Prepare to Teach

Psalms 25:1–7

David lifts His soul to God, seeking guidance in truth and the forgiveness of past sins according to God's unfailing love.

Scripture Text

25:1 To You, Yahweh, I lift up my soul.

25:2 My God, I have trusted in You. Don’t let me be shamed. Don’t let my enemies triumph over me.

25:3 Yes, no one who waits for You will be shamed. They will be shamed who deal treacherously without cause.

25:4 Show me Your ways, Yahweh. Teach me Your paths.

25:5 Guide me in Your truth, and teach me, For You are the God of my salvation, I wait for You all day long.

25:6 Yahweh, remember Your tender mercies and Your loving kindness, for they are from old times.

25:7 Don’t remember the sins of my youth, nor my transgressions. Remember me according to Your loving kindness, for Your goodness’ sake, Yahweh.

Anchor

David lifts His soul to God, seeking guidance in truth and the forgiveness of past sins according to God's unfailing love.

A life of faith requires the intentional lifting of the soul to God, seeking His paths for current direction while relying on His gracious refusal to remember past transgressions.

Point of Contact

To present a comprehensive plea for divine guidance and the forgiveness of past sins, grounding the psalmist's hope in God's eternal character of mercy and love. A life of faith requires the intentional lifting of the soul to God, seeking His paths for current direction while relying on His gracious refusal to remember past transgressions.

Rhythm
  1. 25:1-3
  2. 25:4-5
  3. 25:6-7
  4. 25:8-11
  5. 25:12-15
  6. 25:16-21
  7. 25:22
Crucial Turning Point

Psalm 25 moves from trust under threat, to prayer for guidance, to appeal for mercy over remembered sin, to covenant instruction for the humble, to renewed pleas for pardon and rescue, and finally to Israel's redemption.

Psalm 25 argues that the Lord's covenant people can seek guidance, mercy, pardon, and deliverance because the Lord's own character is good, upright, merciful, loving, and faithful. The worshiper does not deny sin or danger; He brings both to the Lord, whose name is the ground of pardon and whose covenant faithfulness is the path for the humble who fear Him.

Theological logic
  1. The soul must be lifted to the LORD because shame, enemies, and treachery cannot be answered by self-trust.
  2. The LORD's salvation includes instruction; those who wait for Him must ask to know and walk in His ways.
  3. The sinner's hope rests in God's remembered mercy and covenant love, not in the worshiper's clean record.
  4. Because the LORD is good and upright, He does not abandon sinners to ignorance but instructs and guides the humble.
  5. The LORD's paths are covenant love and faithfulness for those who keep His covenant and testimonies.
  6. Forgiveness is sought for the sake of the LORD's name, even when guilt is great.
  7. The fear of the LORD produces teachability, covenant counsel, and watchful dependence for rescue.
  8. Affliction, loneliness, sin, and enemy hatred must be brought together under God's merciful attention and preserving grace.
  9. The LORD's saving work is not only individual relief but the redemption of His covenant people from all trouble.
Canonical Thread
  • : Moses' plea to know the Lord's ways and the Lord's revelation of mercy, compassion, and covenant love provide strong covenant background for Psalm 25's prayers for guidance and mercy.
  • : Deuteronomy's call to fear the Lord, walk in His ways, and keep His commands stands behind Psalm 25's covenant-shaped fear, instruction, and obedience.
  • : Psalm 32 also joins confession, forgiveness, instruction, and guidance in the way the forgiven person should go.
  • : Psalm 86 similarly prays for the Lord to teach His way while appealing to mercy, steadfast love, and deliverance from enemies.
  • : Psalm 130 deepens Psalm 25's movement from sin and waiting to hope in the Lord, ending with confidence that He will redeem Israel from sin.
  • : Isaiah's call for the wicked to forsake their way and return to the merciful Lord develops Psalm 25's themes of divine ways, mercy, and pardon.
  • : Zechariah's blessing celebrates the Lord's redemption of His people and the forgiveness of sins, echoing the redemptive and mercy-shaped hopes expressed in Psalm 25.
  • : Psalm 25's prayer to know the Lord's way and truth finds fuller canonical resolution in Christ, who reveals Himself as the way and the truth to the Father.
  • : The apostolic call to confess sin and trust God's faithful forgiveness corresponds to Psalm 25's honest plea for pardon and mercy.
Gospel Clarity

Jesus Christ is the only one who perfectly walked in God's ways; He took our 'shame' and our 'sins of youth' to the cross, so that we could receive the 'Goodness of the Lord' as our own.