tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6989159438503347124.post1221976584209048172..comments2023-10-17T06:52:41.861-05:00Comments on Living the Lectionary: Pentecost 21c - Psalm 121Pastor Philhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01768406378983141019noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6989159438503347124.post-92029445815362690072010-10-12T22:03:58.917-05:002010-10-12T22:03:58.917-05:00This comment has been removed by the author.Greg Borcherthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11938668974162700784noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6989159438503347124.post-11382802731592632862010-10-12T22:03:19.150-05:002010-10-12T22:03:19.150-05:00I didn't know Robert Werberig, but your post r...I didn't know Robert Werberig, but your post reminded me of someone of the same pastoral yoke, and Eugene Peterson's commentary on this and other Psalms, known as "A Long Obedience in the Same Direction." <br />Peterson writes this: "The Christian life is not a quiet escape to a garden where we can walk and talk uninterruptedly with our Lord; not a fantasy trip to a heavenly city where we can compare our blue ribbons and gold medals with others who have made it to the winner's circle. To suppose that, or to expect that, is to turn the nut the wrong way. The Christian life is going to God. In going to God Christians travel the same ground that everyone walks on, breathe the same air, drink the same water, shop in the same stores, read the same newspapers, are citizens under the same governments, pay the same prices for groceries and gasoline, fear the same dangers, are subject to the same pressures, get the same distresses, and are buried in the same ground.<br />The difference is that each step we walk, each breath we breathe, we know we are preserved by God, we know we are accompanied by God, we know we are ruled by God; and therefore no matter what doubts we endure or what accidents we experience, the Lord will preserve us from evil, he will keep our life....<br />Psalm 121, learned early and sung repeatedly in the walk with Christ, clearly defines the conditions under which we live out our discipleship, which, in a word, is God. Once we get this psalm into our hearts it will be impossible for us to gloomily suppose that being a Christian is an unending battle against ominous forces that may at any moment break through and overpower us. Faith is not a precarious affair of chance escape from satanic assaults. It is the solid, massive, secure experience of God who keeps all evil from getting inside us, who keeps our life, who keeps our going out and our coming in from this time forth and forevermore."Greg Borcherthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11938668974162700784noreply@blogger.com