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Psalms for the Stressed
This is a series of reflections which I wrote for “Sunday
Link”, a weekly news sheet published by
Redemptorist Publications.
I’ve often found that the psalms put very powerfully into words
many of my thoughts and feelings especially at those times when
I feel most alone and separated from a God who seems to have
abandoned me. They also offer hope and reassurance in the
faithful loving kindness of God and his wish to forgive, heal
and restore us.
Click on the Psalm number at the
top of each section to read the psalm.
1.
Psalm 56 “My adversaries trample
over me all the day long”
2.
Psalm 46 “Be still and know that
I am God”
3.
Psalm 139 “For you yourself
created my inmost parts”
4.
Psalm 23 “He shall refresh my
soul”
5.
Psalm 121 “He who watches over you
will not sleep”
6.
Psalm 25 “For your name’s sake,
O Lord...”
7.
Psalm 42 “My soul is athirst for
God, even for the living God”
8.
Psalm 30 “O Lord my God, I will
give you thanks for ever”
Psalm 56
“My adversaries trample over me all the day long” (v.2)
It seems everyone and everything is working against you. You’re
under pressure with too many demands being made of you and too
little time to catch your breath. You’re constantly tired and
ratty. Your mind is racing so fast it’s hard to relax. Sleep
is not refreshing. Your anxiety levels are hitting the ceiling
because you don’t know what’s waiting for you round the next
corner.
You’re stressed. Why not try taking some time out, just a few
minutes each day, to read this psalm and reflect on what God
might be saying to you?
Jesus came that we might have life in all its abundance. Living
in a constant state of stress is not God’s will for us. He
hears our groaning and sees our tears. He calls us to trust in
him. He wants to shield us from harm and to heal our shredded
minds and weary bodies. He longs to free our suffocating souls
and lead us into fresh healthy air.
It may seem impossible to stop and let go but we do need to take
that risk, to trust in God who cares deeply about us and who
will be with us through the struggle.
Psalm 46
“Be still and know that I am God” (v.9a)
In our first reflection we thought about how it may seem
impossible to stop and let go when we’re under stress. In this
psalm God asks (or perhaps he commands) us to “be still and know
that I am God”.
In the first verse the psalmist says “God is … a very present
help in trouble”. Like the psalmist we might feel that
our life is trembling, raging and quaking around us. We daren’t
stop for a moment in case we fall apart completely. But “the
Lord of hosts is with us” in this chaos and “is our
stronghold”.
The message of this psalm is that God is far greater than all
the things causing us stress. This is not to minimise what
troubles us. When you’re under stress because of problems in
relationships, finances, health, housing, employment (or
unemployment), bereavement (the list is endless) then life does
become overwhelming and frightening. That’s exactly why we need
to risk being still and quiet. We need to know the presence
with us of “the Lord of hosts”, “the God of Jacob”; the Father
of our Lord Jesus Christ whose resurrection reveals the
triumphant victory of love over all that life does to us.
Psalm 139
“For you yourself created my inmost parts” (v.12a)
God said “Be still and know that I am God”. Now we hear that
God knows us inside out; he knows everything about us and our
lives because we are his children, created in his image and we
cannot be separated from his love.
Stress can be a healthy response to an emergency or threat. We
need the adrenalin for alertness; faster breathing to increase
oxygen in the blood; tense muscles ready for action, aroused
senses and alert minds to take in and process information.
Stress is a God-given gift to come to our rescue in danger. But
it can also be harmful if our bodies stay in “stress mode” for
too long. We can be in danger of serious illnesses. So if we
feel constantly under stress we need to listen to the warning
signs.
If we are reaching that point, this psalm speaks to us of a
loving God who will never abandon us and who seeks only our
health and happiness. What’s more, his intimate knowledge of us
means that he knows what we need better than we do ourselves.
We can trust him to search us out and lead us in his everlasting
way.
Psalm 23
“He shall refresh my soul” (v.3a)
When we’re under stress we can trust the God who knows us inside
out. When we feel our lives have got out of control we can
trust in the God who is like a shepherd keeping watch and
protecting his sheep.
God will guide us to people and places where we can find rest,
peace and refreshment for our battered and suffocating soul.
If we’re living under stress, the chances are we’re not paying
enough attention to our spiritual needs and so are further
drained of the inner resources which are vital for our well
being.
It may seem impossible but we do need to find time just to be
with God, to rest in his presence, to allow him to attend to our
wounds and to nourish our souls even in the middle of the
battlefield
We need to make space to be aware of God with us in even the
darkest places where we feel most threatened. Stress can make
us feel very alone and persecuted. We need to hear again that
God’s goodness and loving mercy are always with us and that he
longs for us to live life in all its abundance.
Psalm 121
“He who watches over you will not sleep” (v.3b)
“It’s all very well talking about taking time out, being still,
resting in God’s presence. Have you any idea how I feel? I’m
like a performer on stage keeping increasing number of plates
spinning on poles. No matter how fast I run, there’s always one
plate about to fall and just when I think I can breathe for a
moment, another two are added. Do you seriously think I can be
still? Get real!”
If you’ve reached this level of stress then please take notice
and act, maybe seek medical advice. If you really can’t stop,
even for a second, then cry out in your frantic busyness, “where
can I get help?”. Your help will come from the Lord, the maker
of heaven and earth.
At night ask God to look after all those spinning plates for you
while you sleep. He will not sleep. He will watch over you, he
will keep you from evil and protect your soul.
Ask him to continue his watching and protecting in the
morning. Don’t rush back to your plate spinning. Leave God in
charge while you lift your eyes to the hills and reach out to
receive God’s blessing of peace.
Psalm 25
“For your name’s sake, O Lord,
be merciful to my sin for it is great” (v.10)
Sometimes stress has its roots in our past. There may be things
we have said and done which we remember with shame and guilt.
These memories and feelings cling to us and we can’t shake them
off.
Perhaps we ourselves have suffered harm which has left us with a
sense of self-loathing, shame and memories of humiliation and
loss of dignity and self respect.
Stress like this can lead us into depression with its
symptomatic low self esteem and hopeless despair. We can feel
“alone and brought very low” so we cry to God “bring me out of
my distress”.
In this state of stress and depression we need healing to help
us let go of the memories that accuse or shame us. We also need
the love and support of friends who can reassure us of our worth
in the eyes of God and of his love for us. Like the psalmist,
we need to trust God enough to tell him what troubles us, to ask
him, in his mercy and grace, to forgive and cleanse us and then
to lead us into his paths of integrity and uprightness,
delivering us out of all our troubles.
Psalm 42
“My soul is athirst for God, even for the living
God” (v.2a)
Stress can build up quite slowly so we don’t always spot what’s
happening to us. Then we reach a time when we notice that we
are “full of heaviness” and our soul is “disquieted” within us.
Now we see clearly that we have become weary, isolated and
separated from God. Suddenly we long for peaceful times, for
the joy of worshipping the living God in loving fellowship with
people we perhaps now don’t have time to see.
This realisation of our stressed state and our longing for
spiritual healing and peace leads us to “pour out” our soul to
God. Our grief might be expressed in tears as we cry to God
“why have you forgotten me?”.
But God has not forgotten us. His longing for us is greater
than ours for him. In this time of stress we are the lost
sheep, caught up in a tangle of thorns, and the Lord, our
shepherd, is searching for us even before we cry out to him.
We may not have the energy to free ourselves and struggling
makes it worse. Our longing to be free is enough. God will
turn that longing into the longed for freedom.
Psalm 30
“O Lord my God, I will give you thanks for ever”
(v.12b)
When we really feel that it’s all getting too much and we’ve
“run out of cope” this psalm can give us hope. It reminds us
that God is on our side and working to bring us nearer to
himself.
We may find it hard to believe in its promise and maybe we can’t
imagine ever dancing in gladness again. Somehow, though,
joining in with the psalmist, praising and thanking God as if he
has already found and rescued us, will bring its own healing
strength and power. It can renew our hope and faith and keep us
walking towards the glimmer of light at the end of the tunnel.
When we do finally emerge from that tunnel the psalm gives us a
joyful song of praise and thanksgiving to the God who healed us
and brought us life in all its abundance – the life he wants for
us.
Lord, our shepherd, take from our souls all strain and stress.
Quieten our hearts and minds to know you as our God. Give us
your joy and peace that we may have life in all its fullness and
grow daily into the likeness of your Son, Jesus Christ, our
Lord. Amen.
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