Psalm 95 The Warning
And now, the warning.
The first 7 lines of Psalm 95 are a joyful rendering of what it is like to gather together in an assembly of worshippers and bow humbly before God in worship and adoration. Indeed, God created us for worship and this natural outpouring of admiration and appreciation for our maker is the very least we can do. David highlights the blessings that come when we sing and shout for joy to our incomparable God.
Then his tone shifts with the admonition to “listen to God’s voice right now.” He refers to Meribah and Massah, two places where the children of Israel displayed open rebellion and mistrust of God’s plan to deliver them to the Promised Land. After the miracles God had bestowed on them, after helping them escape Egypt, after bringing them through the Red Sea, destroying Pharaoh and his army as they tried to pursue them, after everything God did through Moses to save the people, their response was rebellious, unbelieving, and dismissive. They rejected God’s intervention, complaining that they should have been allowed to either die in Egypt where at least they had food, or die right there in the wilderness.
God offered them the choice to take the Promised Land by faith, and they responded with hearts that were hard with unbelief.
Psalm 95 (Common English Bible)
If only you would listen to his voice right now!
8 “Don’t harden your hearts
like you did at Meribah,
like you did when you were at Massah,
in the wilderness,
9 when your ancestors tested me
and scrutinized me,
even though they had already seen my acts.
God won’t suffer our rejection for long. Refusing God’s ways is a sign of a twisted heart that has gone astray. As Spurgeon put it, “be not willful, wanton, or repeatedly and obstinately rebellious.” God honored their choice and left them to perish in the wilderness as Joshua and Caleb entered the Promised Land.
10 For forty years I despised that generation;
I said, ‘These people have twisted hearts.
They don’t know my ways.’
11 So in anger I swore:
‘They will never enter my place of rest!’”
The question this poses for us today is, are you resisting God’s will for your life? Are you rebelling against his voice and refusing to hear him? Are you putting God to the test? Take a page from Israel’s book. Bow down in trusting acceptance and sing songs of joy, or rebel against God at your own risk. Listen to God’s voice right now.

The Promised Land by Lola Hilton








