Good Morning!
Psalm 103:4; “who redeems your life from the pit, who crowns
you with steadfast love and mercy,”
Many years ago, Erma Bombeck wrote a book entitled, “If Life is a
Bowl of Cherries, What am I doing in the Pits?”
It was her humorous look at life in suburbia. She had many quaint sayings and observations
that were somewhat insightful and usually funny. Yet it asked a serious question if it was
intended to be funny, why am I always in the pits?
We use the phrase “in
the pits” to describe a feeling of despair and or loneliness. We feel we have a problem and that no one has
an answer to it. This feeling can run
the gamut from the high school athlete who just can’t beat his opponent to the
employee who just can’t seem to get that promotion to the person who keeps losing
a job or some other type of calamity. We
usually associate this feeling with being down as in “down in the pits”. This is actually a very old idea and goes way
back to Scriptural and pre-Scriptural time when a person was punished by being
thrown into a literal pit. Often times
this pit would be at the low end of the village so rainwater and sewage would
flow freely into it. Sometimes it would
have a cover of some sort over it to keep out the light and any chance of
escape. So, life in the pit was a dark,
dank, cold, smelly, and lonely existence.
It was a punishment at a time when punishment was very mercurial and
completely dependent upon the whims of the ruler. The length of time was often arbitrary as
well.
So, as we look at our
verse, we should have the image of a person, unjustly and cruelly judged, being
thrown into a pit of punishment. How
long he will stay there is yet to be determined. He will have little, if any, contact with
those who love him; he will just sit in the smelly, cold pit until the ruler or
judge decides to let him out. Also,
remember this was at a time when they put you in prison for a debt and didn’t
let you out until you paid it so he could be in that pit long enough to die.
There are times in our
lives when the devil puts us in a pit like this. First, something goes haywire; it might be
accidental like a car wreck. This spins
into not being able to get to work on time.
This could lead to being fired.
Now you are in the pits. It might
be a relational issue with your hormonally challenged teenager that explodes
into a real war. It might be the
declining health of an aged parent or worse it might be a combination of all
these events with a know-it-all neighbor with all the answers for you. Yikes!! This is really the pits.
So, we see our Savior
pulling us out of the pit and not only pulling us out but lifting us up. He holds us with his everlasting love and
mercy. He sees our condition and sends
his spirit of hope to us; he sends his Spirit of comfort to us. We need to trust in his mercy that the pit is
usually of our own doing, and we only need to focus on Christ for our
deliverance.
Father of all mercies,
you extract us from the pit of despair with your love. Be especially with those who are struggling
with the battles of the pit, depression and despair, ad give them the
refreshing breath of your Spirit. In
Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen.
God’s Peace,
Pastor Bret
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