Psalms 119 is the longest of all the Psalms, 
		being divided into twenty-two parts or sections. Each part begins with a 
		different letter of the Hebrew alphabet. The Psalm teaches respect and 
		praise for God’s Word.
		Our part today, 
		verses 25-32, teaches how the Word can strengthen each of us as we read 
		and apply it.
		
		25 
		My soul clings to the dust;
		Revive me according to Your word.
		26 I have declared my ways, and You answered me;
		Teach me Your statutes.
		27 Make me understand the way of Your precepts;
		So shall I meditate on Your wonderful works.
		28 My soul melts from heaviness;
		Strengthen me according to Your word.
		29 Remove from me the way of lying,
		And grant me Your law graciously.
		30 I have chosen the way of truth;
		Your judgments I have laid before me.
		31 I cling to Your testimonies;
		O Lord, do not put me to shame!
		32 I will run the course of Your commandments,
		For You shall enlarge my heart. (Psalms 119:25-32)
		The Word 
		Revives (Verses 25-26)
		
		· 
		The psalmist is in deep 
		distress. He is crushed and not able to rise. He feels like giving up.
		For our soul is bowed 
		down to the dust;
		Our body clings to the ground. 
		(Psalms 44:25)
		
		He asks God 
		to revive him, to give him strength and joy in life, to raise him up to 
		life and health. He cannot do it himself.
		
		· 
		
		He prays for strength through God’s Word, a 
		deeper knowledge of Scripture. Life is promised as a result of obeying 
		the Lord’s precepts.
		
		88 Revive me according to 
		Your lovingkindness,
		So that I may keep the 
		testimony of Your mouth.
		
		93 I will never forget 
		Your precepts,
		For by them You have given me 
		life.
		
		107 I am afflicted very 
		much;
		Revive me, O Lord, 
		according to Your word. 
		(Psalm 119:88,93,107)
		Note the words of 
		John in John 6:63.
		
		It is the Spirit who gives life; the
		flesh profits nothing. The 
		words that I speak to you are spirit, 
		and they are life.
		
		· 
		Dust may also refer to worldly 
		or unworthy things. The world can choke the Word.
		Now he who received 
		seed among the thorns is he who hears the word, and the cares of this 
		world and the deceitfulness of riches choke the word, and he becomes 
		unfruitful. 
		(Matthew 13:22)
		
		The world offers no to the lost soul. “If 
		in this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most 
		miserable.” 1 Corinthians 15:19. So here, the psalmist asks God to 
		give him the strength to rise above worldly things.
		
		· 
		In verse 26, the psalmist 
		“declares his ways,” recounted his past life–sins, temptations, sorrows. 
		He kept nothing back. He was confident the Lord heard his prayers and 
		confessions. God’s statutes would provide answers to his questions about 
		how to deal with life.
		16 
		All Scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable for 
		doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness,
		17 that the man of God may be complete, thoroughly 
		equipped for every good work. 
		(2 Timothy 3:16-17)
		98 
		You, through Your commandments, make me wiser than my enemies;
		For they are ever with me.
		99 I have more understanding than all my teachers,
		For Your testimonies are my meditation.
		100 I understand more than the ancients,
		Because I keep Your precepts. 
		(Psalm 119:98-100)
		
		The Word Teaches (Verses 27-28)
		
		· 
		The psalmist prays for 
		understanding, for comprehension.
		Open my eyes, 
		that I may see
		Wondrous things from Your law. 
		(Psalms 119:18)
		
		We need to 
		understand God’s precepts so we can apply them to our lives.
		But solid food 
		belongs to those who are of full age, that is, those who by reason of 
		use have their senses exercised to discern both good and evil. 
		(Hebrews 5:14)
		
		As we meditate upon His wondrous works 
		(creation, redemption, providential acts), then we can tell others about 
		them as well.
		But sanctify the 
		Lord God in your hearts, and always be ready to give a defense to 
		everyone who asks you a reason for the hope that is in you, with 
		meekness and fear; 
		(1 Peter 3:15)
		Let your speech 
		always be with grace, seasoned with salt, that you may know how you 
		ought to answer each one. 
		(Colossians 4:6)
		
		· 
		By coming to understand the 
		Word, we will be comforted and be able to comfort others. The psalmist 
		cried out that his soul was melting from heaviness. Melts: weeps, 
		dissolves in tears. He sinks under the weight of affliction. Whether 
		from health, finances, or family, God’s Word can bring comfort 
		regardless of our burdens. Scripture contains wisdom to aid us through 
		our troubles. The Word is like spiritual bread that strengthens the 
		soul.
		This is my 
		comfort in my affliction,
		For Your word has given me life. 
		(Psalm 119:50)
		
		The Word Directs (Verses 29-30)
		
		· 
		The word of God directs him to 
		leave the ways of falsehood–all conduct not governed by God’s truth.
		Through Your precepts I 
		get understanding;
		Therefore I hate every false way. 
		(Psalm 119:104)
		
		This would include insincerity and 
		unfaithfulness—also deceit, apostasy, heresy, and idolatry.
		Let love be without 
		hypocrisy. Abhor what is evil. Cling to what is good. 
		(Romans 12:9)
		
		Always be sincere and truthful. Be governed 
		by God’s gracious word and stick to it.
		
		· 
		“chosen the way of truth”—We 
		are given free will so we can choose the way of truth of the way of 
		error. The way of truth is the way of true religion, the way of a godly 
		life.
		Sanctify them by 
		Your truth. Your word is truth. 
		(John 17:17)
		
		The psalmist says he has laid God’s judgment 
		before him. The Word serves as an open book, a road map, to be looked at 
		continually, to guide us to our eternal home. His judgments are a rule 
		to walk by, the only faithful guide to direct our steps.
		
		The Word Gives Us Hope (Verses 31-32)
		
		· 
		Life should be lived clinging 
		to the Lord’s testimonies. Cling: stuck, cleaved, kept firm, and 
		steadfast to God’s precepts.
		For we have 
		become partakers of Christ if we hold the beginning of our confidence 
		steadfast to the end, 
		(Hebrews 3:14)
		
		The 
		psalmist desires to resolutely persist in the practice of God’s 
		testimonies despite temptations and adversity. He wants to do right. He 
		does not want to fall into sin and disgrace.
		
		· 
		
		His course was to be run in the way of the 
		Lord’s commandments—to obey the precepts with all readiness, fervency, 
		and diligence. To offer God energetic service and take pleasure in them.
		
		“enlarge my 
		heart”—stimulate my will and desire, deliver me from everything that 
		would hinder my running the course.
		
		Following 
		God’s instructions will bless us with the best possible life.
		But he who looks into 
		the perfect law of liberty and continues in it, and is not a forgetful 
		hearer but a doer of the work, this one will be blessed in what he does. 
		(James 1:25)
		
		As Jesus himself said in Luke 11:28,
		“…blessed are those who hear the word of God and keep it.” And in 
		John 13:17, “If you know these things, blessed 
		are you if you do them.”
		
		 
		We have seen today 
		the various ways God’s Word strengthens us.
		Therefore lay aside all 
		filthiness and overflow of wickedness, and receive with meekness the 
		implanted word, which is able to save your souls.
		
		(James 1:21)
		
		 
		
		 
		
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