Psalms of Confession and Hope - Psalm 107

We are storytellers. I noticed this when some friends came to our house from out of town. The husband seemed to have a story for everything. He recited tales about his relatives, his child, his neighbors. He is a good storyteller. Each account that he unfolded was entertaining, funny, and sparked discussion.
I don’t consider myself as good of a storyteller in this specific way. Not everyone is as gifted at “social storytelling,” that is: entertaining a group with personal story after story. But we are all storytellers.
Your calendar is a story. It is the story you have written about your life: the journeys you will take; the events you look forward to. At the moment you wake up, you tell yourself prophetic stories about how the day is going to go, about what you are looking forward to (or not looking forward to).
Deeds are the heart of every story. A story advances by what actions the characters take. Your calendar has events on it, but those events symbolize actions you need to perform. Your personal story for today is probably a series of actions you need to perform before the final action of laying your head down for the night. When you pass away, people will remember you by your actions, and that can be a scary thought for many of us! How do we know the story of our lives that will be told will be a good one – one where we are portrayed favorably?
This is how: by remembering who the Author is. Psalm 107 recounts the story of God’s interaction with humankind – with those who struggle, those who sin, those overwhelmed with needs. In the middle of the Psalm, the psalmist says: “He brought them out of darkness, the utter darkness, and broke away their chains. Let them give thanks to the Lord for his unfailing love and his wonderful deeds for mankind” (Psalm 107:14-15). At first, this doesn’t sound too good. The psalmist says we were in darkness – the darkness of disobedience and separation from God, because of our rebellious and sinful ways. That’s not the kind of story I like to hear about myself, but the more I honestly reflect on it and my own actions, the truer it appears to be.
Thanks to Jesus Christ, our story doesn’t end with us perishing in darkness. God sends Jesus to rescue us from our own sin and bring us into the Kingdom of the Son he loves (Colossians 1:13). Your story is one of a sinner now forgiven by the blood of Christ – of one who was lost but is now found!
The psalmist commands us to tell that story. The plot-important action in this story isn’t ours, but God’s. He has rescued us because of his love that never fails. He has brought us out of darkness because of his unending compassion. And because we have, no matter what the story of our day, week, month, or life may be – we always have reason to give thanks, because we know that no matter what comes, nothing will separate us from the unfailing love of God in Christ (Romans 8:39).
We are all storytellers, but Psalm 107 invites us to make important choices about what kinds of stories we tell ourselves. Join us any Sunday to hear the most important story of sin and grace, Law and Gospel, freedom from darkness, all because of God’s unfailing love.





