The Lord is with us!
Psalm 87 is unique in all of the Psalter. It alone suggests that not only will the nation of Israel be brought into the Kingdom of God but that all people's will have the opportunity to come out of Jerusalem as members. My study Bible says that there is a long tradition of scholarship in both the Hebrew and Christian tradition of this psalm foreseeing "the ingathering of the nations into Zion as fellow citizens with Israel in the kingdom of God." Such an idea is not unique in the Old Testament and is found also in the prophetic words of Isaiah (2:2-4, 19:19-25, 45:14, 22-24, 56:6-8, etc.), Daniel (7:14), Micah (4:1-3) and others. It is also found clearly in the accounts of the Gospel. In John's account, Jesus Himself clearly states in His discussion of the Good Shepherd that there are sheep of other sheepfolds He will gather to Himself which many scholars take as a clear reference to a broader ministry than just an offer of redemption to the nation of Israel.
This may seem like an obvious idea to us but I wonder sometimes. There is much in the Old Testament that suggests that God will not love those outside those He has picked as His people. Even though the books of the Law and Prophets are filled with narratives of people from outside the tribes finding a place and home in God (mostly recently our group studied the story of Ruth from Moab who was the mother of Jesse and grandmother of David), there was a strong sense of exclusivity among the Hebrews that led many to come to the belief that God's love for them meant that He could not or would not love other peoples, even if they did come to recognize Him as the source of light and life in this world.
I wonder if the same is sometimes true with us now. We are so sure that God loves us that we begin to think that God loves only us. Sure we understand that God so loved the world that He sent His one, unique Son but we sort of hedge that. We don't come right out and say it but we act in ways that make it pretty clear. We suggest that God only loves those who have accepted Christ in some fashion that we're comfortable with. Maybe we're more open now in that members of other denominations might be loved but not those with obvious sins. We wonder if God loves the drug addict or the prostitute, the liar and the thief (doesn't Christ tell a thief he'll be with Him in Paradise???), or the alien and stranger.
You don't think so? You think that maybe I'm being too harsh? How would your church treat one of these people if they came into your church on Sunday morning and wanted to sit and worship with your congregation? Would you run to greet them? Would you embrace them with joy? Would you throw a robe around their shoulders and place a ring on their finger? Would you kill the fatted calf?
Do you recognize the parable? Through Jerusalem God will offer salvation to ALL the world: Jew and Gentile, Slave and Free, Male and Female, Saint and Sinner (and most of us who are some of both). Through Jerusalem He has to ANY who would come.
But do we stand in the way? Do we put entrance requirements? Do we think we have the right to stand at the gates of the city and decide who gets to come in? Or do we see ourselves as among those who have had the grace of God poured out upon them by being named as coming from the city of Peace?
I love how our psalm ends today. It ends with the joy of those who have come into it's walls. It reminds me of the description of the New Jerusalem in the Apocalypse, "On no day will it's gates ever be shut for there will be no night there. The glory and the honor of the nations will be brought into it." All peoples who seek Him will walk in the city's light, given by the lamp that is the lamp the Revelator says. Much like what our Psalmist writes:
They will all sing and dance;
all good things come from Jerusalem. (New Century Version)
It's a dance we've been invited to. A great big, wonderful, beautiful wedding dance. Rather than sitting at the door checking tickets we should be inside singing with the Bridegroom. Or better yet, inviting everyone we know to the party.
Grace and Peace.
In Him,
Chad
