Praise the Lord in the morning
It is morning. Your eyes open—slowly or suddenly. With or without an alarm.
What thoughts immediately run through your mind at that moment?
Possibly what you plan to do, hope to do, want to do. Before your head comes off the pillow or your feet hit the ground, you have plotted out the day—of course, with the assumption that you will accomplish every last thing on the list.
Or perhaps there is a question or a concern about the upcoming hours. How will I achieve my multiple goals? There is this that could interfere or that which could interrupt. There could be this situation to disrupt or that scenario to disturb.
Tomorrow it might be how long to bake or how often to baste the bird so that there is not dryness on one hand or E. coli on the other.
So many things could race through your brain.
Maybe King David could help us. He knew a thing or two about pressures and problems. It might have been during his son Absalom’s rebellion that he sang a psalm. Instead of wondering or worrying about the day, with him, we can begin with a silent or spoken prayer.
The fact that we can even pray is a gift from God. (If you are coming up with a list of things to be thankful for, that might make it. It is definitely near the top.) Only a child of God through faith in Christ can come before him. It is Jesus who paid for all of our sins that makes the privilege possible. We approach our Father as boldly and confidently as dear children ask their dear father (cf. Luther’s Explanation to the Address of the Lord’s Prayer). And God gladly and willing turns his ear like a mom drops everything to listen to her child when he calls on the phone. And she loves to hear that voice.
David reminds us that we address our requests to the LORD—the One who is changeless in his love and boundless in his grace. “In the morning, O LORD, you hear my voice” (Ps 5:3). As day breaks, our voice beseeches our God …
With a prayer of thanksgiving. We have a new day of grace after a deep night of sleep. God has watched over us and woken us up again. Sometimes when someone asks, “How are you?” the casual, or comical, response is: “Still breathing.” But there is more than a simple action. Every time our lungs routinely inhale and repeatedly exhale is a gift from the Lord. Another day is a reminder of that.
With a prayer of receiving. We have opportunity to serve our God and our neighbor with our abilities—in a personal way like a mother to a professional way like an employee (unless you have tomorrow off—from work, that is, not as a parent. There are no vacations from that).
Note that Luther does a nice job in directing our attention to that. His morning prayer is worth memorizing.
It is interesting that the gospel writer Mark notes that at daybreak after a busy day of driving out a demon in the synagogue and healing many people, “Very early in the morning, while it was still dark, Jesus got up, left the house and went off to a solitary place, where he prayed” (Mk 1:35). He felt that it was necessary to spend some time talking to his heavenly Father. How much more do we?
David continues: “In the morning I lay my requests before you and wait in expectation” (Ps 5:3). We have the opportunity to arrange our cares like you might do with your clothes on the bed—deciding on what outfit to wear. (There is another thing—we undoubtedly have more than one to choose from. Another blessing to give thanks for.) And then like an ancient watchman on the wall looking intently, we wait expectantly for the Lord’s blessing on our day.
What is a good time of day to praise the Lord? Praise the Lord in the morning. Happy Thanksgiving.
We read from Psalm 5:3:
In the morning, O LORD, you hear my voice; in the morning I lay my requests before you and wait in expectation.
Praise the Lord at noon
It is noon. This is fuzzy math because it depends on when you rolled out of bed, but the day is half over. The morning is in the past; the afternoon is in the present. Some things started; others ended. But there is so much more to carry out and work through. First, there is lunch. Food on the table is another occasion for appreciation to the Lord (Ps 145:15,16)
But then what? King David can lend a hand again. Once more it might be from the episode of when his son was trying to usurp the throne and he was forced to flee from Jerusalem (2 Sa 15-18). David entrusts his cause to the Lord. “Evening, morning and noon I cry out in distress, and he hears my voice” (Ps 55:17).
Recall that was also the practice of the 80-year old Daniel. It was his jealous enemies who got King Darius to issue an edict that no one was to pray to any god or person for the next 30 days except to the king (Da 6:7). If anyone was caught, they would be a happy lunch for the hungry lions. Daniel did not deny his God, but lived out his loyalty. He continued his practice: “Now when Daniel learned that the decree had been published, he went home to his upstairs room where the windows opened to Jerusalem. Three times a day he got down on his knees and prayed, giving thanks to God, just as he had done before” (Da 6:10). Yes, he prayed at midday—one of his fixed times of devotion—along with the other two. But interesting is the content of his prayer—thanksgiving, not complaining—even it could have been the last day of his life.
That is a good thing to keep in mind. As we consider of what we are appreciative, it is usually what we like or what we enjoy. And nothing wrong with that. Every good and perfect gift comes from our heavenly Father (Ja 2:17). But even in troubling and trying times—and each of us has those, we can give thanks to God. From house arrest in Rome, Paul could pen: “Rejoice in the Lord always. I will say it again: Rejoice!” (Php 4:4). In another epistle, he could encourage: “Be joyful always; pray continually; give thanks in all circumstances” (1 Thess 5:16-18).
So as we make our way through the day, even when in sorrow we groan or in sadness we moan, we call out to God when those things occupy our attention. And like in the morning, we have the remembrance and the reassurance that the Lord listens. And God answers in his wisdom. Included in those petitions would be for strength and support to keep on with the challenges and charges of the unfinished day.
What is a good time of day to praise the Lord? Praise the Lord at noon. Happy Thanksgiving.
We read from Psalm 55:17:
Evening, morning and noon I cry out in distress, and he hears my voice.
Praise the Lord in the evening
It is evening. You are weary from all the effort extended and worn-out from all the energy expended throughout the day. And looking back, what is there—tasks uncompleted and sins committed? Now what?
Yet again, King David can assist us. We join those all the way to the ends of the earth who respect and revere the Lord in awe and admiration of his powerful activity. Just like God controls the waves of the ocean so that they go only so far, he limits the nations on earth (Ps 65:5-7). Think back to the Exodus when the Lord brought the nation of Israel out of their slavery so they could return to the Promised Land—the place that our Savior would be placed in a manger, hung on a cross, and raised from the dead, all for our sin and for our salvation. From the time that the sun goes up to when it goes down, the mighty acts of God from furnishing our needs day after day to forgiving our sins day by day bring happiness.
Luther captures those ideas well in his evening prayer. It is valuable to commit it to memory.
So instead of Thanksgiving being one day, Thanksgiving can be all day. It is the Lord who causes us to shout with gladness.
What is a good time of day to praise the Lord? Praise the Lord in the evening. Happy Thanksgiving.
We read from Psalm 65:8:
Those living far away fear your wonders; where morning dawns and evening fades you call forth songs of joy.
November 21, 2018
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