Welcome to Wisdom-Trek with Gramps! I am Guthrie Chamberlain, and we are on Day 2642 of our trek. The purpose of Wisdom-Trek is to create a legacy of wisdom, to seek out discernment and insights, and to boldly grow where few have chosen to grow before.
In today’s Wisdom Nugget, today we continue our deep dive into the raw, emotional depths of Psalm 69 in the New Living Translation.
In our previous treks, we’ve joined the psalmist in his desperate cry for help, feeling overwhelmed by literal and metaphorical floods. We’ve seen his anguish over unjust accusations and the profound pain of being mocked for his sincere devotion to God, even by his own family and the lowest members of society. Now, as we delve into verses 16 through 21, the psalmist intensifies his plea for divine compassion and vividly describes the cruel abandonment and bitter rejection he experiences in his suffering.
This section is particularly poignant, capturing the essence of feeling utterly alone in a sea of hostility, desperately longing for God’s presence and comfort. While steeped in the ancient Israelite experience of shame and ostracization, these verses also carry a prophetic weight, foreshadowing the ultimate suffering and rejection of the Messiah. For our purposes today, we’ll focus on the psalmist’s immediate human anguish and his appeal to God’s merciful character.
So, let’s open our hearts to these words of desperate appeal.
Psalm 69:16-18 NLT
Answer me, Lord, for your unfailing love is good. In your great compassion, turn to me. Don’t turn away from me, for I am in distress. Answer me quickly, for I am in trouble. Come and rescue me! Save me from all my enemies.
The psalmist’s plea begins with an urgent, direct appeal to God’s character: “Answer me, Lord, for your unfailing love is good. In your great compassion, turn to me.” Having laid bare the depth of his suffering and the injustice he faces, he doesn’t appeal to his own merit, but solely to God’s inherent goodness and mercy. “Unfailing love” (hesed) is that steadfast, covenant-keeping love, loyal and true, even when circumstances seem to contradict it. “Great compassion” speaks to God’s deep empathy and pity for those in distress. The psalmist is essentially saying, “God, because of who You are – because of Your good, unfailing love and Your great compassion – You must respond to me.”
This appeal to God’s nature is a powerful lesson in prayer for us. When we feel overwhelmed, instead of focusing solely on the problem, we can anchor our prayers in the unchanging character of God – His love, His mercy, His power, His faithfulness.
The urgency of his situation is palpable: “Don’t turn away from me, for I am in distress. Answer me quickly, for I am in trouble.” To have God “turn away” would be the ultimate abandonment, a sign of divine displeasure or indifference. The psalmist desperately fears this. His distress is acute, his trouble immediate. He isn’t asking for a leisurely response; he needs God to act now. This urgency highlights the direness of his situation, where every moment...