Welcome to Day 2808 of Wisdom-Trek. Thank you for joining me.
This is Guthrie Chamberlain, Your Guide to Wisdom.
Day 2808 – Wisdom Nuggets – Psalm 116:15">17:1-2 – Daily Wisdom
Wisdom-Trek Podcast Script – Day 2808
Welcome to Wisdom-Trek with Gramps! I am Guthrie Chamberlain, and we are on Day two thousand eight hundred eight of our Trek. The Purpose of Wisdom-Trek is to create a legacy of wisdom, to seek out discernment and insights, and to boldly grow where few have chosen to grow before.
The Title for Today’s Wisdom-Trek is: The Shortest Song with the Largest Stage – Calling the Nations Home
Today, we are undertaking a fascinating and entirely unique stage of our journey. We are stepping into the absolute center of the Bible to explore Psalm One Hundred Seventeen, covering its entirety—which is just verses one through two, in the New Living Translation.
This is a milestone for a couple of reasons. First, Psalm One Hundred Seventeen holds the distinct title of being the shortest chapter in the entire Bible. It consists of only two verses and, in the original Hebrew, a mere seventeen words. Second, it is widely considered the middle chapter of the Protestant Bible.
But do not let its brevity fool you. What this psalm lacks in word count, it makes up for in cosmic, earth-shaking theology.
In our previous trek through Psalm One Hundred Sixteen, we listened to an intensely personal, intimate testimony. We heard the voice of a single, desperate individual who had been wrapped in the terrifying cords of death. We saw Yahweh, the Most High God, stoop down from heaven to listen to one man’s whispered cry for help. It was a beautiful picture of individual salvation, ending with the psalmist paying his vows in the temple courts of Jerusalem.
Today, the camera pans out. We move from the microscopic to the macroscopic. The single voice of the rescued individual in Psalm One Hundred Sixteen suddenly turns into a megaphone, broadcasting a summons to the entire planet.
Psalm One Hundred Seventeen is still part of the “Egyptian Hallel,” the songs sung during the Passover festival. But here, the focus breaks completely out of the borders of Israel. It is a trumpet blast directed at the pagan world. It is a declaration of cosmic warfare, and a radical invitation of grace.
So, let us unpack these two massive, monumental verses together.
The First Segment is: The Cosmic Summons: Reclaiming the Disinherited.
Psalm One Hundred Seventeen: verse one.
Praise the Lord, all you nations. Praise him, all you people of the earth.
The psalm explodes right out of the gate with a command: “Praise the Lord, all you nations.”
To modern ears, this sounds like a standard, generic call to worship. But to the Ancient Israelite, singing this in the courts of the temple, this was a jaw-dropping, radical statement. It requires us to look through the lens of the Ancient Israelite Divine Council worldview, as taught by scholars like Dr. Michael S. Heiser.
We must go all the way back to Genesis Chapter Eleven and the Tower of Babel. At Babel, humanity rebelled against Yahweh, refusing to spread out and fill the earth. In response, God judged the nations. But He didn’t just confuse their languages; He disinherited them. According to Deuteronomy Chapter Thirty-two, verses eight through nine, God divided the nations and placed them under the authority of lesser spiritual beings—the “sons of God,” or the divine council.
Yahweh then stepped back and started over with one man, Abraham, to create His own special portion: Israel. From that moment on, the “nations” (the goyim) were viewed as foreign territory. They were under the jurisdiction of rebel gods, hostile principalities, and dark spiritual forces. They worshipped idols of wood and stone, which we saw mocked so thoroughly back in Psalm One Hundred Fifteen.
So, when the psalmist stands up and shouts, “Praise Yahweh, all you nations!” he is doing something incredibly audacious. He is crossing enemy lines.
He is essentially serving an eviction notice to the rebel gods. He is looking at the people of Egypt, Babylon, Philistia, and Assyria, and he is saying, “Your gods have failed you. They are dead. The time of your exile from the Creator is coming to an end. Yahweh is calling you back!”
The parallel phrase, “Praise him, all you people of the earth,” uses the Hebrew word ummim, which refers to tribes, clans, and people groups. The psalmist leaves no one out. The invitation is universal. God is not content to simply be the local deity of a small strip of land in the Middle East. He is the Maker of Heaven and Earth, and He demands, and invites, the adoration of every human being on the planet.
This is why the Apostle Paul quotes this exact verse in Romans Chapter Fifteen, verse eleven. Paul uses Psalm One Hundred Seventeen to prove to the early church that the inclusion of the Gentiles—the non-Jewish people—was not a New Testament “Plan B.” It was God’s plan all along. The ultimate goal of choosing Israel was to create a beacon of light that would eventually draw all the disinherited nations back into the family of God.
The Second Segment is: The Gravity of Grace: Why the Nations Should Sing.
Psalm One Hundred Seventeen: verse two.
For his unfailing love for us is powerful; the Lord’s faithfulness endures forever. Praise the Lord!
If verse one is the Command, verse two provides the Reason. Why should the pagan nations, who have spent centuries worshipping other gods, suddenly turn and praise Yahweh?
The psalmist gives two reasons, rooted in two of the most important words in the Hebrew Bible: Unfailing Love (Hesed) and Faithfulness (Emet).
Let us look closely at the first phrase: “For his unfailing love for us is powerful.”
Hesed is God’s loyal, covenant-keeping, relentless love. But notice the direction of this love. The psalmist says His love for “us” is powerful. “Us” refers to Israel.
This raises a fascinating question. Why should the nations praise God for the love He showed to Israel? If you are a Babylonian, why do you care that God loves the Jewish people?
The answer lies in the promise given to Abraham in Genesis Chapter Twelve: “I will bless you… and all the families on earth will be blessed through you.”
Israel was never meant to be a reservoir of God’s grace; they were meant to be a river. God’s Hesed toward Israel—rescuing them from Egypt, giving them the law, protecting them from enemies, and bearing patiently with their constant rebellion—was the vehicle through which salvation would reach the rest of the world.
When the nations look at how Yahweh treated Israel, they see a God who keeps His promises. They see a God who does not annihilate His people when they mess up. And they realize, “If this God is that intensely loyal and loving to Israel, maybe there is hope for us, too. Maybe we can be grafted into that same covenant.”
Furthermore, the word translated as “powerful” (gabar) is an incredibly muscular word. It means to prevail, to be mighty, or to overwhelm. It is the same word used in the story of Noah’s Ark, when the floodwaters “prevailed” over the tops of the highest mountains.
The psalmist is saying that God’s unfailing love is a flood. It cannot be contained by the borders of Israel. It prevails over human sin. It prevails over the rebellious spiritual principalities of the Divine Council. It overtops the highest mountains of human resistance, and spills out to cover the entire globe.
The Third Segment is: The Eternal Echo: Truth That Outlasts Time.
The second half of the reason is just as anchoring: “…the Lord’s faithfulness endures forever.”
The word for faithfulness is Emet, which means truth, reliability, and stability. In a world governed by chaotic pagan gods who were unpredictable, petty, and easily angered, the concept of a God whose truth “endures forever” was revolutionary.
The gods of the nations rose and fell with their empires. Where is Marduk today? Where is Baal? They are buried in the dust of history, remembered only in museums and archaeological digs. But the faithfulness of Yahweh remains. His truth does not have an expiration date.
Because His love is overwhelmingly powerful, and His truth is eternally stable, the nations have a solid rock upon which to stand. They are invited to leave the shifting sands of the world’s chaos, and step into the eternal security of the Creator’s household.
The psalm concludes with the great bookend of the Hallel: “Praise the Lord!” Or, Hallelujah!
When Jesus sang this psalm with His disciples on the night of the Last Supper, He knew exactly what He was about to do. He was about to walk to the cross to demonstrate the ultimate, prevailing power of God’s Hesed. He was not just dying for the sins of Israel; He was offering Himself to reclaim the scattered, disinherited nations of the world. He was purchasing the right to call every tribe, every language, and every people group back home.
Psalm One Hundred Seventeen may be the shortest chapter in the Bible, but it is the hinge upon which all of human history turns.
It teaches us that God’s vision is always bigger than our own. While we are often focused on our own personal survival—like the psalmist in Psalm One Hundred Sixteen—God is working through our deliverance to send a message to the entire world.
It reminds us that there is no one outside the reach of God’s prevailing love. The invitation is extended to all nations and all peoples.
As you walk your trek today, remember that you are a living fulfillment of this two-verse song. If you are not of Jewish descent, you are part of the “nations.” You are one of the people groups that Yahweh called back from the darkness. You have been grafted into the family because His unfailing love prevailed over your life.
So, take this short, powerful truth with you today. Let your life be a broadcast of God’s faithfulness. Live with such immense gratitude, and such unshakeable joy, that the people around you—no matter their background—cannot help but join the chorus and praise the Lord.
If you found this podcast insightful, please subscribe and leave us a review, then encourage your friends and family to join us and come along tomorrow for another day of, ‘Wisdom-Trek, Creating a Legacy.’
Thank you so much for allowing me to be your guide, mentor, and, most importantly, I am your friend as I serve you through this Wisdom-Trek podcast and journal. As we take this Trek of life together, let us always: Liv Abundantly. Love Unconditionally. Listen Intentionally. Learn Continuously. Lend to others Generously. Lead with Integrity. Leave a Living Legacy Each Day.
I am Guthrie Chamberlain, reminding you to’ Keep Moving Forward,’ ‘Enjoy your Journey,’ and ‘Create a Great Day…Everyday! See you next time for more daily wisdom!
Transcript
Welcome to Day 2808 of Wisdom-Trek. Thank you for joining me.
This is Guthrie Chamberlain, Your Guide to Wisdom.
Day 2808 – Wisdom Nuggets – Psalm 117:1-2 – Daily Wisdom
Wisdom-Trek Podcast Script - Day 2808
Welcome to Wisdom-Trek with Gramps! I am Guthrie Chamberlain, and we are on Day two thousand eight hundred eight of our Trek. The Purpose of Wisdom-Trek is to create a legacy of wisdom, to seek out discernment and insights, and to boldly grow where few have chosen to grow before.
The Title for Today’s Wisdom-Trek is: The Shortest Song with the Largest Stage – Calling the Nations Home
Today, we are undertaking a fascinating and entirely unique stage of our journey. We are stepping into the absolute center of the Bible to explore Psalm One Hundred Seventeen, covering its entirety—which is just verses one through two, in the New Living Translation.
This is a milestone for a couple of reasons. First, Psalm One Hundred Seventeen holds the distinct title of being the shortest chapter in the entire Bible. It consists of only two verses and, in the original Hebrew, a mere seventeen words. Second, it is widely considered the middle chapter of the Protestant Bible.
But do not let its brevity fool you. What this psalm lacks in word count, it makes up for in cosmic, earth-shaking theology.
In our previous trek through Psalm One Hundred Sixteen, we listened to an intensely personal, intimate testimony. We heard the voice of a single, desperate individual who had been wrapped in the terrifying cords of death. We saw Yahweh, the Most High God, stoop down from heaven to listen to one man's whispered cry for help. It was a beautiful picture of individual salvation, ending with the psalmist paying his vows in the temple courts of Jerusalem.
Today, the camera pans out. We move from the microscopic to the macroscopic. The single voice of the rescued individual in Psalm One Hundred Sixteen suddenly turns into a megaphone, broadcasting a summons to the entire planet.
Psalm One Hundred Seventeen is still part of the "Egyptian Hallel," the songs sung during the Passover festival. But here, the focus breaks completely out of the borders of Israel. It is a trumpet blast directed at the pagan world. It is a declaration of cosmic warfare, and a radical invitation of grace.
So, let us unpack these two massive, monumental verses together.
The First Segment is: The Cosmic Summons: Reclaiming the Disinherited.
Psalm One Hundred Seventeen: verse one.
Praise the Lord, all you nations. Praise him, all you people of the earth.
The psalm explodes right out of the gate with a command: "Praise the Lord, all you nations."
To modern ears, this sounds like a standard, generic call to worship. But to the Ancient Israelite, singing this in the courts of the temple, this was a jaw-dropping, radical statement. It requires us to look through the lens of the Ancient Israelite Divine Council worldview, as taught by scholars like Dr. Michael S. Heiser.
We must go all the way back to Genesis Chapter Eleven and the Tower of Babel. At Babel, humanity rebelled against Yahweh, refusing to spread out and fill the earth. In response, God judged the nations. But He didn't just confuse their languages; He disinherited them. According to Deuteronomy Chapter Thirty-two, verses eight through nine, God divided the nations and placed them under the authority of lesser spiritual beings—the "sons of God," or the divine council.
Yahweh then stepped back and started over with one man, Abraham, to create His own special portion: Israel. From that moment on, the "nations" (the goyim) were viewed as foreign territory. They were under the jurisdiction of rebel gods, hostile principalities, and dark spiritual forces. They worshipped idols of wood and stone, which we saw mocked so thoroughly back in Psalm One Hundred Fifteen.
So, when the psalmist stands up and shouts, "Praise Yahweh, all you nations!" he is doing something incredibly audacious. He is crossing enemy lines.
He is essentially serving an eviction notice to the rebel gods. He is looking at the people of Egypt, Babylon, Philistia, and Assyria, and he is saying, "Your gods have failed you. They are dead. The time of your exile from the Creator is coming to an end. Yahweh is calling you back!"
The parallel phrase, "Praise him, all you people of the earth," uses the Hebrew word ummim, which refers to tribes, clans, and people groups. The psalmist leaves no one out. The invitation is universal. God is not content to simply be the local deity of a small strip of land in the Middle East. He is the Maker of Heaven and Earth, and He demands, and invites, the adoration of every human being on the planet.
This is why the Apostle Paul quotes this exact verse in Romans Chapter Fifteen, verse eleven. Paul uses Psalm One Hundred Seventeen to prove to the early church that the inclusion of the Gentiles—the non-Jewish people—was not a New Testament "Plan B." It was God's plan all along. The ultimate goal of choosing Israel was to create a beacon of light that would eventually draw all the disinherited nations back into the family of God.
The Second Segment is: The Gravity of Grace: Why the Nations Should Sing.
Psalm One Hundred Seventeen: verse two.
For his unfailing love for us is powerful; the Lord’s faithfulness endures forever. Praise the Lord!
If verse one is the Command, verse two provides the Reason. Why should the pagan nations, who have spent centuries worshipping other gods, suddenly turn and praise Yahweh?
The psalmist gives two reasons, rooted in two of the most important words in the Hebrew Bible: Unfailing Love (Hesed) and Faithfulness (Emet).
Let us look closely at the first phrase: "For his unfailing love for us is powerful."
Hesed is God's loyal, covenant-keeping, relentless love. But notice the direction of this love. The psalmist says His love for "us" is powerful. "Us" refers to Israel.
This raises a fascinating question. Why should the nations praise God for the love He showed to Israel? If you are a Babylonian, why do you care that God loves the Jewish people?
The answer lies in the promise given to Abraham in Genesis Chapter Twelve: "I will bless you... and all the families on earth will be blessed through you."
Israel was never meant to be a reservoir of God's grace; they were meant to be a river. God's Hesed toward Israel—rescuing them from Egypt, giving them the law, protecting them from enemies, and bearing patiently with their constant rebellion—was the vehicle through which salvation would reach the rest of the world.
When the nations look at how Yahweh treated Israel, they see a God who keeps His promises. They see a God who does not annihilate His people when they mess up. And they realize, "If this God is that intensely loyal and loving to Israel, maybe there is hope for us, too. Maybe we can be grafted into that same covenant."
Furthermore, the word translated as "powerful" (gabar) is an incredibly muscular word. It means to prevail, to be mighty, or to overwhelm. It is the same word used in the story of Noah's Ark, when the floodwaters "prevailed" over the tops of the highest mountains.
The psalmist is saying that God's unfailing love is a flood. It cannot be contained by the borders of Israel. It prevails over human sin. It prevails over the rebellious spiritual principalities of the Divine Council. It overtops the highest mountains of human resistance, and spills out to cover the entire globe.
The Third Segment is: The Eternal Echo: Truth That Outlasts Time.
The second half of the reason is just as anchoring: "...the Lord’s faithfulness endures forever."
The word for faithfulness is Emet, which means truth, reliability, and stability. In a world governed by chaotic pagan gods who were unpredictable, petty, and easily angered, the concept of a God whose truth "endures forever" was revolutionary.
The gods of the nations rose and fell with their empires. Where is Marduk today? Where is Baal? They are buried in the dust of history, remembered only in museums and archaeological digs. But the faithfulness of Yahweh remains. His truth does not have an expiration date.
Because His love is overwhelmingly powerful, and His truth is eternally stable, the nations have a solid rock upon which to stand. They are invited to leave the shifting sands of the world's chaos, and step into the eternal security of the Creator's household.
The psalm concludes with the great bookend of the Hallel: "Praise the Lord!" Or, Hallelujah!
When Jesus sang this psalm with His disciples on the night of the Last Supper, He knew exactly what He was about to do. He was about to walk to the cross to demonstrate the ultimate, prevailing power of God's Hesed. He was not just dying for the sins of Israel; He was offering Himself to reclaim the scattered, disinherited nations of the world. He was purchasing the right to call every tribe, every language, and every people group back home.
Psalm One Hundred Seventeen may be the shortest chapter in the Bible, but it is the hinge upon which all of human history turns.
It teaches us that God’s vision is always bigger than our own. While we are often focused on our own personal survival—like the psalmist in Psalm One Hundred Sixteen—God is working through our deliverance to send a message to the entire world.
It reminds us that there is no one outside the reach of God's prevailing love. The invitation is extended to all nations and all peoples.
As you walk your trek today, remember that you are a living fulfillment of this two-verse song. If you are not of Jewish descent, you are part of the "nations." You are one of the people groups that Yahweh called back from the darkness. You have been grafted into the family because His unfailing love prevailed over your life.
So, take this short, powerful truth with you today. Let your life be a broadcast of God's faithfulness. Live with such immense gratitude, and such unshakeable joy, that the people around you—no matter their background—cannot help but join the chorus and praise the Lord.
If you found this podcast insightful, please subscribe and leave us a review, then encourage your friends and family to join us and come along tomorrow for another day of, ‘Wisdom-Trek, Creating a Legacy.’
Thank you so much for allowing me to be your guide, mentor, and, most importantly, I am your friend as I serve you through this Wisdom-Trek podcast and journal. As we take this Trek of life together, let us always: Liv Abundantly. Love Unconditionally. Listen Intentionally. Learn Continuously. Lend to others Generously. Lead with Integrity. Leave a Living Legacy Each Day.
I am Guthrie Chamberlain, reminding you to’ Keep Moving Forward,’ ‘Enjoy your Journey,’ and ‘Create a Great Day…Everyday! See you next time for more daily wisdom!
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