In God We Trust

Songs For Our Heart  •  Sermon  •  Submitted   •  Presented   •  42:43
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Introduction

Our country’s motto is inscribed on our money lest we forget. “In God we trust”. Every time we take a dollar out to use it and every time we receive even a dollar we are reminded that our trust is not in things, and not even in the money in our hands, but our trust is to be in God alone. Who do we trust in though? Do we really trust in God alone?
This evening we come to Psalm 20 which again is another Psalm of David and written to the Choir Director or Chief Musician which by now we know has a double meaning. It is a Psalm for public worship and also it is written to God as the Choir Director and Chief Musician. This Psalm is a prayer perhaps written for singing before battle - it was believed to have been written before David went out to fight the Ammonites and the Syrians, although no one quite knows when it was written. This account seems to fit and was followed by a victory - which is what the next Psalm 21 is about the victory after the war.
This is not the only battle that David fought in his life. David was a man of war and had many battles throughout his life and reign. I believe this Psalm was penned before the battle as a reminder to David that his trust is in God. This Psalm is proof that David’s trust was in the LORD God.
Like David we will face many battles in our lifetimes. Maybe not wars against other countries but wars nonetheless against a formidable foe - namely our flesh and against the spiritual realm. In the time leading up to the battle we reveal where our trust is by how we prepare. David demonstrated his trust in the LORD by praying to the Lord for victory and trusting Him for it. We can know victory in our own battles but victory comes from putting our trust not in ourselves or anything else but putting our trust in the Lord. Let’s read together and see what it looks like to trust in the Lord.
Psalm 20:1–3 CSB
1 May the Lord answer you in a day of trouble; may the name of Jacob’s God protect you. 2 May he send you help from the sanctuary and sustain you from Zion. 3 May he remember all your offerings and accept your burnt offering. Selah
Psalm 20:4–6 CSB
4 May he give you what your heart desires and fulfill your whole purpose. 5 Let us shout for joy at your victory and lift the banner in the name of our God. May the Lord fulfill all your requests. 6 Now I know that the Lord gives victory to his anointed; he will answer him from his holy heaven with mighty victories from his right hand.
Psalm 20:7–9 CSB
7 Some take pride in chariots, and others in horses, but we take pride in the name of the Lord our God. 8 They collapse and fall, but we rise and stand firm. 9 Lord, give victory to the king! May he answer us on the day that we call.

By Turning to Prayer

Psalm 20:1–2 CSB
May the Lord answer you in a day of trouble; may the name of Jacob’s God protect you. May he send you help from the sanctuary and sustain you from Zion.
Psalm 20:3–4 CSB
May he remember all your offerings and accept your burnt offering. Selah May he give you what your heart desires and fulfill your whole purpose.
This Psalm is a royal Psalm as the king was about to go out to war, but stopped to pray and worship in the sanctuary. Before the army went out to battle, the Jewish law of warfare required the officers and soldiers first to dedicate themselves to the Lord.
Deuteronomy 20:1–2 CSB
“When you go out to war against your enemies and see horses, chariots, and an army larger than yours, do not be afraid of them, for the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, is with you. When you are about to engage in battle, the priest is to come forward and address the army.
Deuteronomy 20:3–4 CSB
He is to say to them, ‘Listen, Israel: Today you are about to engage in battle with your enemies. Do not be cowardly. Do not be afraid, alarmed, or terrified because of them. For the Lord your God is the one who goes with you to fight for you against your enemies to give you victory.’
What we see here is such a dedication service in which the king prays, the people pray and both trusting in the Lord for victory through prayer. Prayer was never meant to be a last resort, but a method of proper equipping and preparation. We see regularly in the life of David that prayer was not the last thing on his mind but the first thing and especially when he was in trouble. Going to God in prayer is trusting that God will act on our behalf, and David rightfully believed that God acts on behalf of His people.
May the Lord answer you in a day of trouble”May the name of Jacob’s God protect you” “May he send you help and sustain you” “May He remember all your offerings and accept your burnt offering” “May He give you what your heart desires and fulfill your whole purpose” “May the LORD fulfill all your requests” This prayer shows that the trust is in the Lord to answer. Not David’s own skill and previous victories (as he was victorious in wars and battles all throughout his life). The repeated phrase “May He or May the Lord” denotes that it is the Lord that they are looking to provide everything necessary for and for the victory itself.
This understands not all sacrifices are acceptable before the Lord and not all prayers for our desires will be answered either. If they are not offered accordingly. Sacrifices as laid out in the book of Leviticus and prayers and described throughout scripture. If they didnt line up they wouldn’t be remembered or accepted by God. When our desires are in accord with the plan and will of God for us, then we can pray with confidence that God will grant us our requests. We must also continue to look to God to bring our desires more into alignment with His as we grow.
Our desires are out of alignment with the Lord also when our relationship with the Lord is broken. When our hearts are far from the Lord our hearts are far from the Lord’s heart. Prayers are hindered in such things - the Lord has said He wont hear prayers while we are not in right relationship with Him.
Psalm 66:18 CSB
If I had been aware of malice in my heart, the Lord would not have listened.
Proverbs 28:9 CSB
Anyone who turns his ear away from hearing the law— even his prayer is detestable.
1 Peter 3:7 CSB
Husbands, in the same way, live with your wives in an understanding way, as with a weaker partner, showing them honor as coheirs of the grace of life, so that your prayers will not be hindered.
If you are right before God He will hear you, answer you and help you, and give you the victory. By the same token if you are not right you will miss out on the victory God wants to give you.
God also gives each of us a purpose to fulfill in His plan throughout the ages. Some of us play a larger part like King David - who was to subdue the land and bring forth in His lineage the promised Messiah. The key to fulfilled desires and achieved purpose is to seek to find our place in His plan instead of waiting for God to make us an actor through our own plan.
Jesus knew this fulfilled desire and purpose as displayed in His great prayer in John 17.
John 17:4 CSB
I have glorified you on the earth by completing the work you gave me to do.
The apostle Paul also knew of this fulfilled desire and purpose.
2 Timothy 4:7 CSB
I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith.
The king’s desire was for victory over the enemy and to win the battle before him. The one who hold the victory in His hands is God and so he went before the Lord in prayer and even invited the people to pray over them as well. God desires for you to have victory over the enemy in the battles in your life also, but He wants you to trust in Him not your own strength for the victory. The enemy knows victory is only found in God and that is why he works to discourage us from praying before the battle ever begins.

By Kneeling in Faith

Psalm 20:5–6 CSB
Let us shout for joy at your victory and lift the banner in the name of our God. May the Lord fulfill all your requests. Now I know that the Lord gives victory to his anointed; he will answer him from his holy heaven with mighty victories from his right hand.
Psalm 20:7–8 CSB
Some take pride in chariots, and others in horses, but we take pride in the name of the Lord our God. They collapse and fall, but we rise and stand firm.
When they prayed they didnt come praying in fear, but in faith because of who they were praying to. When praying for victory WHO you pray to matters. Look at verse 5 “Let us shout for joy at your victory, AND lift the banner in the name of OUR GOD.” The name of God as revealed to Moses was YHWH - Yahweh or I AM THAT I AM. We also see further identification in that they call upon the name of Jacob’s God. The God who revealed himself to Jacob at different times throughout his life. The God who changed Jacobs name from Jacob which was steeped in deceitfulness and sin and was remade, renewed and renamed Israel by this God.
To trust in God is to trust in His genuine name. The name of something regards its true character, and thus to have the right name requires the right qualities and character. Downtown you can go and find some $10 Rolax watches, or some $10 oakey sunglasses and some $5 Conserve All Star shoes - none of those things have the quality of the true name though. Trust in the true and living God, not some handcrafted knock-off.
The Psalmist says that some take pride in chariots and others in horses, but we take pride in the NAME of the LORD our God. The character and faithfulness of God was mightier in David’s eyes than thousands of chariots and horses. Israel was not to have large numbers of chariots and horses because they were to trust only in the LORD’s power in the battles. Even in the face of overwhelming might and odds it is God who will give the victory. This is easy to forget and counter-intuitive to human reasoning logic.
The end of those who trust in horses and chariots, well they collapse and fall. They literally bow down prostrated in submission and fall or suffer ruin defeat and failure. Notice the antithetical parallel and how what each one chooses brings about a different result. They have trusted in things that do not have sovereign power.
Those who trust in the name of the LORD our God they rise or stand to one’s feet and stand firm to resist and stand against, because God is sovereign and omnipotent to cause them to rise and not be moved. It is better to trust in Him than stockpiled weapons. Those who are on the Lord’s side WILL stand upright when the smoke of battle clears.
King David expressed great confidence in verse 6 that God would give the victory to His anointed and that He would specifically answer from His holy heaven with mighty victories from His right hand. David said “now I KNOW” - not I hope, not “I think”, but David said “now I KNOW”. What is it that he knows? David knows that God gives victory to His anointed.)
This statement is a definite statement of faith. As long as the king and the army is carrying out God’s purposes God’s ways they can trust Him for the victory. God is seen as willing to save them. The key to this is not God being on their side as many falsely assume, but rather it is being on God’s side.
Joshua 5:13 CSB
When Joshua was near Jericho, he looked up and saw a man standing in front of him with a drawn sword in his hand. Joshua approached him and asked, “Are you for us or for our enemies?”
This statement is also a definite statement of faith in that not only is God willing to save but that God is ABLE to save. It doesn’t matter how vast the army or how well developed the warriors. Our faith and confidence for the victory relies less on experience and training and more on our closeness with the LORD. If experience and training counts for anything it is merely to continue to shape our utter dependence and reliance upon the LORD.
1 John 5:4 CSB
because everyone who has been born of God conquers the world. This is the victory that has conquered the world: our faith.
Faith is the assurance of what is not yet, and those who have faith in God can claim the victory before it is there.

By Standing in Commitment

Psalm 20:9 CSB
Lord, give victory to the king! May he answer us on the day that we call.
David cried out to the LORD to give victory to the king! He looked to the LORD for victory and even called out for it. Those who live by faith in God through the grace of God will find themselves crying out to God. They stand committed to God. Crying out to God might be seen by some as a lack of faith or commitment, but that simply isn’t true. Crying out to God demonstrates a commitment and a dependence upon God for His help. The life of the people of God as believers is such that we work out of our weaknesses not our strengths. It is through our weaknesses that God is most glorified.
1 Corinthians 1:27 CSB
Instead, God has chosen what is foolish in the world to shame the wise, and God has chosen what is weak in the world to shame the strong.
1 Corinthians 1:31 CSB
—in order that, as it is written: Let the one who boasts, boast in the Lord.
Who cares if we can do it in our own strength - it is when God intervenes through God’s miraculous working that people encounter and are touched with the presence of God. Gods people tend to live tolerating a lesser life because we live in doubt and fear. The strong and victorious believer is one who lives with a commitment to God knowing that without God’s delivery evil and wickedness would assume their place. Crying out is not a sign of weakness but commitment. No one enjoys these situations but it seems that God creates situations or puts us in situations that need His miracles and His working to solve. May He answer us on the day we call - otherwise we are doomed. If the LORD does not come through we are done for and done with. Do you live and go to battle in such a way? Emptied completely of yourself and your resources so you have no choice but to cry out and depend upon God completely? Those who live committed to God see no other resource besides the answer of God and if God doesn’t answer then they will fail.

Conclusion

We never know what it is we trust in until we are tested. It is in the testing we prove in who or what we trust most.
We trust in God - His name, His Word, His Promise and His Power and His victory!
He gives His anointed the victory
His anointed - the sense of every king of Israel being God’s anointed because they were all appointed to their office and throne by anointing with oil. This anointing was a picture of the spiritual anointing of the Holy Spirit needed for fulfilling the duty of leading the people of God according to the plan and purpose of God as king.
His anointed - it was also understood that at the same time there would one day come the ultimate Anointed One, the perfect king of Israel, the Messiah, the Christ. It is true the LORD saves His anointed and people and it is perfectly true that the LORD saves His Anointed One - Jesus Christ - giving Him the victory and His people (the Church - Believers)
When we are committed to the Lord it means also that we are committed to the LORD’s way and plan. How He would have us fight the battle. Many of us ask for the victory, but few ask God how He would have us fight, and then to follow the battle plan. It might be because it is difficult and it might cost us but the payoff is worth it because it is then we enjoy the victory.
This Psalm is applied in the victory David enjoyed over the Syrians and Ammonites (Psalm 21), but also this Psalm anticipates the victories that God promises His Anointed - especially the victory experienced the first Easter morning
Will tonight be when you trade in the dollars and horses and chariots and instead trust int he LORD for salvation? Believe in Jesus and trust Him as Lord and risen Savior!
Lastly this Psalm can be applied to those who desire to go into Satan’s territory and fight to gain ground for the Kingdom of the LORD. Turn to prayer, kneel in faith and stand in commitment and you will enjoy the victory!
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