David wrote the Psalm 34 in response to what he was facing at the time. Beginning of Psalm 34 tells us David was not yet King David; he was just a shepherd and King Saul was trying to hunt and kill David. So, at the point of writing this Psalm, David's living in a cave. He's running for his life. He's with a bunch of misfits, and he writes a song saying that God is close to the misfits, the losers, the vagrants, the contrite, and the brokenhearted. David is talking to everyone who thought they could do things on their own but now finds themselves in a place or situation they never wanted to be.
David now realizes that it's not even that he simply wants God close to him – he needs God. When we acknowledge how desperate we are and how amazing the God we fear is, we can say with David that the Lord is close to the brokenhearted. He rescues those whose spirits are crushed. The Lord is close to us. The Lord rescues us.
Are you misfit? Are you brokenhearted? Are you crushed? Are you in trouble or discontented? The Lord wants to draw you close. In fact, Psalm 34:22 says that the Lord will redeem those who serve him. No one who takes refuge in him will be condemned. This verse is ultimately pointing to eternity. The way you take refuge in God is to humble yourself, to repent, to be baptized, and to be saved by calling on the name of the Lord to save you.
Reflection/Discussion Questions: Have you taken refuge in the Lord? If you haven't, what's stopping you?
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