Give Ear, O Shepherd Of Israel
Devotional
Companion to the Psalter
A Devotional Guide to the Psalms
Object:
Stir up your might
and come to save us! ...
look down from heaven, and see;
have regard for this vine,
the stock that your right hand planted ...
Restore us, O LORD God of hosts;
let your face shine, that we may be saved.
-- Psalm 80:2b, 14b-15, 19
Theme: A prayer of Israel in exile
Outline
1-2 -- Show your power, shepherd of Israel.
3 -- Restore us.
4-6 -- How long must we be the scorn of our neighbors?
7 -- Restore us.
8-13 -- You planted the vine, and gave it growth. Why abandon it to foes?
14-18 -- Give us life and we will call on your name.
19 -- Restore us!
Notes
• Lament
• This psalm gives a theological interpretation of Israel's devastating experience -- being overrun by the Babylonians and taken into exile. The figure of the vinedresser and the vine expresses the relation of God and Israel. (See Isaiah 5:1-7; Matthew 21:33-43.) God brought the vine from Egypt (Exodus), cleared the promised land (conquest), and planted it there, where it grew and flourished (reigns of David and Solomon). Now foreign armies ravage the land and Israel is scorned.
• "Restore us" "turn us again" suggests not merely return from exile, but make us "turned toward you again," a spiritual change, repentance, a daily renewal.
For Reflection
• Jesus used the vine figure to describe the relation of the Christian to him and to the Father. "I am the true vine and my Father is the vinedresser ... I am the vine, you are the branches ... Those who abide in me and I in them bear much fruit, because apart from me you can do nothing." (See John 15:1-11.)
• This is a symbolic picture of the church and a good prayer for it today.
Prayer
Lord God, you prune the vine that it may bear fruit. From the sufferings of Israel and the sufferings and death of Christ, you have brought forth our salvation with precious fruits of the Spirit for the blessing of all the earth. Keep us in the vine, abiding in Christ Jesus, that we may be vessels of your love, messengers of your love and grace to all the world. Amen.
and come to save us! ...
look down from heaven, and see;
have regard for this vine,
the stock that your right hand planted ...
Restore us, O LORD God of hosts;
let your face shine, that we may be saved.
-- Psalm 80:2b, 14b-15, 19
Theme: A prayer of Israel in exile
Outline
1-2 -- Show your power, shepherd of Israel.
3 -- Restore us.
4-6 -- How long must we be the scorn of our neighbors?
7 -- Restore us.
8-13 -- You planted the vine, and gave it growth. Why abandon it to foes?
14-18 -- Give us life and we will call on your name.
19 -- Restore us!
Notes
• Lament
• This psalm gives a theological interpretation of Israel's devastating experience -- being overrun by the Babylonians and taken into exile. The figure of the vinedresser and the vine expresses the relation of God and Israel. (See Isaiah 5:1-7; Matthew 21:33-43.) God brought the vine from Egypt (Exodus), cleared the promised land (conquest), and planted it there, where it grew and flourished (reigns of David and Solomon). Now foreign armies ravage the land and Israel is scorned.
• "Restore us" "turn us again" suggests not merely return from exile, but make us "turned toward you again," a spiritual change, repentance, a daily renewal.
For Reflection
• Jesus used the vine figure to describe the relation of the Christian to him and to the Father. "I am the true vine and my Father is the vinedresser ... I am the vine, you are the branches ... Those who abide in me and I in them bear much fruit, because apart from me you can do nothing." (See John 15:1-11.)
• This is a symbolic picture of the church and a good prayer for it today.
Prayer
Lord God, you prune the vine that it may bear fruit. From the sufferings of Israel and the sufferings and death of Christ, you have brought forth our salvation with precious fruits of the Spirit for the blessing of all the earth. Keep us in the vine, abiding in Christ Jesus, that we may be vessels of your love, messengers of your love and grace to all the world. Amen.

