Word of Salvation – Vol. 46 No.35 – September 2001
When Heaven Is Your Home
Sermon by Rev S Bajema
on Psalm 137
Scripture Readings: Revelation 18; Psalm 137
Congregation in our Lord Jesus Christ…
There are many Christians who have asked a lot of questions about this Psalm. Perhaps you’ve got some questions too, after having heard it now. There is one thing we cannot question about this Psalm, however – it is full of passion! This psalmist leaves us in no doubt about what he feels, and why he feels that way. A feeling, which certainly isn’t a happy one – he is sad and angry.
It’s because of his strong writing about this – a writing which is framed in a special poetic rhythm – that many today believe it doesn’t really belong in our Bibles. One theologian wrote about it, and other psalms like it, “The ideas in them, the Lord made obsolete; the temper is quite definitely unchristian. Christian lips should never utter [them] in the presence of God.”
Remember, this is what so-called Christians are saying about part of the Word of God! They cannot reconcile it to what they think Christianity should be. And so they delete it altogether! That doesn’t help, though. To simply wipe part of the Word of God is to throw doubt on all of the Word of God. If this is legitimately part of Scripture, no one can take it away. It has to stay.
Congregation, it’s actually the strong passion of the psalmist which helps us to see just how much this belongs in God’s Word. A passion that is definitely godly – as God Himself in Jesus Christ will show.
So, let’s consider the first three verses. The situation there is the Babylonian exile. The Lord’s people have been punished for their sin by being exiled to this distant foreign land. It was all like the Lord had said to His people through Moses, just before they entered the Promised Land. And how much doesn’t this psalmist miss the Promised Land! This really is a classic case of, “you don’t know what you’ve got until it’s gone!”
Congregation, in the words of our first point, this is, WHERE YOU’RE NOT AT HOME. These are the words of our first point…
WHERE YOU’RE NOT AT HOME.
Listen to his deep sadness of this song, “By the rivers of Babylon we sat and wept when we remembered Zion.” Talk about being home sick! This place didn’t look anything like Palestine. Here there were the large rivers that crossed the long flat landscape – rivers from which canals had been developed. It’s by one of those waterways that he thinks about how different this all is. A difference the verses 2 and 3 develop in showing that he can’t worship the LORD in freedom. He is told he has to sing, because that was part of what slaves did then – especially the slaves who were prisoners of war. But it can’t be in him. I mean – how can he? He is away from Jerusalem. That’s the only place for him where he can freely sing. That’s the place where the temple of the Lord is, for His people to worship Him according to His will.
We must not forget that this is a song of the old covenant. And here is a believer zealous for his God. So zealous, in fact, that he can’t forget where he ought to be. He knows that his present situation isn’t the way it’s meant to be. And he knows that it’s as a result of his people’s own disobedience. But how much he longs to be restored again – for the future promise of restoration by the LORD to come true right now! This is… WHERE YOU’RE NOT AT HOME.
Now, the first point draws in more than only the psalmist and God’s people back then. It is also very much for us today, too. So, when do you think you would not be at home because of your faith? You see, the New Testament Church has her Babylonian captivities also. While God’s people then were physically removed from being able to worship Him according to His Word, today that may happen when the Church is spiritually taken away from God’s blessing. If it was Babylon then – a mighty earthly power – what is it today when the attack is particularly spiritual?
To make it personal – have you ever been in a situation WHERE YOU’RE NOT AT HOME spiritually? How about the last time you visited the family in Holland? Perhaps you went to the church or the denomination you grew up in. It was different. Maybe it was so different that you just knew you weren’t at home.
Perhaps it was noticing that your relatives believe some strange things. You have to watch what you say because they don’t quite believe the same anymore – to some of them there’s no hell; the Bible’s not all true; the apostle Paul had a problem with women; and so on. When the minister shared his message for the day – something about loving each other despite whatever they did – and you became quite uncomfortable because the Bible does not condone all kinds of love.
When the church is unbelieving there is still punishment, too – a spiritual exile. And the faithful can’t escape its effects. It affects everyone. Then, like the psalmist, we need to be open about our position. It’s not right. And just as much as those captors in Babylon couldn’t see where the songs of Zion really belonged, so we may meet that situation too, spiritually. For WHERE YOU’RE NOT AT HOME… YOU CAN’T MAKE YOUR HOME.
Our second point. This is a place… YOU CAN’T MAKE YOUR HOME.
The verses 4 to 6 see the psalmist become quite defiant. What may be thought of as homesickness from verse 1 is something much deeper. He’s not simply missing the special presence of the LORD in Jerusalem, he can’t live without knowing that he has to go back there! This is not to say that it was against the Law to sing the psalms there in Babylon, because they were sung during the exile, and even new ones like this one were added to them.
It was the temple worship, the whole way of worshipping the LORD, which couldn’t be done anywhere but in Jerusalem. The altars, the incense, the priests with their trumpets and the music of the Levites, that couldn’t happen there.
Congregation, this was a homesickness that was also a penitence. Without realising their sins, the people of the Exile wouldn’t be going back. Then they would simply become pagans, and their fate would be the same as those of the northern kingdom who disappeared after their exile to Assyria.
When this psalmist cries out, “If I forget you, O Jerusalem, may my right hand forget its skill,” he arms himself against that temptation to forget God and so become like those whose memory has long before become obliterated. And when he cries out, “May my tongue cling to the roof of my mouth if I don’t remember you, if I don’t consider Jerusalem my highest joy,” he’s digging deep into his heart to show how high God’s place must be!
The imagery of his ability to play and his being able to sing being taken away shows how much he is zealous for the cause of the LORD. He knows that he can’t use what God has given him, to do something which God hasn’t told him to do. There can be no blessing there! YOU CAN’T MAKE IT YOUR HOME!
The temptation is still there, congregation. Just to make life a little easier we could just skirt around God’s Word a bit. Perhaps that’s in your work place. Or it could be where you play sport or pursue a hobby. It might even be in a group with other Christians.
We don’t have a Jerusalem in a physical country anymore. We don’t have to wait to get to a certain place to meet with God in the fullest possible way. He has come and done that Himself – in His Son!
Friends, we can’t make this earth our home. And we need to show that that is what we like. With the psalmist we’re focussed on the LORD – we’ve got our hand on the plough and we’re not looking back.
You see, we believe that Jesus Christ didn’t only come to be the Saviour but also to be the Lord. That’s what the early New Testament church meant with their confession to His Lordship. It meant persecution for them because it meant they were at war with the world. In Acts 7, before being stoned, Stephen confessed what he saw about the glory of God and Jesus standing at God’s right hand. (vs.55f). That same historical book says at its end about the apostle Paul, “Boldly and without hindrance he preached the kingdom of God and taught about the Lord Jesus Christ” (28:31). There was no way they were making this earth their home. In the words of Hebrews 11, they were longing for a better country – a heavenly one.
WHERE YOU’RE NOT AT HOME… YOU CAN’T MAKE IT YOUR HOME… since, in the third place… FOR YOUR HEART HAS A HOME!
Congregation, this is the part of the psalm that really does come home! And that not least of all with the reactions to it! But just think of what a reaction this is first of all! The theme begun in verse 1 has flowed through to its fullest expression here. This is where the term ‘imprecatory psalm’ is clearly illustrated. To imprecate means to call down or invoke a curse. Not terribly loving, is it? And that’s all that many think. But consider, who is being cursed? Why are they being cursed? And how are they being cursed? Then who is right there in the verses 7 and 8? There are the Edomites. They are the descendants of Esau. In other words, they’re related – extended family. You wouldn’t imagine it, though, from what they were doing when Jerusalem was conquered and carried off. What they did to Judah then was the most terrible thing.
Obadiah details that scene further. He points out how the Edomites were far from innocent bystanders. They openly boasted against Judah, they stole her wealth, they murdered her refugees, and they handed over the survivors. Their treachery stank to the highest heaven! The psalmist knows that He in heaven will judge that. He trusts Him for that. All His enemies will be completely destroyed. I mean, where are Edom and her citizens now?
This is how the psalmist comes to Babylon herself. The title, ‘Daughter of Babylon,’ is simply the Hebrew way of saying, ‘the people of Babylon.’ A people who are doomed to destruction. That’s the word of the LORD also confirmed in Isaiah 13. While the Babylonians had been the LORD’s arm of punishment to His covenant people, she herself would be judged for her atrocities.
The punishment upon Babylon takes the form of a blessing on the one who pays her back for all she has done. And the psalmist already knew who that would be. It will be someone called ‘the messiah’ – a man anointed by God Himself to execute both His judgment and restore His people. We think naturally of THE messiah – the Lord Jesus Christ. But Isaiah prefigures the Saviour’s work by describing Cyrus, king of the Medes, as a messiah (Is.45:1-17). It is Cyrus who is happy, which means being blessed.
There is, though, an anomaly at the end of this psalm. For while we can see this is a prophecy against those who set themselves up against the Lord God and His people, it doesn’t seem to have been literally fulfilled with the Babylonians. Cyrus conquered them with little bloodshed. He even continued Babylon as a kind of second capital. Eventually it declined in importance, until it was abandoned altogether. But you couldn’t say that it was punished in such a way as, say, Sodom was.
This is where the psalm very much applies to us today. You see, Babylon is pictured in Scripture as a reflection of the anti-God spirit which God will ultimately wipe out in the ‘Day of the Lord’. That was clearly shown in Revelation 18. Because it’s not that we’ll be taking vengeance into our own hands. Just as Cyrus was the LORD’s anointed, executing the LORD’s vengeance (Jer.50:15,25; 51:10,56), so Jesus, the true Messiah, will judge the world in righteousness. What Babylon had done when it had annihilated other nations, including such crimes as dashing the babies on the rocks, will be repaid – whether it was done physically or spiritually!
We cannot sit comfortably with the evil of this world… YOUR HEART HAS A HOME! We pray for the Lord’s righteous rule. So why should we be surprised that it will come true? There’s a battle out there – and in here! The battle which is the good fight of faith.
Congregation, in the words of Cornelius van der Waal, “Psalm 137 is not ‘below the level of the New Testament. It would be more accurate to say that the New Testament continues the lines begun in the Old Testament – including the line of thought in Psalm 137.” The prayer of Psalm 35, “Contend, O LORD, with those who contend with me,” is our prayer today, too. YOUR HEART HAS A HOME… and that’s where’re you’re going – home!
This makes sense of those imprecatory psalms. David’s words in Psalm 139, “Do I not hate those who hate you, O LORD,” are our words, too. For while the struggle may not be physical anymore, like the church at Ephesus in Revelation 2, we must hate false doctrine and all which is set against the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ. You’ll find that throughout the New Testament. But will it be found throughout you? Can it be said of you that YOUR HEART HAS A HOME?
Then you know that you’re on the way home! Then you can say the phrase the Jews use, when they say goodbye. They say, “Next year – Jerusalem.” And next year, or next month, or next week, you could well be in Jerusalem – the heavenly city!
Amen.