James 5:13 (NKJV)
13 Is anyone among you suffering? Let him pray. Is anyone cheerful? Let him sing psalms.
13 Is anyone among you suffering? Let him pray. Is anyone cheerful? Let him sing psalms.
What
are we to do when facing the ups and downs of life? When we are suffering and
weighed down, heavy of spirit – what are we to do? On the other hand, when
cheerful, full of joy and wonder at the world in which we live – what are we to
do? Today James tells us. “Is anyone
among you suffering – feeling poorly, enduring trouble? Let him (an
imperative, a command – this isn’t simply good advice) Let him pray. Is anyone cheerful? Let him (again, an imperative, a
command), Let him sing psalms.”
James
tells us that when we are suffering we are to pray. We are to take our troubles
straight to the Lord. Cry out to God; He wants to hear; He wants to be the one
to whom you direct your cries.
Likewise,
when we are cheerful, we are to sing psalms. Why? Because singing enables us to
funnel the joy that we are experiencing in the right direction – in praise and
thankfulness to our Creator and Redeemer. When joyful, James tells us, that
which should first come out is the psalms.
But
as you think about the psalms, you will perhaps remember that some of the
psalms are expressions of grief and longing for God’s presence – how do they
fit with James’ theme of thanksgiving? It is here that we are directed back to
James’ command to pray when burdened. James’ exhortation to pray also directs
us to the psalms – for the psalms embody for us what despairing cries to God
look like.
Notice
then the priority that James places upon the psalter for the life of the people
of God. What are we to do when suffering? We are to pray. And where do we find
examples, patterns of prayers offered up in the midst of suffering? In the
psalter. What are we to do when joyful? We are to sing psalms. And where do we
find these psalms to sing? In the psalter.
So
here’s the question for you – do you know your psalter well enough to obey
James’ exhortations? How well do you know your psalms? Do the psalms, when you
are burdened and weighed down, come to your mind and fill your soul with cries
to God? Do the psalms, when you are cheerful and lifted up, come to your mind
and fill your home with praise and thanksgiving?
I
dare say that if you are like me there is some lack in this regard. Not many of
us grew up singing the psalms. This is a new experience for us. Many of the
psalms may be strange and foreign to us. Some of the tunes that we have in our
English psalters are hard to learn. Some of the words of the psalms are
difficult to understand and believe. But is the problem with the psalter? Hardly.
It is with us. We need to grow in our ability to sing and to understand the
psalms. And so, one of the things we are committed to do as a congregation is
to become more excellent in our ability to sing the psalms and more
knowledgeable of their content. And one of the things that we do every month to
enable us to fulfill this duty is hold a psalm sing. The psalm sing is
specifically geared to help us fulfill the exhortations given to us by James –
is anyone among you suffering? Let him pray. Is anyone cheerful? Let him sing
psalms.
Reminded
that in our suffering and in our joy God expects us to cry out to Him with the
psalms and to praise Him with the psalms, let us kneel and confess that we have
neglected to do so.
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