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Psalm 79:1-9
1God, the nations have come into your inheritance. They have defiled your holy temple. They have laid Jerusalem in heaps.
2They have given the dead bodies of your servants to be food for the birds of the sky, The flesh of your saints to the animals of the earth.
3Their blood they have shed like water around Jerusalem. There was no one to bury them.
4We have become a reproach to our neighbors, A scoffing and derision to those who are around us.
5How long, Yahweh? Will you be angry forever? Will your jealousy burn like fire?
6Pour out your wrath on the nations that don`t know you; On the kingdoms that don`t call on your names;
7For they have devoured Jacob, And destroyed his homeland.
8Don`t hold the iniquities of our forefathers against us. Let your tender mercies speedily meet us, For we are in desperate need.
9Help us, God of our salvation, for the glory of your name. Deliver us, and forgive our sins, for your name`s sake.
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In Psalm 79:1-9, we read with watchfulness: God’s purposes advance toward a literal fulfillment—today, not someday.
Psalm 79:1-9 shows that God’s power is for love, not spectacle—today, not someday.
If Psalm 79:1-9 feels offensive, remember: the cross is always scandal before it is comfort.
If Psalm 79:1-9 never disrupts comfort, it may be tradition pretending to be fire—today, not someday.
Psalm 79:1-9 joins personal faith with practical holiness that touches neighbor and society—today, not someday.
Psalm 79:1-9 steadies anxious hearts: the God who chose you will also keep you—today, not someday.
Psalm 79:1-9 assures us: God is not confused by our weakness; He supplies grace for the journey.
Psalm 79:1-9 invites us to practice mercy with hands, budgets, and policies—not just feelings—today, not someday.
Psalm 79:1-9 invites us to mutual aid—no one follows Jesus alone—today, not someday.
Psalm 79:1-9 confronts consumer Christianity—if you’re not being sent, you’re being sold—today, not someday.
Psalm 79:1-9 reminds us: you don’t have to be impressive to be sent—just faithful and available.
Psalm 79:1-9 invites ordered love—right worship that spills into right living—today, not someday.
In Psalm 79:1-9, the kingdom is practiced: enemy-love, simplicity, and truth-telling in public—today, not someday.
In Psalm 79:1-9, God’s covenant faithfulness outlasts human failure and calls forth obedience—today, not someday.
Psalm 79:1-9 comforts the crushed: God is not distant from your struggle; He is present as deliverer.
In Psalm 79:1-9, Christ meets us as Physician, tending wounds we can’t name—today, not someday.
Psalm 79:1-9 challenges untethered spirituality—without rooted worship, zeal becomes drift—today, not someday.
Psalm 79:1-9 comforts us: the Church’s remedies are for the wounded, not the perfect—today, not someday.
In Psalm 79:1-9, love becomes public: the kingdom confronts systems that crush the vulnerable—today, not someday.
Psalm 79:1-9 reminds the Church: God’s Word forms God’s people through worship, holiness, and mission.
Psalm 79:1-9 warns us: you can inherit religious vocabulary and still miss the living Christ.
Psalm 79:1-9 refuses shallow life; holiness is deep healing—today, not someday.
If Psalm 79:1-9 never leads to holiness, what you call “power” may be performance—today, not someday.
Psalm 79:1-9 reminds us: God’s presence is not distant—He strengthens the weak and fills the hungry.