Together, we have faith

June 19, 2026
Christ In The Psalms
Psalm 36:5–9 — Celebrating the Covenant Love of God
Psalm 36:5-9
“Your steadfast love, O LORD, extends to the heavens,
your faithfulness to the clouds.
Your righteousness is like the mountains of God;
your judgments are like the great deep;
man and beast you save, O LORD.
How precious is your steadfast love, O God!
The children of mankind take refuge in the shadow of your wings.
They feast on the abundance of your house,
and you give them drink from the river of your delights.
For with you is the fountain of life;
in your light do we see light.”
“With a confidence that we have mostly lost since the so-called “Enlightenment,” the church fathers, medieval theologians, and Reformers explicitly connected this language of old covenant temple, of light, and of waters of life to Christ and also to the Holy Spirit. The delights here celebrated, anticipated in the garden in Eden, foreshadowed in the old covenant temple, and fulfilled in the incarnation, atoning death, and resurrection of Christ will be consummated at the end of the age when Jesus returns.” (C. Ash)
Psalm 36:5–9 — celebrating the covenant love of God. In contrast to, and because of, the total depravity and sinfulness of humankind, we now turn to the faithful, lasting, eternal and expansive covenant love (the “hesed”) of God. These verses suggest “that the Noahic covenant (Gen. 9) is at least partly in view. Life exists and is preserved on earth only because God is a God of covenantal faithfulness and love.” “However great the depth of wickedness which there is among men,” writes Calvin—noting the context of Psalm 36:1–4—“and though it seems like a flood which breaks forth and overflows the whole earth, yet still greater is the depth of God’s providence, by which he righteously disposes and governs all things. . . . His faithfulness signifies his utter reliability (cf. 33:4). Then there is his righteousness (cf. 33:5), by which he consistently does right and grants a status of righteousness to his King and the King’s believing people. His judgments are his decisions, both decisions against wrongdoers and judgments given for his King and people.” (Ash) Note the expansiveness of God’s covenantal love and power and grace. Ash again says “also, in the light of the strongly Davidic covenantal context, we marvel that there is no “no-go zone” in the inhabited world in which the mercies of God offered to us in Christ are not available to the one who seeks them and sure to those who find them (cf. Eph. 3:18–19). It is these covenantal mercies in Christ that come more clearly into view in Psalm 36:7–9.”
Song for Today —
“The love of God is greater far
than tongue or pen can ever tell;
it goes beyond the highest star,
and reaches to the lowest hell;
the guilty pair, bowed down with care,
God gave His Son to win;
His erring child He reconciled,
and pardoned from his sin.
Refrain:
O love of God, how rich and pure!
How measureless and strong!
It shall forevermore endure:
the saints’ and angels’ song!
2 When years of time shall pass away
and earthly thrones and kingdoms fall,
when men who here refuse to pray,
on rocks and hills and mountains call,
God’s love so pure shall still endure,
all measureless and strong;
redeeming grace to Adam's race—
the saints’ and angels’ song. [Refrain]
3 Could we with ink the ocean fill
and were the skies of parchment made,
were ev’ry stalk on earth a quill
and ev’ry man a scribe by trade,
to write the love of God above
would drain the ocean dry;
nor could the scroll contain the whole,
tho' stretched from sky to sky. [Refrain]”
(Frederick Lehman, 1917)


