A Sheep’s Journey Through Psalms -137

When Home Feels Far Away

Hello my dear friends,

Have you ever found yourself in a season where everything familiar felt stripped away? Maybe a move, a loss, a heartbreak, or just a long stretch of life that left you aching for “how things used to be”? If so, you’re in good company with God’s people. Psalm 137 is raw, honest, and deeply human. It’s a lament written from the banks of foreign rivers during one of Israel’s darkest times.

The Setting (Historical Context)

In 586 BC, Babylon destroyed Jerusalem, burned the temple, and carried God’s people into exile. They sat by the rivers of Babylon—probably the Euphrates and its canals—far from home, surrounded by a pagan culture that mocked their faith. The psalm captures the grief, anger, and fierce loyalty of a displaced people.

Psalm 137:1–4 (ESV)
By the rivers of Babylon we sat and wept when we remembered Zion. There on the willows we hung our harps, for there our captors asked us for songs, our tormentors demanded songs of joy; they said, ‘Sing us one of the songs of Zion!’ How can we sing the songs of the Lord while in a foreign land?”

The exiles had every reason to stop singing. Their temple—the place where God’s presence dwelled—was in ruins. Their city was rubble. Their enemies were taunting them: “Come on, worshippers of Yahweh—entertain us!” The musicians hung their harps on the willow trees like funeral wreaths. Sometimes silence is the most honest response to deep pain.

Fierce Loyalty (vv. 5–6)

If I forget you, Jerusalem, may my right hand forget its skill. May my tongue cling to the roof of my mouth if I do not remember you, if I do not consider Jerusalem my highest joy.

This is a solemn vow. The psalmist says, “I would rather lose my ability to play music or speak than forget where I belong.” Jerusalem wasn’t just a city—it represented God’s covenant, His promises, and their identity. In exile, they chose remembrance over assimilation.

Justice and the Hard Words (vv. 7–9)

The psalm ends with a cry for God to remember the violence done to them—especially by the Edomites who cheered the destruction—and a shocking blessing on anyone who would bring Babylon down.These verses feel harsh to modern ears, and they are. Yet they reveal something important: the exiles handed their desire for revenge over to God instead of taking it into their own hands. They trusted that the Judge of all the earth would do right.

Christian Reflection: Finding Ourselves in the Psalm

As followers of Jesus, we are not in physical Babylonian exile, but we often feel the ache of living “in a strange land.” This world is not our ultimate home (Hebrews 11:13–16; Philippians 3:20). We experience seasons when God feels distant, when worship is hard, when culture pressures us to perform faith on demand or water it down.Yet Psalm 137 reminds us of three beautiful truths:

  1. God welcomes our honest grief. You don’t have to fake joy when your heart is breaking. Hanging up your harp for a season can be part of genuine lament.
  2. Remembering our true home keeps us faithful. Just as the exiles clung to Jerusalem, we fix our eyes on the New Jerusalem and our crucified, risen, and returning King. Jesus is our highest joy.
  3. We can entrust our pain and anger to God. The imprecatory (judgment) ending shows us we don’t have to pretend everything is fine. We can pour out our rawest feelings to a God who is perfectly just—and who has already absorbed the ultimate judgment on the cross.

Personal Reflection Questions

Take a few quiet moments with the Lord and journal or pray through these:

  • What “rivers of Babylon” are you sitting by right now? Where do you feel far from home, misunderstood, or grieved?
  • What has God asked you to remember about Himself and His promises during this season? Are you tempted to “forget Jerusalem” by lowering your standards or losing hope?
  • When have you found it hard to “sing the Lord’s song” in a difficult place? How might honest lament actually lead you back to authentic worship?
  • Who or what has hurt you deeply? Can you, like the psalmist, entrust that pain and the desire for justice into God’s hands today?
  • What would it look like for Jesus to be your “highest joy” this week, even if circumstances don’t change?

A Simple Prayer

Lord Jesus, thank You that You understand exile—You left the joy of heaven for our broken world. When I feel far from home, help me remember who You are and who I am in You. Teach me to lament honestly, to hold fast to Your promises, and to trust You with my deepest hurts. Make my heart’s true home Your presence. Amen.

Friend, even in the exile seasons, God is writing your story with tender care. He who brought His people home from Babylon will one day bring us safely home to be with Him forever. Keep remembering. Keep hoping.Grace and peace to you today.

A Sheep’s Journey Through Psalms -60

A Banner of Hope in the Storm: Reflections on Psalm 60

My dear friend, imagine for a moment the dust-choked battlefield, where the ground itself seems to quake under the weight of defeat. Swords clash like thunder, banners lie tattered in the mud, and the once-mighty warriors scatter like leaves in a fierce gale. This is the vivid scene that unfolds in Psalm 60, a heartfelt cry from King David amid the turmoil of war and national crisis. Written during his campaigns against Aram and Edom, as recorded in the psalm’s title, it’s a raw, honest plea that resonates deeply with our own seasons of struggle. Yet, woven through the despair is a thread of unshakeable hope—a reminder that even when God seems distant, His banner waves high, calling us back to victory. As we walk through this psalm together, let’s uncover its treasures, drawing comfort from its truths and applying them to our lives with a warm embrace of faith.

The psalm opens with a lament that paints a picture of divine abandonment, like a loving father turning away in disappointment, leaving his children to face the storm alone. “O God, you have rejected us, broken our defenses; you have been angry; oh, restore us,” David cries in verses 1-3. Here, the earth trembles as if split by an invisible hand, breaches gaping like wounds in a shattered wall, and the people are forced to drink “the wine of astonishment“—a bitter, swirling draught that leaves them reeling, dizzy with hardship and confusion. It’s as if the very foundations of life are shaking, isn’t it? We’ve all tasted that wine at times: the job loss that hits like an earthquake, the relationship fractured beyond recognition, or the health crisis that scatters our plans like defeated troops. David doesn’t sugarcoat it; he acknowledges that these “hard things” come from God’s sovereign hand, not as random chaos, but as a call to humility and repentance.

Yet, even in this vulnerability, David points us to the source of healing. As church leader Matthew Henry insightfully observes, “In God’s displeasure their troubles began, therefore in his favour their prosperity must begin.” What a comforting truth! When we feel cast off, it’s not the end—it’s an invitation to turn back to Him. God isn’t a distant tyrant but a compassionate restorer, mending the breaches with His gentle touch, steadying the ground beneath our feet.

Then, the tone shifts like dawn breaking over a war-torn valley, illuminating a symbol of hope in verse 4: “You have set up a banner for those who fear you, that it may be displayed because of the truth.” Picture that banner now—vibrant crimson fluttering against a stormy sky, a rallying point for the weary soldiers, emblazoned with the promise of God’s unchanging truth. It’s not just a flag; it’s a beacon, a declaration that amid the chaos, God gathers His people under His protection. For us as Christians, this banner foreshadows Christ Himself, the ultimate standard lifted high on the cross, drawing all who fear God to safety and triumph. No wonder Charles Spurgeon, in his reflections on this psalm, declares, “The bravest men are usually intrusted with the banner, and it is certain that those who fear God must have less fear of man than any others.” Friend, in your battles—whether against doubt, temptation, or external foes—lift your eyes to that banner. It’s there for you, waving defiantly because of God’s faithful word.

In verses 5-8, David pivots to rejoicing in God’s promises, claiming victory over enemies as assured possessions. “God has spoken in his holiness: I will exult,” he proclaims, dividing lands like Shechem and Succoth as if the conquest is already done. Gilead and Manasseh are His, Ephraim the helmet of strength, Judah the lawgiver. Even foes like Moab become mere washpots—humble vessels for cleansing—and Edom a place to casually cast a shoe, symbolizing effortless dominion. Philistia is taunted to “shout in triumph” over David’s success. What vivid confidence! It’s like a king surveying his map, marking territories with bold strokes, knowing the Divine Conqueror fights for him. Spurgeon captures this spirit beautifully: “Faith regards the promise not as fiction but fact, and therefore drinks in joy from it, and grasps victory by it. ‘God hath spoken; I will rejoice:’ here is a fit motto for every soldier of the cross.” As believers, we too can claim this: in Christ, our enemies—sin, death, and the powers of darkness—are already defeated. We divide the spoils of grace, wearing the helmet of salvation and wielding the law of love.

But David doesn’t end in presumption; verses 9-12 bring a humble plea for God’s ongoing help. “Who will bring me into the fortified city? Who will lead me to Edom?” he asks, acknowledging that past rejections don’t erase future reliance. Even after tasting defeat when God “did not go out with our armies,” he affirms, “Give us help from trouble, for vain is the help of man.” It’s a stark reminder: our strategies, alliances, and strengths are like fragile reeds in the wind without Him. Yet, the psalm closes on a triumphant note: “Through God we shall do valiantly; it is he who will tread down our foes.” Imagine stamping grapes in a winepress—that’s how God crushes opposition, empowering us to march forward with courageous steps.

Oh, how this psalm speaks to our hearts today! In a world trembling with uncertainty—pandemics, divisions, personal trials—Psalm 60 invites us to own our brokenness, rally under Christ’s banner, and trust in God’s promises for victory. As Henry reminds us, “Hope in God is the best principle of true courage, for what need those fear who have God on their side?” So, my friend, whatever breach shakes your life, turn to Him. Let His restoration flow like healing rain over parched earth.

Let me close with a simple prayer: Heavenly Father, in our moments of astonishment and defeat, restore us again. Raise Your banner over us, that we may rejoice in Your holiness and do valiantly through Your strength. Amen.