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RACHAM: Tender Mercies – The Wonder of God’s Mercy

I will rejoice and be glad in your steadfast love, because you have seen my affliction; you have known the distress of my soul, and you have not delivered me into the hand of the enemy; you have set my feet in a broad place. Psalm 31:7-8

Note the 4 occurrences of “you have” in these two verses. Now note the response of “I will”. Joy is a choice toward God resting on God’s prior choices toward us. Our obedience always flows from God’s prior provisions! Yet we must choose to rejoice. God does many things for us, but rejoicing for us is not one of them!

Pastor Tim Kerr

RACHAM: Tender Mercies – The Wonder of God’s Mercy

For his anger is but for a moment, and his favor is for a lifetime. Psalm 30:5

Let us put to rest forever the idea that God is some sort of irritable deity, upset and disappointed with his children most of the time with only momentary glimpses of kindness or care. This is such a false view of God, especially in light of the cross! We are guilty of making God in our image and defining him by our tendencies rather than by Scripture’s revelation of him.

Think of the difference between a moment and a lifetime. Which option would you choose for the time span of experiencing God’s anger? Which would you choose for the time span of experiencing God’s favour? Why are we so slow to believe that God is like this? Does our distorted view speak more about God’s character, or our own? What does it reveal?

Pastor Tim Kerr

 

RACHAM: Tender Mercies – The Wonder of God’s Mercy

For my father and my mother have forsaken me, but the LORD will take me in. Psalm 27:10

To experience rejection is hard but to be rejected by one’s own parents is devastating. Yet even if we experience life’s most bitter rejection there is One who will “take us in”. He was despised and rejected by men (Isa 53:3) and therefore is able to sympathize with the pain of  rejection (Heb 4:15-16). There is nothing better than to be accepted and welcomed by God! So we also are to “welcome one another as Christ has welcomed us, for the glory of God” (Rom 15:7)

Pastor Tim Kerr

RACHAM: Tender Mercies – The Wonder of God’s Mercy

Good and upright is the LORD; therefore he instructs sinners in the way. Psalm 25:8

This verse is puzzling because it tells us what we would not expect. We might expect it to say “Good and upright is the LORD; therefore he instructs the good and upright” or “good and upright is the LORD; therefore sinners better beware!”. But instead of that we find something counter-intuitive—BECAUSE God is good and upright, he moves toward sinners and instructs them! Even sinners are repelled by sinners. Separations of friendships, of families, of spouses, of churches, of denominations, of even countries, are because sinners are repelled by each other.

But God is so different. Part of his goodness is that he moves toward and instructs and helps those which have no rightful claim on him. Every time we open the Scriptures, we can come with the confidence that God will instruct us—for he is good and upright and we are sinners. Both qualifications are met each time we look to him for instruction. What a promise!

Pastor Tim Kerr

RACHAM: Tender Mercies – The Wonder of God’s Mercy

Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life, and I shall dwell in the house of the LORD forever. Psalm 23:6

Here is another example of God’s generous heart. Because the Shepherd is ever present with us, goodness and mercy are always in the picture. The promise says “all” the days on my life. Not some. Not even most. All means all. This very day. But how can this be? What about the days of blackness, sorrow, and heartbreak? What about when sin clouds the day, whether our sin or other’s? What, then, of this goodness and mercy?!

Especially then. Surely the darkest day in all of history, the greatest act of injustice, was the day Christ was executed as a criminal—as a blasphemer. Surely a day with no mercy and no goodness. Or perhaps the greatest door to mercy and goodness the world has ever known!

Pastor Tim Kerr

 

RACHAM: Tender Mercies – The Wonder of God’s Mercy

You gave a wide place for my steps under me, and my feet did not slip. Psalm 18:36

God is never stingy. Never ever. One of Satan’s biggest lies is that God is trying to squeeze us but never bless us—that he loves to hammer us, but is a stingy miser when it comes to giving anything to us. We imagine God is like the man described in Proverbs:

Do not eat the bread of a man who is stingy; do not desire his delicacies, for he is like one who is inwardly calculating. “Eat and drink!” he says to you, but his heart is not with you. Proverbs 23:6-7

This is at the heart of so many of our problems—we have a miserly view of God. The reality is that God is the kindest and most generous person you will ever meet! What are some clear proofs of God’s wide and generous heart? (see Gen 1:27-28, Isa 55:6-9, Romans 8:31-32, Rev 21:4-6)

“A wide place” is another way of speaking about God’s grace—abundant grace. Enough provision for every trial and temptation. If our eyes are on the path we will find it is always enough to carry us to safety.

Pastor Tim Kerr

 

RACHAM: Tender Mercies – The Wonder of God’s Mercy

For it is you who light my lamp; the LORD my God lightens my darkness. Psalm 18:28

A lamp is useless without light. It is made for light—that is its purpose but it cannot make its own light. It is just a carrier of light. It must be lit from outside itself. Darkness always yields to light. We never turn on the darkness. Darkness is simply the absence of light. Where light is present, darkness is absent. There is no struggle—darkness always yields to light. There is no volitional button that we can activate to produce light. We can only be lit. Therefore we are dependent creatures. But remember this, He who lights looks at what is being lit. Attentive enablement!

Pastor Tim Kerr

RACHAM: Tender Mercies – The Wonder of God’s Mercy

He sent from on high, he took me; he drew me out of many waters. He rescued me from my strong enemy and from those who hated me, for they were too mighty for me. They confronted me in the day of my calamity, but the LORD was my support. He brought me out into a broad place; he rescued me, because he delighted in me. Psalm 18:16-19

Here we see multiple actions of God toward one person. The word “me” or “my” occurs 10 times. This is not a narrative of God’s actions toward many but toward just one needy soul; for the individual has always mattered to God. Note the many actions of God—each one personal, attentive, and deliberate. What is the reason given for this unusual care by God? What is the cause and source of this thinking? Is it attraction from without or internally generated within God Himself?

Pastor Tim Kerr