Psalm 23 Step 3 Mine (Part 1)

Psalm 23 Step 3 Mine (Part 1)

NEW TO THIS STUDY? START HERE.

Hello! Thanks for joining me here. This past weekend I had the opportunity to share some of my discoveries from this study at a women’s conference in central Florida. It was awesome to see so many women interested in personally exploring God’s Word!

In my study, I felt the Spirit leading me to focus on verse 3; my questions about how the Lord as Shepherd restores a soul and whether it’s related to being on righteous paths. Here’s what I uncovered this past week:

Last Week’s Work

WHO (CHARACTERS)

I discovered two main characters:

  1. David, the first character mentioned. The Psalm is “of” him, which I think means he wrote it (v1). In v2, he describes following the second character,
  2. The LORD, into green pastures and past still waters. In my focus verse, David says the LORD restores his soul and leads him in righteousness for the sake of the LORD’s name (v3). David further explains even when he feels like he’s in a valley of death’s shadows, he’s not afraid of evil there, because he knows the LORD/Shepherd is with him, and the LORD’s rod and staff make him feel safe (v4). David also says the LORD anoints him and sets him up with provisions—so much so, his cup runs over! And in front of David’s enemies, no less. Finally, David believes goodness and mercy will be with him all the days of his life, and he’ll live in the LORD’s house forever (v6).

Did you notice in the ESV, LORD is all caps? Since this is the first study in my God Who? series, I can’t wait to research this name and all the other biblical names of God we’ll encounter in this series!

WHERE (LOCATIONS)

In this short Psalm, I noticed at least one location in all verses but the first:

  • Green pastures and still waters (v2). This makes me think of what a sheep would like: lying down with plenty of food and water around. It also reminds me of a scene from my childhood in southwest Kansas: a lake and the pastureland surrounding it. I remember going there as a child and feeling so calm: I was with my family, sitting by the water, so contented to just be there with people I knew and trusted.
  • Paths of righteousness (v3). This was part of the HUH? question I’m pursuing: I don’t feel confident I know what David means by this.
  • Valley of death’s shadow (v4). This is also an unfamiliar term to me, though I certainly can imagine plenty of places that would evoke my fear, as did this place for David.
  • Presence of David’s enemies (v5). I can’t imagine anyone feeling comfortable in an environment where he has no friends. I also can’t imagine feeling safe enough to enjoy a meal there!
  • The house of the LORD (v6). The closest I think I’ve come to what David mentions here would be the peace I’ve experienced in quiet, meditative environments like old places of worship where generations of Christians have prayed and otherwise sought the presence of God on earth.

WHEN (TIME FRAMES)

I found just two timeframes: all the days of my life and forever. Both occur in v6, when David talks about goodness and mercy following him (all his life) and when he anticipates living in the LORD’s house (forever). These must refer to different things, so I think he’s talking about experiencing goodness and mercy during his earthly life, then living in God’s house in the life beyond.

Dig-In Challenges

Here’s my plan for this week:

  1. PRAY the prayer I wrote last week before I study. Then I’ll…
  2. MINE: Look for repeated words or phrases in this passage and check for synonyms or pronouns that refer to the same concepts.
  3. MINE: Locate any special statements (blessings, commands, curses, prayers, promises, requests, and/or warnings) in the passage.
  4. MINE: Note any lists (3 or more similar items) mentioned in Psalm 23.
  5. Record what the Spirit prompts so I can use it in Steps 4 and 5.

Remember, you can download this printable summary of the DISO process for more specific instructions. I’ll share what I discover with you next week, so I hope you’ll join me then.

GO TO WEEK 4 >

Psalm 23 Step 3 Mine (Part 1)

Psalm 23 Step 1 Pray & Step 2 Survey

NEW TO THIS STUDY? START HERE.

Welcome! This week, I’m preparing to share the DISO study process at a women’s conference in central Florida. Please join me in prayer for the conference and specifically for the speakers and attendees: that it may be a time of celebration, restoration, and growth for us. Now, here’s my prayer and what the Spirit revealed to me in Psalm 23 this past week.

Last Week’s Work

MY PRAYER
Thank You, Father, for Psalm 23 and the impact it’s already had on my life. I’m excited for the chance to really dig deep here and get to know You, my Shepherd, better, too. Open my eyes, ears, and heart—help me see, hear, and understand Your Teacher, the Holy Spirit, so I can align with what this passage teaches. In Jesus’s name I pray. Amen!

HUH? and WOW! MOMENTS
This time, I noticed these reactions to the text:

  • HUH? Which word for God does David use for LORD (vv1, 6)?
  • WOW! I just noticed this “poem” begins and ends with the LORD (vv1, 6)!
  • HUH? How does Lord as Shepherd restore a soul? Is it related to being on righteous paths (plural)?
  • HUH? What does David mean when he says, “anoint my head with oil” (v5)?
  • HUH? and WOW! Interesting procession: the Shepherd leads David (vv2-3) and David leads “goodness and mercy (v6).”

Dig-In Challenges

If you’re studying along with me, listen to the Spirit’s guidance this week and choose your own topic (your personal treasure) from Psalm 23 to dig more deeply into. It can be anything you noticed in your survey of the text that raises a question or resonates with you, or you can use one of my responses above if you like. We’ll start out digging into the whole chapter and later focus on just the verse(s) that pertain to our individual treasures.

  1. PRAY for the Spirit to direct your focus for the remainder of this study. In your journal, record the personal treasure He identifies, along with any verse(s) relating to it from the study text.
  2. MINE: Read Psalm 23, focusing on three factors setting the stage in this text: note anything the Spirit emphasizes about the characters involved, any locations mentioned, and any timeframes discussed.

I’m looking forward to sharing my discoveries with you next week!

GO TO WEEK 3 >

Psalm 23 Step 3 Mine (Part 1)

Psalm 23 DISO Study Introduction

Hello! Thank you for joining me for this eight-week study of the 23rd Psalm.

This is the first study in my new series called “God, Who?” focusing on names of God found in His Word. By studying these names, I’m looking forward to seeing how God has revealed Himself over time to certain people and what that reflects about His unchanging character.

I’m starting with Psalm 23 because it has special meaning for me: I heard Psalm 23:4 spoken over me the day I was turned away from suicide and put my faith in Jesus. But I was so biblically illiterate, I had no idea my life had been supernaturally protected. All I knew for sure was that something prevented me from picking up the loaded gun, and my soul immediately praised and thanked God. Moreover, from that point on, life was different. 

Let’s Study Psalm 23! 

This week, I’ll begin by praying and surveying Psalm 23. If you want to study on your own with me, here’s what I recommend you have ready:

  1. A copy of Psalm 23.
    I like to refer often to the text I’m studying and sometimes make notes on it, so I copy the passage from blueletterbible.org, paste it into a word processing program like Google Docs or MS Word, change the formatting to suit my preferences, and print it out. If you want to use the ESV translation, here’s a pdf of my Scripture study sheet.
  2. A study journal.
    We’ll spend the next seven weeks immersed in and learning about Psalm 23. And the work we’ll do each week builds on what came before, so plan to record at least some highlights from your work over the coming weeks. I’m old-school and like the pen-and-paper method for journaling my studies, but it’s okay if that doesn’t work for you. If you don’t have time to write out or type your notes, consider dictating them into a notes app or recording audio files instead.

Or, you may decide to just read the entries posted here, and that’s great, too. You’ll get familiar with the process and see how the Spirit speaks to my situation. Either way, I appreciate you checking in with me, even if you can’t dig into Psalm 23 yourself this time.

Dig-In Challenges

So, here’s how I’ll be studying this week:

  1. PRAY: I’ll be creating a prayer with which I’ll start each of my weekly study sessions. If you’ve studied with me before, you know I usually just adapt a previous prayer. Though I’ve pretty much memorized my prayer, I still write it in my study journal as a reminder to pray each time I start studying.
  2. SURVEY: Then I’ll read Psalm 23, noting anything that makes me say, “huh?” (as in, “I wonder what that means?”) or “wow” (as in, “that is so awesome!”). I’ll record these and later ask the Spirit to direct me to the one I should dig into right now.

If you’d like more information about these steps, check out this printable summary of the process I’ll be using here. Or, you can always reach out to me with your questions through my contact page or at [email protected].

I’m looking forward to sharing what I discover in this process with you, and I hope you’ll keep checking in with me each week!

GO TO WEEK 2 >

Galatians 5 Step 5 Align

Galatians 5 Step 5 Align

 NEW TO THIS STUDY? START HERE.

Hi—thanks for checking in with me today!

Last Week’s Work

LESSON(S) LEARNED
Over the last seven weeks, Paul taught me I have a choice: I can choose the salvation of God’s unfailing, unending grace and look forward to forever in heaven with Him by believing Jesus Christ was God’s Son who willingly gave His earthly life to redeem me. Or I can opt to always act in accordance with every condition of God’s law. I can’t do either of these perfectly, but the risk manager in me realizes that grace covers me even when my belief is small as a mustard seed. I choose grace.

CONVICTION

I am reminded that my actions always reflect what I believe. And, unfortunately, that fluctuates. Many times, I let fear take over when faith should lead. I speak or act based on what I’m afraid of because my confidence in Jesus isn’t strong enough to overcome the worry.

CORRECTION

In this study, two cross-references caught my eye: He told them another parable. “The kingdom of heaven is like leaven that a woman took and hid in three measures of flour, till it was all leavened.” (Matthew 13:33 ESV); and Luke’s version: And again he said, “To what shall I compare the kingdom of God? It is like leaven that a woman took and hid in three measures of flour, until it was all leavened” (Luke 13:20-21 ESV). These two are the only instances where leaven is used as a positive influence: a woman working with this hidden substance successfully impacts a whole batch of flour.

For good (or bad), my faith impacts my behavior. But I know it’s also true that action impacts my belief. About the time I was saved, I read a book called Feel the Fear and Do It Anyway. To the best of my recollection, it was more self-help than scriptural, but I believe the title is an excellent reminder of what faith looks like: it’s acknowledging I need God’s help for a successful journey but taking the first step anyway.

ACTION PLAN

Going forward, I want to stop allowing fear (unbelief) to hold me back from doing what I believe God has prepared for me to do: studying His Word and helping other women do the same. I want to grow my faith by taking the first step in whatever form it appears and continually reminding myself that He is with me all the way.

Our Next Study

Next week, I’m excited to begin a study of Psalm 23, the Scripture that saved my life thirty years ago and—because God is like that—ties right into what I discovered here in Galatians 5!

This upcoming study kicks off a new series called God Who? where we’ll examine passages that feature several of His names. I can’t wait to explore the treasure to be found there, and I hope you’ll join me to learn more about our awesome God!

Galatians 5 Step 5 Align

Galatians 5 Step 4 Refine (Part 2)

NEW TO THIS STUDY? START HERE.

Welcome back! Let’s dig right into what I found in my review of cross-references, other translations, and relevant commentaries.

Last Week’s Work

CROSS-REFERENCES

These references stood out this week:

  • Matthew 16:6-12. Jesus told his disciples to beware of the leaven of the Pharisees and Sadducees, which, He explained, meant they needed to be wary of what those Jewish leaders taught. Depending on which commentary you follow, it seems Paul might have used the proverb that way also (see below).
  • Luke 12:1-3. In Luke’s version, Jesus calls out specifically the Pharisees’ hypocrisy as the leaven he warns against.
  • 1 Corinthians 5:6-8. Here, Paul chastises the Corinthian congregation for tolerating sexual immorality and arrogance, exhorting them to clean out the old leaven of malice and evil and, instead, be like the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth.

OTHER TRANSLATIONS

The first thing I noticed in this comparison was punctuation in the New International Version and the Good News Translation: both included quotation marks around this statement. I interpreted that as an indication this statement didn’t originate with Paul; it was likely a proverb he quoted. In fact, the GNT version even adds as they say at the end of the verse to make that clearer.

The Amplified Bible went a little further into an explanation, identifying possible comparisons Paul might have intended his audience to consider: A little leaven [a slight inclination to error, or a few false teachers] leavens the whole batch [it perverts the concept of faith and misleads the church].  Though it doesn’t stay true to the actual verbiage of the verse, based on my research and review of other commentaries on this verse, I think it does the best job of stating what Paul probably intended his audience to hear: that the church should strictly adhere to the gospel as Paul proclaimed it to them and not listen to those who argued salvation also required compliance with all law.

COMMENTARY

This time, I first narrowed the list of commentaries to those applicable to my focus verse (Galatians 5:9). Then, I searched for my key term from that verse: leaven (Hint: pressing Ctrl+F on your Windows keyboard—or Command+F on Apple—enables a word search box where you can enter any terms you want to locate on the page).

After focusing my review on the sections of commentary featuring that word, I made these observations:

  • Not all the commentators I reviewed agreed on what Paul intended leaven to represent in this context: some suggested it was doctrinal error (for example, you’re saved by grace, but you still need to keep the whole law, too), and others thought it referred to false teachers (though there might only be a few of these pseudo leaders, their influence spread enough confusion to taint the whole community). Some even felt it might represent both—or any other type of influence that threatened to lead the Galatians astray or dilute the gospel.
  • Regardless of who or what leaven represents, though, they agreed that the gospel (the way of grace) and the (way of) law are incompatible: one cannot be saved by grace if he chooses to depend on his own works for salvation.

Considering this, it seems to me humans can never succeed in keeping the whole law—the standard of behavior is just too high for us to clear. But faith is something we can manage with the help of the Spirit (who will also help us manifest love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, gentleness, and self-control, according to v22).  Thank God for the Holy Spirit!

Dig-In Challenges

This coming week, let’s wrap up our study of Galatians 5 and align with what we’ve discovered here:

  1. PRAY: Read the prayer created in Step 1.
  2. ALIGN: Review our study notes and other work, focusing specifically on what we’ve learned in this study.
  3. ALIGN: Then, considering those “lessons learned,” think about how the Spirit has convicted us through this study. In other words, where has He shown us misalignment between what we’ve discovered and how we practice our faith?
  4. ALIGN: Next, let’s look to God’s Word for guidance to correct that misalignment. This is often—but not always—a verse from the study text or from one of the cross-references.
  5. ALIGN: And finally, reflect on how we can change thoughts or actions to align more closely with what we’ve discovered here. To make this work, I commit to change something and do my best to act on that commitment every day for at least three weeks.

If you haven’t been able to work through everything with me in the last seven weeks, I encourage you to read through my previous posts in this series and ask the Holy Spirit to work with you on steps 3-5 above. I know the Lord will bless your efforts to understand and apply His Word!

GO TO WEEK 8 >

Galatians 5 Step 5 Align

Galatians 5 Step 4 Refine (Part 1)

 NEW TO THIS STUDY? START HERE.

Hello again! I just realized I’ve been posting DISO study discoveries online since March 2019—almost seven years now! The process has changed over time, and I have as well. God’s Word has a way of doing that to us, doesn’t it? It’s one of the main reasons I’ve devoted my post-retirement life to digging into Scripture. I’m so glad you’re joining me today as I unpack what I discovered this week researching Galatians in general and verse 9 of Galatians 5. Let’s get to it!

Last Week’s Work

WRITING TYPES

From Galatians 1:1, this is a letter from Paul, the apostle, to the churches of Galatia. Like many of Paul’s letters, it contains instructions and comparisons, which leads me to conclude it’s instructional text and generally intended to be interpreted literally. As I dug deeper into the meaning of verse 9, though, I believe this statement about leaven is figurative, symbolizing how seemingly small, insignificant factors can have great influence (for good or bad) over the whole.

LITERAL CONTEXT

Reading through chapters 1-4 in Galatians, the Holy Spirit helped me see other references to someone or some group who seemed to be pressuring the Galatians to accept and conform to Jewish law tradition (i.e., circumcision) in addition to professing their faith in Christ. For example, Galatians 1:7 mentions some who trouble you and want to distort the gospel of Christ. Paul also talks about certain men who intimidated Peter into reverting to traditional eating rules (see also Acts 10:9-16) and how Paul set him straight (Galatians 2:11-14).

HISTORICAL CONTEXT

The churches of Galatia likely refers to several churches Paul founded during his first missionary journey (see Acts 13-14), and the purpose of this letter was to encourage these new Christians to stay focused on the simple truth of the gospel: that they are saved purely through faith in Jesus Christ. According to the ESV Introduction, Galatia was a Roman province which other sources locate in modern-day Central Turkey. The same source indicates this letter was written about 48 AD, though a timeline I found on blb.org suggests a bit later, during Paul’s second missionary journey. It’s likely the congregation Paul addresses is mostly non-Jewish, since he mentions “receiving circumcision (v2).” I think this infers they were agreeing, as adults, to submit to the practice, but Jewish law affirmatively required this operation no later than the eighth day after a male child was born (Leviticus 12:3). Also, my conclusion about their identity is consistent with Paul’s stated commission to bring the gospel to Gentiles (see Galatians 2:7-8).

INTERLINEAR RESEARCH

My interlinear research focused on the two leavens mentioned in v9. First, the noun, zymē, G2219, refers to a substance used in both Jewish and Greek baking to cause dough to “rise” or enlarge (over time), producing a lighter and fluffier baked product. I was reminded of my mom teaching me to make homemade bread: kneading the dough to work the yeast through it, putting it in a towel-covered bowl in the warmest spot in the kitchen, then coming back to find it had grown exponentially!

I also looked at the verb form of leaven, in Greek, zymoi, G2220, meaning to rise as described above. The Biblehub.com resource I consulted indicated verse 9 might have been a proverbial expression (also used in the gospels and by Paul again in 1 Corinthians 5:6) in which the leaven represented a thorough, utterly complete change agent affecting itself and others [for good or bad]. Given my experience with yeast dough, I can see why biblical teachers like Jesus and Paul used leaven as a memorable way to talk about influence.

Dig-In Challenges

I’m anxious to learn more about this proverb, so this week my research will include more refining steps. If you want to dig deeper, too, here’s my plan:

  1. PRAY, of course.
  2. REFINE: Consult a concordance or online cross-reference study tool [I’ll be starting here] to find and read through the available cross-references for your focus verse(s) and log what the Spirit shows you.
    NOTE: for your study, follow the above link, then use the Prev or Next buttons below the verse text to go to your focus verse(s).
  3. REFINE: Next, compare at least a few other translations of your focus verse(s) and write about what you find in your study journal. I’ll be comparing ESV, AMP, NIV, NLT, and GNT starting with this biblehub.com page. After following this link, you can navigate to your verse(s) by entering the reference in the Enter Reference or Keyword box at the top of the page and clicking the spyglass icon there.
  4. REFINE: Last, I plan to check a few commentaries on Galatians 5:9. If you already have a favorite study Bible or commentary, feel free to review it, too. If you don’t, I recommend bibleref.com if you’re new to the Bible or Bible study: it’s easy to following and you can find information about the whole book and this passage.
    If you’re looking for something with more detail, try checking the commentary section of StudyLight.org. There, you can access verse-by-verse commentaries on Galatians 5 by clicking the box for your focus verse, then clicking the name of the commentary listed immediately under the text of the verse you chose. I recommend you review more than one commentary and listen to the Spirit’s guidance on them.

I encourage you to do what you can this week to dig deeper into God’s Word. I know you’ll find immense treasure there. And I hope you’ll check in with me again next week!

GO TO WEEK 7 >