Consumer reviews, they’ve become a pretty big deal in today’s world. Someone else’s experience with something we’re interested in is often the first thing we’ll check out. There’s a place to find reviews for almost every imaginable product or service. Whether it’s Google or Yelp, Amazon or Tripadvisor, we go there looking for stars, ideally 5 stars. “How many stars?” is what we want to know, ’cause it’s a solid predictor of customer satisfaction or product quality. The more stars, the better. 5 Stars and you’re feeling pretty good that the service, product, or business is top-tier and that taking a chance on it is a prudent choice. This morning I’m chewing on a divine 5-star rating.
Your promise is well tried,
and Your servant loves it. (Psalm 119:140 ESV)
Well tried . . . those are the words that caught my attention.
Literally, it’s well refined. Well smelted. Thus, well tested. And something that is well refined is something that’s pure. Hence, why some translations render this, Your promise is very pure.
But the ESV’s rendering struck me this morning less as a quality review and more as a dependability review. The songwriter had tested God’s promise again and again, it was well tried, and he loved it! 5-stars!
You journey through Psalm 119 and, while the focus is the word of God, it tells the story of how the Word proved itself over and over as the psalmist faced enemies and trials and his own testing. So much so, that even when “trouble and anguish had found me out” the word of God was still his delight (v.143), “righteous forever” and the way of life (v. 144). God’s promise was well tried.
Able to be well tried because it is our “go to” repeatedly. For example, experiencing “the peace of God which surpasses all understanding” (Php. 4:6-7) isn’t a one-and-done thing. No, that’s a promise that is well tried in every storm and amidst clouds of confusion and waves of worry. Every time we experience storms, cloulds, and waves we can know the provision of supernatural, circumstance-transcending peace — again and again, over and over. That’s a promise which is well tried. And I love it! 5-stars.
The promise of mercies new every morning (Lam.3:22-23) is a heads up that we are going to enter seasons when we need mercies new every morning, when we need to experience God’s never-ceasing faithfulness and steadfast love. Persistent “thorns in the flesh” are going to try the assurance that His grace really is sufficient and that His power really is “made perfect” in our weakness (2Cor. 12:9). And they’ll require us to go to that promise over and over, again and again. So that, we too, can bear witness, Your promise is well tried and Your servant loves it!
5 stars!
By His grace. For His glory.
