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Learning to Long for the Church: A Meditation on Psalm 84 - The Crosswalk Devotional - August 27

You may or may not go to church looking for God's presence. You may or may not feel like you need God to reveal himself to you in some way. But God’s presence and God’s power define the church.

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Learning to Long for the Church: A Meditation on Psalm 84
By Rev. Kyle Norman

Bible Reading
“My soul longs, indeed it faints for the courts of the Lord; my heart and my flesh sing for joy to the living God.” – Psalm 84:2

When you were young, did you ever find yourself giddy with excitement when going somewhere? Maybe it was a theme park, maybe it was grandma’s house, maybe it was a long trip, but internally you were fueled with joy and excitement. Like a kid before Christmas, you couldn’t fall asleep - and if you did, you dreamt of what you would do when you got there. 

Have you ever had that experience on your way to church? Every block you pass on your way makes your heart leap into your throat; you are filled with excitement. I am willing to be not many of us have had that experience. But this is exactly what Psalm 84 calls us to.

Psalm 84 centers around a pilgrimage to the Temple. For the psalmist, there was no greater thing than approaching the house of the Lord. The joy that is felt is not because the temple was beautifully adorned. The psalmist has a divine longing to be in the temple because the temple was the dwelling place of God - and to be in the temple was to be in God's presence. What is more, to be in God's presence was to experience the wonder of God's divine activity. 

Do we have a similar understanding when we step through the front doors of our local churches today? Or do we view the church only in human terms, as a place to sing religious songs, to hear scripture read, to touch base with faithful friends? If we view the church only through the lens of what we do, we might fail to recognize what God does in our midst. Because the church is the place where we gather to meet the God who created, redeemed, and sustains us. And God is present in the church.

In many ways, contemporary society has lost an understanding of sacred space. Life with God has become so individualized that we tend to downplay the importance of the church as a place of God. A common quip is, 'I don't need to go to the church; I can worship God as much on the golf course as anywhere.' And that's true, but do you? Yes, God is everywhere, even the psalmists understood that, but scripture always holds that there is something special about God’s house. Psalm 84 begins, 'How lovely is your dwelling place, O God;' how perfect, how wonderful, how magnificent is the place where God sets God's glory. See, for the psalmist, if God's presence was in the temple in some magnificent,   unique, yet indescribable way – then there was no other place that he would rather be. 

We come to church to be in God's presence and to open ourselves to divine activity. Because God is not just some passive observer. God never naps in church. God is always moving, always active. Whatever the denomination, whether you meet in a building with a spire or in someone’s home, whether the church is liturgical or charismatic, this is the nature of the church that we are invited to enjoy.

Intersecting Faith and Life:

Psalm 84 declares that the Lord bestows favor and honor and does not withhold good things. Do you need good things in your life, a good resolution, a good report, or healing? Are you needing a reinvigoration of life, or a sense of protection from whatever you may be going through?  It may sound odd, and it may sound countercultural, but have you tried going to church? After all, what is the church if it is not the place where we gather to meet God's loving and grace-filled presence and to receive good things from God’s hand? 

Of course, understanding God's presence and activity doesn't mean that things will turn around in a moment. Psalm 84 isn't a poem of prosperity declaring that God will make you healthy, wealthy, and glad all your days. No, life with God is a journey. The psalmist says, “Blessed are the ones whose hearts are set on pilgrimage.”  The ones who receive God's activity are those who long to move closer to God, even when the path is ruff and the hill is steep, and even in those times that you think that the journey isn't worth it. We are called to keep reaching out to God. Because rough times never discount God's presence or activity. And through the church, God always invites us to God’s self.

You may or may not go to church looking for God's presence. You may or may not feel like you need God to reveal himself to you in some way. But God’s presence and God’s power define the church. The church, amid all its flaws and humanness, is like a big neon sign from God saying, “If you want to find me, you can find me here.” Even today, the church is the house of the Lord.

Further Reading:
Psalm 84
What Is the Church? It's Role and Purpose According to the Bible

Photo Credit: ©Getty Images/AJ Watt


SWN authorThe Reverend Dr. Kyle Norman is the Rector of St. Paul’s Cathedral, located in Kamloops BC, Canada.  He holds a doctorate in Spiritual formation and is a sought-after writer, speaker, and retreat leader. His writing can be found at Christianity.com, crosswalk.comibelieve.com, Renovare Canada, and many others.  He also maintains his own blog revkylenorman.ca.  He has 20 years of pastoral experience, and his ministry focuses on helping people overcome times of spiritual discouragement.

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Christianity / Devotionals / The Crosswalk Devotional / Learning to Long for the Church: A Meditation on Psalm 84 - The Crosswalk Devotional - August 27