A Sheep’s Journey Through Psalms -124

God With Us

Hello friend,

Take a deep breath with me and let’s sit with Psalm 124 together. This beautiful little song is one of the “Songs of Ascent,” sung by God’s people as they climbed the hills toward Jerusalem for worship. It’s raw, honest, and full of wonder—like a collective sigh of relief after a narrow escape.Here’s the heart of the psalm (ESV):

“If it had not been the Lord who was on our side—
let Israel now say—
if it had not been the Lord who was on our side
when people rose up against us, then they would have swallowed us up alive,
when their anger was kindled against us; then the flood would have swept us away,
the torrent would have gone over us; then over us would have gone the raging waters.”

“Blessed be the Lord who has not given us as prey to their teeth!
We have escaped like a bird from the snare of the fowlers; the snare is broken, and we have escaped!

Our help is in the name of the Lord, who made heaven and earth.”

The Honest Danger

The psalmist doesn’t sugarcoat the threat. He uses vivid, almost terrifying pictures: being swallowed alive, swept away by a raging flood, and trapped like a helpless bird in a hunter’s snare. These weren’t exaggerated fears. Israel faced real enemies—powerful nations, hostile armies, and seasons when it looked like God’s people would be wiped out.Yet the repeated refrain is powerful: “If the Lord had not been on our side…” The psalmist wants us to pause and imagine the alternative. Without God, we would have been finished.

The Grateful Turn

But God was on their side. And because He was, the outcome was completely different. The snare didn’t hold. The flood didn’t win. The teeth of the enemy never closed around them. Instead of despair, the psalm bursts into praise: “Blessed be the Lord!”This is the rhythm of the Christian life, isn’t it? We face real dangers—relational brokenness, health struggles, spiritual attacks, cultural pressures, or our own wandering hearts. Sometimes the waters rise fast. But when we look back, we see the same faithful hand at work.

A Christian Lens

As followers of Jesus, we read this psalm in the light of the cross and the empty tomb. The ultimate “If the Lord had not been on our side” moment happened when Jesus stepped into our place. Without Him, sin would have swallowed us alive. Death would have swept us away forever. The enemy of our souls would have kept us trapped.

But Jesus broke the snare.
He took the flood of God’s judgment in our place.
He rose victorious so we could sing, “We have escaped!

The apostle Paul echoes this same wonder in Romans 8:31: “If God is for us, who can be against us?” The same God who was on Israel’s side is now unbreakably for everyone who belongs to Christ.

Personal Application

Take a moment right now, friend. Where in your life are you tempted to say, “If the Lord had not been on my side…”? Maybe it was that season of depression when you almost didn’t make it.
Maybe it was the conflict that threatened to tear your family apart.
Maybe it was the quiet temptation that nearly shipwrecked your faith.

Look back and name it. Then speak the truth out loud: But the Lord was on my side. Our help doesn’t come from our own strength, clever strategies, or even the support of good people (though those are gifts). Our help is “in the name of the Lord, who made heaven and earth.” The Creator Himself is committed to you.

Personal Reflection Questions

Here are a few gentle questions to help you process this psalm more deeply. You might want to journal your answers, talk them over with a friend, or pray through them slowly:

  1. When you read the vivid images of floods, snares, and being swallowed alive, what current or past situation in your life comes to mind? How does the psalm encourage you in that place?
  2. Looking back over the last year (or even further), can you identify a specific time when you can truly say, “If the Lord had not been on my side…”? What happened, and how did God show up?
  3. What “raging waters” or “traps” are you facing right now? How does the truth that “our help is in the name of the Lord” speak to those fears?
  4. How does remembering Jesus’ victory on the cross change the way you understand God being “on your side”?
  5. This week, how can you live out the psalm’s spirit of gratitude and praise, even if you’re still in the middle of a difficult climb?

Take your time with these—there’s no rush. The Lord who rescued Israel and raised Jesus delights in walking through these reflections with you.

A Simple Prayer

Lord, thank You for being on our side. When the waters rose and the snare tightened, You were there. We bless Your name! Help us remember Your past faithfulness the next time we feel overwhelmed. Give us songs of gratitude even in the middle of the climb. And remind us again today that because Jesus lives, we have already escaped the ultimate trap. We are safe in You. Amen.

You are loved, you are protected, and you are never alone. Keep climbing, dear friend—the Lord is with you.

A Sheep’s Journey Through Psalms -121

Our Helper

Dear friend in Christ,

Psalm 121 is one of the sweetest and most comforting portions of God’s Word. It belongs to the collection known as the Songs of Ascents (Psalms 120–134), which pilgrims sang as they journeyed upward to Jerusalem for the great feasts. These were traveling songs for a difficult road—full of hills, heat, danger, and uncertainty. Yet they lift the heart to the God who is greater than every trial.

From a Christian perspective, this psalm beautifully displays the sovereignty, faithfulness, and preserving grace of our covenant God. He is not a distant deity but the active Keeper of His people—chosen, redeemed, and kept by Him from first to last.

Verse 1–2: Looking Up to the True Source of Help

The psalm opens with the pilgrim lifting his eyes to the hills. In the ancient Near East, hills and mountains could be places of refuge but also sites of pagan shrines and false gods. The question “From where does my help come?” is honest. Life’s journey is steep. Dangers loom. Where will strength come from?The answer is immediate and decisive: “My help comes from the LORD, who made heaven and earth.” This is a confession of faith. The psalmist turns from created things to the Creator. We rejoice that our help is not ultimately in ourselves, our efforts, or any human institution, but in Jehovah—the self-existent, almighty God who created all things by the word of His power.

This Creator is no abstract force. He is the covenant LORD (Yahweh), the same God who redeemed Israel and who, in the fullness of time, sent His Son to redeem us. When your eyes are drawn to the “hills” of money, politics, health, or human wisdom, this psalm gently redirects you: Look higher. Your help is from the Maker of heaven and earth.

Verses 3–4: The Keeper Who Never Slumbers

The psalm shifts to direct assurance, almost like a blessing spoken over the traveler: “He will not let your foot be moved; he who keeps you will not slumber.”In the rocky terrain of Judea, a slipped foot could mean disaster. Spiritually, our path is slippery too—beset by temptation, doubt, and opposition. Yet God promises stability. The repetition of “keep” (Hebrew shamar, to guard, protect, watch over) is striking. It appears six times in the psalm. This is not a sleepy guardian. “Behold, he who keeps Israel will neither slumber nor sleep.” Pagan gods might nod off; our God never does.

Christians cherish this truth because it underscores God’s preserving grace. The same sovereign Lord who elects and calls His people also keeps them to the end. As Jesus prayed in John 17, “I have guarded those whom you gave me” (v. 12). If the Father gave you to the Son, the Keeper of Israel will not lose you on the journey. What comfort for weary pilgrims!

Verses 5–6: Shade and Protection by Day and Night

The LORD is your keeper; the LORD is your shade on your right hand.” In the blazing Middle Eastern sun, shade is life itself. God Himself is that refreshing protection—always at your side (your “right hand” being the place of strength and honor). “The sun shall not strike you by day, nor the moon by night.” This is poetic for comprehensive protection. No danger by day or by night is outside His care. The perils of heatstroke, exhaustion, bandits, or even supposed lunar influences (ancient superstitions) are all under His sovereign hand. For us, this means that whether in visible trials or hidden spiritual attacks, our Keeper covers us.

Verses 7–8: Kept from All Evil, Forever

The LORD will keep you from all evil; he will keep your life.” This does not promise a trouble-free life (the pilgrims faced real dangers, and so do we). Rather, it assures us that no evil will ultimately destroy the believer. God works all things—even painful things—for our good and His glory (Romans 8:28).

Finally: “The LORD will keep your going out and your coming in from this time forth and forevermore.” This beautiful closing echoes the language of blessing (see Deuteronomy 28:6). Every departure and return, every beginning and ending of a journey, every moment of your life—is under His keeping. And this keeping is eternal. From the moment of your new birth to the day you step into glory, and into eternity itself, the Lord keeps you.

A Gospel Echo for Today

Beloved, as believers we sing this psalm not merely as ancient travelers but as pilgrims on the way to the New Jerusalem. Our Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ—the true Pilgrim who ascended the hill of Calvary—has gone before us. He was struck by the sun of God’s wrath so that we might find shade in Him. He was moved (crucified and buried) so that our feet might stand secure. He ever lives to intercede, so we have a Keeper who never slumbers.

In your daily pilgrimage—through work, family struggles, illness, doubt, or uncertainty—lift up your eyes. Your help comes from the LORD. He who keeps you is the same God who keeps the stars in place and who keeps every one of His elect safe in Christ.

May this psalm warm your heart today and fill you with quiet confidence. The road may be steep, but your Keeper is stronger. He will keep you—body and soul, now and forevermore.

Grace and peace to you in our Lord Jesus Christ, the Keeper of our souls.

Confession and Repentance – pt 2

As we saw yesterday, confession is taking our repentance and allowing the church to hold us accountable so we do not continue in the same pattern of sin. So often, we forget that we have been saved into the body of Christ. Our actions, both good and bad, reflect on Christ and on the church. What we do in our personal lives is everyone else’s business.

When a person confesses their shortcomings, burdens and sins – the church is then empowered to help them and share their burden as Scripture commands. People aren’t simply to acknowledge another’s confession and say, “I’ll pray for you.” They are to act. For example, if a person was to confess not reading and studying Scripture, another brother or sister should immediately offer to spend time with them weekly in studying the Scripture together. Or, if a person was to confess they had a drinking problem, another brother who has had victory over that sin would offer to counsel, support, hold them accountable. In this way we fulfill the law of Christ.

Confession leads the church into actually living the shared life. In a later post I will answer some common objections but I leave you with this today – does your church practice a healthy discipline of confession? Why not?