked at it, and Kathy and I talked a lot about this, at the time we looked at it and we said, well, I'm just not praying enough. Now we look back and it's very obvious to see I was just enormously overtired.
Starting point is 00:28:37 And see, the doctor points out that here in verse three, you see that there's an, they're inextricably linked. Let me summarize it like this. you see that they're inextricably linked. Let me summarize it like this. There are people who say, there's secular people who say everything is basically physical. So if you are discouraged or depressed one dimensionally, it's physical, take your medicine.
Starting point is 00:28:59 Take medicine, it's physical. There's another kind of person who reduces everything to moral. People from traditional societies, in fact I'm afraid a lot of Christians, they reduce everything to moral. If you're discouraged or you're depressed, buck up. Pull yourself together. Keep a stiff upper lip. Stop sniffling. Okay? And then there's a third kind of person who doesn't reduce everything to the physical and doesn't reduce everything to the moral But reduces everything to the psychological and emotional
Starting point is 00:29:30 So if you're discouraged or depressed Well, we're gonna listen to you and accept you and listen to you and and support you and listen to you and accept you and listen To you and support you but not listen Will you listen? Will you listen? The Bible says that you have an emotional aspect so you need friends, and you have a physical aspect so you need rest and food and maybe medicine, but you also have a spiritual aspect and you need truth. And as a result, if you have a Christian worldview, if you have a Christian view of human nature,
Starting point is 00:30:02 you should be the least reductionistic, the most nuanced, the most multi-dimensional, the most balanced. You shouldn't say buck up. You shouldn't just sit and listen or just yell and say buck up and just give the truth or just you know give medicine. But you have to recognize that all of these things are involved. All of them are involved. And as we look at the cures here, which we're about to now, you will see an astounding balance that you won't see in any other approach or any other worldview, an astounding balance of both listening to the emotions and at the same time talking to the heart. Of both listening and figuring out motivation and being kind and supporting, but at the same time being tough too. This is a fascinating balance here.
Starting point is 00:30:45 Now, what are the cures? Four things that this person does, four things this speaker does that you have got to do when this comes on you. He pours out his soul, he analyzes his hopes, he remembers the loving kindness of the grace of God, and he preaches sermons to his heart. He pours out his soul, he analyzes his hopes, he remembers the grace of God, and he learns how to preach to his own heart. Number one, pours out his soul. See, he says that in verse four, therefore I pour out my soul.
Starting point is 00:31:26 But you know what he's doing? That's the whole psalm. Let me tell you what's ironic about this. He says, I don't feel God. He says, that's his problem, I don't feel God. I get nothing out of worship, I get nothing out of prayer, I get nothing out of Bible reading, I just don't sense him there at all.
Starting point is 00:31:45 And what is he doing in Psalm 42 and 43? It's an eloquent, theologically rich, sustained, beautiful, reflective prayer and meditation. In other words, and this is the first thing you've got to do, if you don't get anything out of worship in this period of time, in your dry time, if you get nothing out of worship, don't miss it. If you get nothing out of prayer, don't miss it.
Starting point is 00:32:13 If you get nothing out of Bible reading, don't miss it. Pour out your soul. You say, but I don't feel anything, fine then talk about that. If nothing else, talk to God about how you're getting nothing out of it. If nothing else, talk to God about how much you miss him. If nothing else, talk to the absent God about his absence.
Starting point is 00:32:39 So the first thing is, do not ignore those spiritual disciplines, in fact, be more disciplined about them than you ever have been before. Okay? Number one, he pours out his soul. Number two, he analyzes his hopes. Now, there's a refrain that comes up three times. And this refrain, this is in some ways the theme that runs right through the passage. In verse five, in verse 11, and then in verse five of 43, almost repetitious, not quite, I'll tell you about that in a second, but it says, why are you cast down, oh my soul? Why are you disquieted within me? Hope in God. Three times he does that. Why are you cast down and disquieted? Hope in God.
Starting point is 00:33:22 Now, this is a question about this question. Is this a rhetorical question? Why are you cast down on my soul? There are some rhetorical questions that are not after information, right? If you say to somebody, why did you do that? You're not asking for information. What you're really saying is, that was stupid.
Starting point is 00:33:42 You're just saying that was stupid. Why did you do that? Is it a rhetorical question? You're not asking for information. You're saying, why were you so stupid, basically? Is that what he's doing to here? Is he saying, why are you cast down? How stupid?
Starting point is 00:33:55 I don't think so. The commentators that I like the most, the commentators that I respect the most, say he's looking for information. He's actually asking himself, why did I get so downcast? Now you say, well, wait a minute, I thought you said that though he's downcast, it's not the result of sin, it's not the result of something he's done wrong. Right. And yet, he's still doing some self-examination. And what is he looking for? He's looking for his hopes. He says, why am I so cast down?
Starting point is 00:34:30 It's because I've put my hope in some things that are now letting me down. Even though, as I said, spiritual dryness can come upon you without you sinning to cause it. However, spiritual dryness is a perfect time to examine your heart because spiritual dryness reveals inordinate loves, false hopes. Perfect example of this is in Psalm 1, pardon me, Psalm 3. Psalm 3 is about when David was on the run for his life because his favorite son, the son that he loved the most, Absalom, had actually pulled off a coup d'etat,
Starting point is 00:35:11 was trying to take David's throne, was now trying to hunt him down and kill him so he could have the kingship. And there were two things in David's life that had been the source of his glory. Now the word glory literally means weight. It means significance. It means something that makes you matter.
Starting point is 00:35:32 Weight. Weightiness. And the two things that were David's glory were number one, the love of his son and family. And number two, the love and acclaim of his people. And he lost both of them. And yet right in the middle of Psalm 3, verse 3, it's a short Psalm, he says this, but you, O Lord, are my shield, my glory, and the lifter of my head.
Starting point is 00:36:02 Pretty famous verse, but do you see what he's saying? You, O Lord, are my shield, my glory, and the lifter of my head." Pretty famous verse, but do you see what he's saying? You, O Lord, are my shield, my glory, and the lifter of my head. And what he's doing at that point is he says, my son used to be my glory, my people used to be my glory, I've lost them and it hurts me, but I'm not devastated because what I am doing in this moment is I am relocating my glory.
Starting point is 00:36:24 I'm relocating my glory. I'm relocating my glory in you, your approval, your smile, your love, your support. I've got that, and if I've got that, then I won't be devastated by the loss of anything else. I will lift up my head. Anyway, that's what's happening here. Do you know that?
Starting point is 00:36:43 What he's saying is, I see that one of the reasons I'm so downcast because of the events of the life that you know have made me wonder and All the other things that have happened is I see there's certain things I've been putting my hopes in again. We don't know what they are. He doesn't say what they are Verse in Psalm 3 it's easier to discover what those things are because in verse in Psalm 3, it's easier to discover what those things are because in Psalm 3 you have example of David and Absalom and how he's lost his kingship and he's lost what his sons love. Here you don't know what it is, but I can tell you this.
Starting point is 00:37:16 In times of dryness, that's when to look, what is it that you really hope in? What is it that is your real significance? What are the things that you really rest in? Don't rest so much in them. Relocate your hope. Shift your hope. And that's what he's doing. It's very, very profound.
Starting point is 00:37:35 During times, do you know the difference between during times of spiritual discouragement and dryness? He's not repenting. He's not beating himself on the chest saying, oh, I must be doing things wrong, I guess I'm not praying enough, I'm not reading my Bible enough, maybe I need to do this and maybe I need to do more of this. No, but what he is doing, he is doing, he is doing self-examination at a profound level. He sees things that he puts his hopes in which are not going to be able
Starting point is 00:38:00 to sustain his soul unless he hopes in God. So he pours out his soul unless he hopes in God. So he pours out his soul, he analyzes his hopes. Thirdly, he remembers the loving kindness of God. You notice how down here in verse five, verse six, he says, my soul is cast down, therefore I will remember. So he is very, very deliberately thinking about something, remembering something, but he's not only
Starting point is 00:38:26 thinking about God in general. Verse eight, the Lord will command his loving kindness in the daytime and the night his song will be with me a prayer to the God of my life. The commentators say this, he is thinking about God's loving kindness, which is the Hebrew word ksev, which means covenant faithfulness, unmerited grace, unconditional love. And he's thinking about his entire life.
Starting point is 00:38:55 He's thinking about the history of redemption, that's the Bible, and about he's seeing grace of God in all of that. He's thinking about his own personal history, all of his life, and he's seeing grace of God in all of that. He's thinking about his own personal history, all of his life, and he's thinking about the grace of God, and he's turned it into a song. You know why, by the way? Because the heading of this, though we didn't have it printed, this is not a Psalm of David,
Starting point is 00:39:18 this is a song of one of the sons of Korah, and 1 Corinthians, 1 Chronicles 6 tells us the sons of Korah were professional musicians, verse Chronicles 6 tells us the sons of Korah were professional musicians, full-time artists. Notice this one happens to be a string instrumentalist because at the end he says, I'm going to pick up my harp again someday. And what he's doing is he is turning the grace of God into a song that he sings to himself even at night.
Starting point is 00:39:44 Now lastly, he's remembering the grace of God, he's reanalyzing his hopes, he's pouring out his soul, and then he finally, this is the key in a way, he takes all that and what does he do? He has learned to preach to his heart. Notice the three refrains are not prayers, he's not talking to God, he's not saying, why am I cast down, oh my God, nor is he talking to us, he's not talking to God. He's not saying, why am I cast down, oh my God?
Starting point is 00:40:06 Nor is he talking to us. He's saying, why am I so cast down, oh my people? But he's saying, why are you so cast down, oh my soul? And Dr. Lloyd-Jones in his famous sermon says, this is the key. You'll never get out of spiritual dryness unless you learn how to do this. He's listened to his heart. He's poured his heart out.
Starting point is 00:40:28 He's analyzed his hopes. He's thought about the grace of God. But at one point he stops listening to his heart and he starts talking to his heart. Why are you cast out on my soul? Look at this. Do you know how to do that? In times of spiritual dryness and discouragement every morning you wake up and your heart is talking. Oh my gosh, oh my gosh, oh no, oh no, it's terrible, it's terrible, terrible. At some point you have to grab your heart and say listen heart, shut up and listen. Do you know, do you
Starting point is 00:40:58 know when to do that? Do you see the balance here? This is not buck up, but this is not just listen and listen and listen. And I'm sorry to be so self-referential, but I can't help it. This guy has learned to preach. Now I know something about this, and let me tell you, it takes a lot of listening to be a good preacher. If you want to preach to people in New York,
Starting point is 00:41:20 if you want to preach to people in Bombay, you want to preach to people in London, it doesn't matter, but wherever you go, you can't just walk in and say, you want to preach to people in Bombay, you want to preach to people in London, it doesn't matter, but wherever you go, you can't just walk in and say, I know what I'm doing. You have to listen to them. You have to live with them. You have to find out what their hopes are, what their fears are, what their strengths
Starting point is 00:41:36 are, what their weaknesses are, so that you can build up their strengths and you can identify your weakness, their weaknesses, but you have to do lots and lots of listening. But at some point, you turn and you say, now listen. And if you've done your listening well, they'll do their listening well. It's very hard to learn how to preach to a group of people. If you have listened to your heart so that you've found its false hopes,
Starting point is 00:42:04 you know you've really listen carefully. At some point you have to turn around and you have to learn how to preach the grace of God to yourself. You have to, just like I've had to learn how to find illustrations that ring your bell, you say, oh, I get it. You have to learn illustrations that ring your heart's bell.
Starting point is 00:42:19 But at some point you have to learn, do you know how to do this? After you've listened and listened, do you finally turn around and say, now listen, self, just shut up and you listen to learn. Do you know how to do this? After you've listened to listen, do you finally turn around and say, now listen, self, just shut up and you listen to me. You take yourself in hand, you say, why are you like this? You've forgotten this, you've forgotten this, you've forgotten this. Do you know how to do that? That is an absolutely essential skill and you have to. And what will the result be? What's fun is, notice
Starting point is 00:42:46 the realism of this Psalm. He doesn't say, hope in God I do now praise him. That would be denial. Nor does he say, hope in God I'll never praise him. That would be despondency. He says, hope in God I will praise him. And if you look carefully, you'll see a progression. I don't have the time to trace it out, but you'll see that bit by bit by bit, he starts in the dumps, he moves himself up because in verse five, he says, hope in God for I shall yet praise him
Starting point is 00:43:17 for the help of his countenance, which simply means all I want is to see him come back. But by the time he gets to the very bottom, it says, hope in God for I shall yet praise him the help of my countenance, which is his way of saying, I can feel him already beginning to lift up my face, lift up my heart, lift up my spirits. The results will happen slow, but they will happen.
Starting point is 00:43:40 Okay, last point. I don't know how he preached to his heart about the loving kindness of God, about the grace of God, but we've got a resource he doesn't have. I just told you it's very hard to learn how to preach because you've gotta listen so that people will listen to you. If you listen to them well, they'll listen to you.
Starting point is 00:44:03 If you haven't listened to them well, then the things you say were just going to bounce right off and they're going to say that was boring or stupid or offensive. But let me tell you a way to preach the gospel to your heart with a kind of vividness and effectiveness that he didn't have. The biggest problem during times of dryness is you say, I think God has finally given up on me. He's not there. Makes sense? I'm an idiot. I've been a failure. I'm inadequate. He's abandoned me. No, says the psalmist to the heart. I will yet praise him. He's a loving,
Starting point is 00:44:44 kind God. He's a gracious God. He will yet praise him. He's a loving kind God. He's a gracious God. He will not abandon you. Well, how do I know? Here's how you and I know. Here's something you can use in your heart. Read Psalm 42 to 43 and listen to the one who really said, I thirst.
Starting point is 00:44:59 Who really said, I'm dying of thirst. Read it and hear the one who said, my God, my God, why have you forgotten me? Read it and think of the one whose enemies taunted him, where is your God? Let's see if God will come and save him. Don't you see, Jesus Christ really experienced not just the loss of the feeling of God,
Starting point is 00:45:23 he lost God, even though he was trusting God. He had the ultimate thirst, the ultimate cosmic thirst, he was really forgotten by God. He was really forsaken by God. He really experienced the thirst of God. Why? So that in spite of your failures and inadequacy, God will never give up on you.
Starting point is 00:45:43 God treated him and punished him and gave him the things we deserve so we can receive his commitment, his love unconditionally. And that's what you have to say to yourself. And if you say that to yourself, if you preach Christ to yourself, you'll get out of the trough and you'll be better for it. You will have grown.
Starting point is 00:46:07 What's interesting is when you deal with spiritual dryness properly, you don't just get back on track. When you do get back on track, you find yourself having, you get back far down the path, far further ahead, far humbler, far happier, far stronger than you were before. I dare not trust the sweetest frame, but wholly lean on Jesus' name. In Christ the solid rock I stand,
Starting point is 00:46:31 on Christ the solid rock I stand, all other ground is sinking sand. Let's pray. Father, we ask that now in the Lord's Supper, you would make it real to us what your Son did. We pray, Lord, for those of us who are spiritually dry right now that this actual sacrament will be part
Starting point is 00:46:48 of the remedy. We pray that you would help us, though, most of all, to expect, recognize, analyze, and treat our own hearts and the hearts of those around us so that we can grow in grace in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus. In his name we pray. Amen. Thanks for listening to today's teaching. We hope you were encouraged by it and that it gives you a deeper appreciation for God's grace and helps you apply His
Starting point is 00:47:21 Word to your life. You can find more resources from Tim Keller by subscribing to our quarterly journal at GospelInLife.com. When you subscribe, you'll receive free articles, sermons, devotionals, and other valuable resources. We also invite you to stay connected with us on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and Twitter. Today's sermon was preached in 2002. The sermons and talks you hear on the Gospel in Life podcast were preached from 1989 to 2017, while Dr. Keller was senior pastor at Redeemer Presbyterian Church.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.