What the Bible says about Twenty Third Psalm
(From Forerunner Commentary)
Many of us know this psalm, written from the standpoint of a sheep, by heart. Have we ever considered it to be a Sabbath psalm? Or one of God's Kingdom or of Christ's life, death, and resurrection into His rest?
Richard T. Ritenbaugh
Christ's Death, Resurrection, and AscensionRelated Topics: Psalms | Psalms, Prophetic | Sabbath Psalm | Sheep | Sheep as Metaphor | Shepherd | Shepherd as Metaphor | Twenty Third Psalm
"The LORD is my Shepherd." Could we not also say that this psalm applies to the Lamb of God, as if written from His standpoint? The Lord was His Shepherd too. Jesus said He went through what He did for all righteousness—for God's name's sake, for His glory! Consider Christ's work, His life, in these first three verses. Verse 4, then, reminds us of His death.
Richard T. Ritenbaugh
Christ's Death, Resurrection, and AscensionRelated Topics: Jesus Christ's Death | Lamb | Lamb of God | Lamb Symbolism | Sheep | Sheep as Metaphor | Shepherd | Shepherd as Metaphor | Twenty Third Psalm
Here is a summary of the lessons in this amazing psalm:
Verse 1: Do I really recognize God's right to me? Do I respond to His management?
Verse 2: Sheep must be free from tension within the flock, fear from the outside (e.g., pests, predators), and not hungry.
Verse 3: Though we may become cast down, our Shepherd will seek us out to save us from ourselves.
Verse 4:
- Instead of loving myself most, I am willing to love Christ best and others at least as much as myself.
- Instead of being one of the crowd, I am willing to be singled out and set apart from it.
- Instead of insisting on my own rights, I am willing to forgo them in favor of others.
- Instead of being boss, I am willing to be at the bottom of the heap and to eliminate the drive for self-assertion, self-determination, and self-pleasing.
- Instead of finding fault with life and always asking why, I am willing to accept every circumstance in life in an attitude of gratitude.
- Instead of asserting my will, I am willing to learn to cooperate with God's wishes.
Verse 5: The only way to the tablelands (our goal) is through testing and trial, but we learn through these that He is with us. His rod denotes correction and His staff denotes guidance.
Verse 6: He has gone on before us to prepare the tableland. He thoroughly identifies with us and ensures that we can make it. He anoints us, cares for us continually, and promises that we will be in His flock.
John W. Ritenbaugh
Psalm 23 (Part Three)Related Topics: God's Control | God's Involvement | God's Maintenance | God's Management | God's Manipulation of Events | Love for Christ | Love for God | Psalms | Psalms, Prophetic | Set Apart | Sheep | Sheep as Metaphor | Shepherd | Shepherd as Metaphor | Submission to God | Submission to God's Will | Twenty Third Psalm | Yielding to God | Yielding to God's Will