Psalm
5:1-2
For
the music leaders. For the flutes.
A Psalm of David.
Hear my words, Lord.
Consider my groans.
Pay attention to the sound of my
cries,
my king and my God,
Because I am praying to you. – Common English Bible
\
A loose translation
might be...
“Pay attention God! I’m talking to
you!
Oh great king…LISTEN to MY voice!”
Seriously, David!?! Get over yourself!
Don’t
get me wrong, David, King of Israel…slayer of giants, is one of my favorite
characters in the Bible… has been since I fell in love with him as a young
girl. He ran neck-and- neck with Jesus Christ
himself for a few years, I’m slightly ashamed to admit, because…well, let’s
face it…Jesus was Divine…Son of God…perfect, sinless, blameless, etc…and David
was human.
I could relate to David.
Besides,
what’s not to like…handsome, athletic, talented musician, rich young ruler, heart
for God…every female church-nerd’s dream! And confidence is always attractive –
going up before a giant with a slingshot, alone…that’s borderline arrogant,
perhaps, but we’re told it was because of his faith in God, and we women are
suckers for le grand geste.
My
youthful self always pictured him as the epitome of male beauty. Not that
smoldering, tall, dark, handsome, dangerous kind some girls go for...but the
clean cut, dependable, unlikely hero type.
When we’re first introduced the Biblical narrative says: “Now he was ruddy and had beautiful eyes
and was handsome.” (Sigh!) Come on! Even Michelangelo was a fan!
And
being short of stature myself, David circa
Goliath became an icon of ‘little but mighty.’ In college, while I was editing
the student newspaper, our cartoonist, a genuinely gentle giant, drew a frame
of David standing between the upturned soles of defeated Goliath’s sandals (the Biblical hero looking suspiciously
like cartoons he’d previously done of me, from the back) with the caption, “For
all the reasons you want to be taller.”
It was during a period of great strife between the paper and the
school’s administration; and the sketch, which ran on our front page without
further comment and therefore sailed quite over-the-heads of said
administration, and then hung above my desk; warmed my heart…and won the
Collegiate Press Association’s award that year! But I digress…
So
David is a long time interest for me. I studied everything I could about him
during my adolescent crush with the Old Testament hottie. Yes, you may be sad
for me, no Davey Jones, or David Cassidy on MY bedroom walls…but if the Bible
Bookstore had carried posters of Jesse’s shepherd son…they would have had a
customer. In the interest of FULL disclosure, there were other, live,
present-day idols who caught my eye…but this thing was David was pretty heavy. I
remember a heated discussion with my clergyman father about why the book of
Samuel didn’t contain more about David and Jonathan’s friendship or David’s
romance with Princess Michael. And, God rest his soul, the poor man fielded
more than a few of his teenaged daughter’s questions about what… for a long
time in our house was referred to mysteriously as “that business with
Bathsheba”. I vacillated between serious disappointment in my clay-footed hero’s
carnal weakness, and contempt for some roof-top bathing temptress without the
modesty to keep her clothes on when she clearly HAD to know that His Majesty
could see her, a married woman, from his palace window!
Yes…Davey boy and I have history….we go waaaay back!
And
so something has bugged me a little, especially in the last several months, as
I read my (nearly) daily office. I often
feel like Ole King David is a bit of a drama queen…eh… monarch anyway!
Let’s
face it, in a large portion of the Psalms, he’s asking for God to bring
vengeance down on his enemies in some pretty frightful ways: everything from
your garden variety “smite them on the cheek bone” to head crushing! And when
that isn’t the content, David can come off as kind of a whiner. Sure, Saul spent most of his own reign trying
to kill the boy who’d saved his bacon out there on the battlefield with the
Philistines, but come on, fellow… give the lamenting a rest! Don’t you ever get
the idea that God has heard it ENOUGH? And I’ve got to admit that my adult
reading of the poetry of my beloved teenage heart-throb can occasionally give
new meaning to the words narcissistic, self-centered, and self-absorbed. If these
were excerpts from his prayer diary, I’d dismiss that feeling immediately,
protesting right along with the cranky Poet King at the outrageous lack of
privacy given to religious celebrities! Agreeing wholeheartedly with the
pontifical tradition of burning the pope’s journals after his death, to avoid
voyeuristic speculation, like poor Mother Teresa suffered when hers went
public! The man is speaking to his creator here…perhaps we shouldn’t listen-in.
It just isn’t cricket!
But
many of the Psalms of David are addressed
to the palace choirmasters, with musical notations for public performance! Clearly, he wanted them to be heard!
So
David may have been the first of the “put it all out there” poets, baring his
soul for his art and the audience. And
as I read, day after day, how he complained, and cried…how he begged for divine
retribution…and how sometimes, like in Psalm 5, he DEMANDS of God… I’m puzzled,
to say the least.
Oh
there is glorious poetry in them. Nobody can speak of the majesty of God’s
creation, the height and the breadth of God’s love…nobody can pen “Come on all
you people, let’s praise the Lord!” like the Psalmist David! And the imagery,
the heart tugging beauty of the phrases, perfection of expression… it’s all
there. And sets itself easily to music!
However,
it still occurs to me, from time to time, that David pushes and pulls at his
God…crying, wailing, be-moaning his plight…and even to the point of calling out
“Hey! PAY ATTENTION TO ME!” to the High King of Kings, the Creator of the
Universe. He basically has a temper tantrum!
…and
you know what?
God
does pay attention.
God
shows up, despite all those “where are you God, why have you forsaken me”
psalms. He’s there, listening to the gut-wrenching fears, to the numerous
confessions of failure, to the perhaps pompous proclamations…for ALL of it…God
is right there…listening…to every word…every note of the poet David’s
beautiful, baffling, bipolar offering. Even after Bathsheba!
Why?
Because, as God said of him: David was a man after His own heart...who
shared His desires.
God
loved him. And that…was that.
So
I continue to read the Psalms, because there’s no better way to rail at the
injustice, to whine about the loneliness, to complain about our enemies. And
though sometimes I laugh, or roll my eyes, or wish my long-time hero would
“take it down a notch” (some days they actually make me cringe, “How do you talk to the Creator of
Everything like that!?”) …David got it right! At least right enough that
after everything, an affair, betrayal, killings, wardrobe malfunctions…God
declared that David was a man that He loved. Unconditionally loved.
And so, I pray that something like that might
be said about me…despite my lack of faith, my cries, my failures. And so…I continue to read David’s Psalms.

Hey! These are very much my thoughts too on the Psalms and King David. Great post, funny, honest, and beautiful.
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