Happy are those who have not walked in the
counsel of the wicked,
nor lingered in the way of sinners,
nor sat in the seats of the scornful!
Their delight is
in the law of the LORD,
and they meditate on Gods teaching day and night.
They are like
trees
planted by streams of water,
bearing fruit in due season,
with leaves that do not wither.
This psalm not only begins the psalter, it also
serves as a gateway, as a guide into the study of and encounter with all of
Scripture. We are invited into this encounter with a number of strong images
that help us to imagine what we are doing as we hear and study Scripture
together. I want to talk about just two of these images.
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The first image
is found in the first two verses: Happy are
those whose delight is in the law of the LORD,
who meditate on Gods law, Gods teaching, day and
night. The word that is sometimes translated law
and other times translated teaching is the
Hebrew word torah. Happy are those who
delight in the torah
of the Lord, who meditate on Gods torah
day and night. Torah can indeed mean law, but
more fully it refers to eithe r
the first five books of the Bible or, by
extension, even to the whole of Scripture. Torah
thus includes within it
both the law, which directs us to the paths we
should take as Gods people, and the story,
through which we hear the marvelous good news of
Gods love for us and for all creation. Both the
law and the story give us our identity as the
people of God. Psalm 1 invites us to take
delight in both the path we walk and the story
we proclaim. Scripture, our torah, is identified
as a source of joy!
Psalm 1 then
invites us further to meditate on the Scriptures
day and night. Often we picture meditation as an
exercise we do alone, clearing our minds of all
distractions and being alone with God in prayer.
This is not a bad image. But another image is
equally at work in these words. The Hebrew word
for meditate, hagah, is the same as the
roaring of lions and the cooing of birds.
Roaring is not a very private activity! In the
same way, meditation involves shared or communal
as well as individual study. We are to study
Gods torah as a community. Picture a group of
rabbis sitting around and actively engaging with
both the text and each other. Or picture
yourself with a group of Christians in a lively
Bible study ... all of us together experiencing
the text speaking to us and through us to one
another inspiring us, challenging us, giving
language to both demand and promise.
The promise of
Psalm 1 comes to light most wonderfully in the
strongest of the images found in the psalm. The
promise is this: when we take delight in Gods
torah, when we participate in such cogitating,
such cooing and roaring, such reading and
listening and engaging together with the Bible,
we become like trees planted by streams of
water, bearing fruit in due season, with leaves
that do not wither. What an amazing promise!
Think about this image with me. Like a tree, we
students of the Bible are made alive and are
kept alive by being rooted by an ever-flowing
stream.
We are rooted in
God, in Gods life giving Spirit, in Gods word in
Scripture and in Gods word in Christ. Without
being rooted thus, we cannot grow. Rather, we,
like the wicked in the final verse of Psalm 1,
perish and die.
But the image of
the tree is more than an image of roots. What is
visible when we look at a tree is not its root
but rather its fruit and its leaves. And the
fruit and the leaves are not only for the tree
itself. Fruit is always for the other the fruit
nourishes the other, reaching out to the other.
The fruit-laden branches visibly mirror the
life-giving roots. Fruit gives susten ance
to all who eat, and in truth the word sustains
us as we share the fruits of the word with
others. And the leaves
add yet more to this picture. The leaves of a
tree provide both shade and shelter. Small
wonder that this image is found scattered
throughout the Bible in Jeremiah and Ezekiel and
Revelation, where it is said that the leaves of
the tree of life are for the healing of the
nations.
So brothers and
sisters in Christ, I invite you to open your
Bibles and come join the conversation. May
studying Scripture together be our joy and our
delight. Ma y
we together root ourselves in Gods Word in order
that we might bear much fruit. And may our
encounter with Gods Word sprout a whole
Spirit-filled, church-load of leaves for the
healing of the nations.
Diane Jacobson
is director of the Book of Faith initiative and
teaches at Luther Seminary in Saint Paul,
Minnesota.
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Questions on Psalm 1:1-3 |
- How
do we meditate on the Word together?
- In
what ways do we take delight in the
study of the Bible?
- What
are we rooted in?
- How
does studying Gods word together
help us to be like trees providing
fruit or leaves for others?
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