Looking Forward as We Look Back at the Mess

(Psalm 96)

Newer models may be replacing it with a rear-facing video camera and screen on the dashboard, but the rearview mirror is always going to be a necessary part of driving a vehicle. Whether you’re looking into an actual mirror or at a screen, you need to know what is behind you to drive safely. That would be most obvious when backing up, but it’s necessary other times, too. It allows you to see if someone is driving too closely behind you, or if a car is speeding or swerving behind you. Or, if you are heading somewhere with another driver who doesn’t know where you’re heading and needs to follow you, you can make sure they’re still behind you. A rearview mirror isn’t an optional feature on a car; it’s a necessary one.

At the same time, if you only drove looking into the rear view mirror the whole time well, let’s just say you wouldn’t be driving too long. It wouldn’t take long at all for you to hit something or someone in front of you if you were only focused on what was behind you. So while a rear view mirror is necessary, remember that its purpose is to assist you in getting safely to wherever you are going. When we use it for that purpose, it is helpful, but if we used it the whole time we were driving the car, it would actually put us at risk. It would do more harm than good.

So it is with life. There is great value in looking back. Some of us don’t do it enough. We make one mistake after another in life and when we never look back to review or assess how it could have gone differently, we wonder why we seem to be plagued by all the same mistakes. We never look back to grow from them. On the other hand, some are so accustomed to looking back that the present and the future will never live up to their expectations because the good ole’ days are behind us and life will never be that great again. 

As we are in that limbo time of the year after Christmas and rolling into the new year, let’s take a balanced approach. As we close out this series, let’s do so Looking Forward as We Look Back at the Mess. To guide us in that process, we’ll focus on the words of Psalm 96, which you might recognize as the psalm for Christmas Eve each year. 

Notice that long before Buddy the Elf pointed to singing loud for all to hear as the best way to spread Christmas cheer, the writer of this psalm gave the same encouragement. “Sing to the Lord a new song; sing to the Lord, all the earth. Sing to the Lord, praise his name” (v.1-2a). Three times he urges us to sing, starting with the encouragement to sing a “new” song. You get to sing a new song in the year ahead. No matter what mess this year leaves behind, you don’t have to sing the same song. Choose to sing a new song rather than the same old negative refrains that we’ve grown so tired of over the course of this year. A new year means a new song, and you get to choose what you’re going to sing.

What will you sing about? What milestones and memories would you like your song to be about in 2021? Will your current job or a new one bring you unprecedented happiness or success? Will you make the jump to the next level in your education? Will your song be a love song as a new relationship blossoms? 

Realize there is nothing wrong with any of those new songs, and they can certainly be good things to focus on. Just be aware that they also carry with them the possibility of more disappointment. I don’t say that to throw a wet blanket on any optimism for the year ahead. I am all for growth and progress and personal development and being excited about the possibilities a new year holds. But not all of us are able to handle the failure and disappointment that such efforts can bring. What am I trying to say then? I’m not saying those things can’t be a part of your new song for 2021, but I am confident in saying that they shouldn’t be the refrain. They shouldn’t be the main focus. There’s something better and far more fulfilling to serve that role, and the psalmist highlights it repeatedly for us: 

Make the Lord, rather than your own life, the focus of your new year. The added good news? Just because the song you sing is new doesn’t mean you have to come up with your own original content. The psalmist offers some very solid suggestions for the basis of the new song you’ll sing as you look forward to a new year. “Proclaim his salvation day after day. Declare his glory among the nations, his marvelous deeds among all peoples” (v.2b-3). So as we look back, don’t just look back over the course of this past year; go further back. Go back about 2,000 years, to that day when salvation was born into the world, accompanied by the glory of the angels who themselves were spreading Christmas cheer by singing loud for all to hear. And what were they singing? Glory to God in the highest! 

Put into perspective. This entire psalm is a song of rejoicing over God’s authority and salvation, and it was written hundreds of years before salvation even came to earth in Christ. Then, on the day of Christmas, the angels – the beings who are themselves continually in the presence of God’s glory in heaven – belt out praises of glorious joy at the birth of a baby amidst earthly surroundings that are the farthest cry possible from the glory of heaven. And in strikingly stark contrast to both the psalmist and the angelic messengers… here we are, just two days removed from our Christmas celebration of salvation coming to earth, and already our song is muted. Our joy has been jettisoned. Any glory appears to be gone. 

The psalmist encourages us: “Ascribe to the Lord the glory due his name; bring an offering and come into his courts. Worship the Lord in the splendor of his holiness” (v.8-9a). But… could we possibly sound more depressed when we mumble through the psalm responsively? Could we muster any less gusto when singing our songs? Could we put any less energy into our worship so soon after Christmas, let alone at any point during the rest of the year? Is that ascribing the Lord the glory due him? Is that worshiping the Lord in the splendor of his holiness? No wonder it’s so natural for us to focus more on our life than the Lord year in and year out when we can hardly muster so much as an ounce or two of joy or excitement as we gather for worship to declare his praises and celebrate his salvation!

Is it possible we have forgotten what it means that he is “to be feared above all gods” (v.4), or to “tremble before him all the earth” (v.9b)? Is our tepid worship due to the fact that we so quickly forget that “he comes to judge the earth” and “will judge the world” (v.13)? Do we forget that the God who knows and sees all things is well aware of the ho-hum worship we offer up to him each week? Would he not be right to question if we really actually believe any of what the psalmist writes based solely on what he sees us trying to pass off as worship? For shame! Will there finally be fear and trembling when it sinks in that if his judgment is based even just on our worship, let alone anywhere else in our lives, that we are doomed?!? Yet this psalm is filled with so much singing and praise – how can this be? How can it be when our very singing and praise are themselves a dismal reflection of what is sorely lacking in our ability to meet God’s level of splendid holiness? 

The psalmist knew what we know by faith, what we cling to as the only source of our salvation. When he wrote that the Lord “will judge the world in righteousness and the peoples in his truth” (v.13), it was not our righteousness (or unrighteousness!), not our truth (or falsehood!) which will serve as the basis for his judgement, but rather his righteousness and his truth. Christmas matters not just because that baby would grow up to die in our place, but because that baby, Jesus Christ, also came to live in our place. Perfectly. Purely. His righteousness – not our lack of it – will serve as the basis of the Lord’s judgment. And, as popular as it is for people to speak of “your truth” or “my truth” or “their truth,” you can keep all of that silly talk to yourself; it is but nonsense. There are not multiple truths that are relative to each and every one of us. Thankfully, there is one truth, and it is Jesus, who alone even merits the title “Truth,” along with the Way and the Life. His truth is the only one that matters, and it says that he is the holiness we need for heaven. He is the Substitute we needed to avoid hell. He is our salvation.

What would your 2021 look like if you made your new song more and more about that? I really mean it. How many years in your life are you going to let slip by telling yourself “this is the year that I am going to seriously commit to growing in my faith,” only for nothing to change? Aren’t you tired of it? Aren’t you the least bit curious about what your 2021 could look like if it embodied Psalm 96? What difference would more consistent worship make? What changes in you might the Holy Spirit bring about through daily time in his Word? What untapped gifts and abilities might you discover about yourself be getting more plugged in and committed to your church? How could your generosity touch others as you plan to increase your giving in new ways? What could your congregation look like a year from now if its people dedicate themselves to singing a new song this year – one that is based less on our own lives and more on the Lord and his glorious salvation? Let’s leave the mess of 2020 behind and find out together. 

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