Connect360: Rescued From the Pit
- Lesson Two in the Connect360 unit “Psalms: The Believer’s Prayer Book” focuses on Psalm 30:1–12
It is noteworthy the psalm does not open with a description of the situation.
It begins with a declaration of the goodness of God, “I will exalt you,” highlighting how the story ended before describing how it began.
Nowhere does the psalmist describe the desperate situation that lies behind this passage, but we can infer it was a matter of life and death.
The opening section uses words such as “depths,” “realm of the dead,” and “pits” to suggest the situation was both desperate and deadly.
Throughout the Old Testament, the word pit is used to describe a well, an empty cistern, or even a place of the dead.
Verse one represents God’s response to the psalmist’s cry, not as an instantaneous delivering act, but as a process of being lifted out.
Often our expectation of God is instant gratification and instant deliverance: “God, hear me and get me out now!”
In contrast, we must understand God can and often does deliver by reversing the process that led to our desperation.
If the psalmist was lowered into a well or cistern, like Joseph (Genesis 37:24) or Jeremiah (Jeremiah 38:6), one would expect his deliverance would come by reversing this process.
God would send someone to lower a rope, and he would be lifted out of the same cistern into which he was lowered.
For the psalmist, the lesson is clear: When I was lowered down to the pit, God delivered me from the pit by lifting me out.
The passage shifts from a personal call to exalt the Lord to a corporate call.
Verse four is a call to people who have pledged their faithfulness to God.
Verse one opens with an individual who has had a personal life-or-death encounter and was delivered by the power of God.
Verse four is an expansive call to everyone who has experienced a similar event.
Finally, after the psalmist cried out to God, God heard and responded.
The response came in the form of God lowering a rope from heaven to the bottom of the pit, and suddenly darkness and stale air were replaced by sunshine and a cool breeze.
Once on the soft but firm ground, the psalmist, who was at the threshold of death, found the strength to dance and praise God.
God’s ability to transform death into life, sorrow into joy, and pain into healing is also seen in his ability to transform wailing into dancing.
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