Series: Dwelling in the Psalm
July 19, 2026
O
come, let us sing to the Lord; let us make a joyful noise to the rock
of our salvation!
Let us come into his presence with
thanksgiving;
let us make a joyful noise to him with songs of praise!
For the Lord is a great God and a great King
above all gods.
In his hand are the depths of the earth; the
heights of the mountains are his also.
The sea is his, for he made it, and the dry land,
which his hands have formed.
O come, let us worship and bow
down; let us kneel before the Lord, our Maker!
For he is our God, and we are the people of his
pasture and the sheep of his hand.
O
that today you would listen to his voice!
Do not harden your hearts, as
at Meribah, as on the day at Massah in the wilderness,
when your ancestors tested me and put me to the proof,
though they had seen my work.
For forty years I loathed that generation and said,
“They are a people whose hearts go astray,
and they do not regard my ways.”
Therefore in my anger I swore, “They shall not enter
my rest.”
I graduated from a school in New Jersey that had high expectations of its graduates. The curriculum required a full course of study – Bible, theology, history, counseling. Before they let you graduate, they required two courses in preaching, even if you had no desire to be a preacher. In addition, they required two courses in public speaking. And if necessary, more. I took three.
Because they told us, “You are going to speak in public, so you need to be prepared.” So, we practiced baptizing noisy kids. We memorized the communion prayer to maximize visual contact. One day we arrived in class to see a large rectangle of masking tape on the floor. “What’s this?” We would practice a graveside funeral service without falling into the hole. They wanted to make sure we were prepared.
But it all got started on the first day of class. The topic was “How to Lead a Call to Worship.” Each of us was given a scrap of paper with a verse or two, then pointed to a podium up front. It was our job to summon our classmates to begin an imaginary worship service. The lessons were invaluable. Enunciate the letters. Sculpt the words. Give appropriate emphasis to the right syllable. This is what we did, one by one, with plenty of feedback.
It will not surprise you to learn that most of us were given lines from Psalm 95, the text for today. It was titled “the Call to Worship Psalm,” for much of it is ready made to initiate a worship service like this one.
The trick was to speak clearly for those with muffled ears, and to do it with just enough amplification to be heard in the back row, where many Presbyterians sit. We had to pretend the church had a lousy sound system yet arrest the attention of those gathered. The task was to signal something important was about to commence, without overdoing it.
The teacher was ruthless. One classmate from Pittsburgh showed up with a big floppy Bible. That was fine, but he insisted on adding an extra syllable or two to the Lord’s name: “Ja-ee-ee-zus.” The prof said, “Do it again.” When it was my turn, he shook his head to say, “Mister Carter, is your mouth full of cotton? Enlarge those consonants. Try it again.”
Then it was Margaret’s turn. She was short, slight, a little shy. But when she spoke, the lion roared. “That’s it!” he cried, which surprised everyone but Margaret. Margaret, by the way, enlisted as a Navy chaplain and rose to the position of Rear Admiral. She now serves as chaplain of the House of Representatives. Her third day of work was the January 6 insurrection, where she prayed for the congress and led them to safety. “I know how to get people’s attention,” she said. “That combat experience came in handy.”
What does it take for a good call to worship, anyway? We were taught to never begin with, “Hello, how are you doing?” Not that, but to aim higher, “This is the day the Lord has made.” We summon the people to worship. And it is aimed at including all the people. The psalmist does not say, “Come, let me sing,” nor does he write, “Let me make a joyful noise.” It is “Let us worship,” or “Let us sing.” We are in this task of worshiping together. It is the leader’s job to lead.
The leader needs to grab people’s attention, inviting them to lay aside the grocery list they are making in the margin of the worship bulletin, to call them from their solitude or their conversations to connect with the community of saints around. For God is worthy. God is great. God raised the mountain up high. God scooped out the depths of the valleys.
A good call to worship is a call to
look beyond ourselves, to look toward the Creator in praise and gratitude. We
speak with exuberance! We stand with energy and enthusiasm, as if something
important is at stake. Back at my school, this is what our speech teachers wanted us to know.
“For the Lord is our God, and we are the people of his pasture and the sheep of his hand.” Are we clear about this? So far, so good. That is how the psalm begins … but that is not where it remains.
Maybe it’s all that mention of sheep that moves the psalm somewhere else. “Oh,” says the Psalmist. “Oh, if only you would listen to God’s voice.” I don’t know what you know about sheep. They don’t listen very well. They aren’t very bright, either. It is a blessed affirmation to be part of God’s flock. But scripture is full of stories about sheep that wander away. They don’t pay attention to where they are or what danger lies at hand. Sheep tend to be motivated by their stomachs. They nibble themselves lost.
So, the one thing required of the sheep is to listen to the shepherd’s voice. It is one thing to get their attention. It is another thing for the flock to pay attention.
Fred Craddock was one of my teachers. He grew up on a farm in west Tennessee. “It was a dairy farm,” he said. They had a herd of one cow. It was a brown and white Guernsey cow, up in years, but still producing milk. When Fred sensed God was calling him to be a preacher, he decided he needed to practice. So, he went out to the field, found the cow, and started reciting Bible verses. There was nothing harder than getting the cow to stop munching on the timothy grass and look at him. It was good practice for a future preacher, he said. “And if the cow could pause and raise its head, I felt like I was getting somewhere.”
“Oh, that you would listen to God’s voice!” says the psalm. The poet leans back into Israel’s memory. He remembers a moment when nobody was listening. Actually, he remembers two moments and combines them together. Not long after God brought Israel out of slavery, the sheep of God’s hand started grumbling about water. “We don’t have any water. Why did God bring us out of Egypt and not provide any water? Back in Egypt we had the Nile River. All we have out in the desert is sand.” They grumbled. They complained. They needed somebody to blame.
And God said, “OK, I hear it. I will tell Moses what to do: strike that big rock over there, and there will be streams in the desert.” Moses took his big stick, whacked the rock, and the water came gushing out. God told him what to do, he did it, and the people filled their canteens. That’s the 17th chapter of Exodus. And to mark the moment, he gave the place two names, “Massah” (which means “test”) and “Meribah” (which means “quarrel”).[1] Psalm 95 remembers that.
But it also remembers a time forty years after that moment, when Israel was still in the desert. The people were grumbling again, quarreling again. “We don’t have any water. Is God with us or not?” It was further evidence that the sheep of God’s hand hang on to the same old complaints. Rather than trust, they grumble, they quarrel, they put God to the test. Massah and Meribah, redux.
This time, it’s Moses who gets angry. He says, “Lord, what am I going to do with these people?” And God says, “We’ve been here before. Different location, same issue. So, get up, take your walking stick, and gather the people in front of that big rock over. This time, speak to it. Preach to it. Water will gush out of the rock.”
So, Moses got up, took his walking stick, gathered the people by the rock. He complained to the sheep of God’s hand. But he didn’t talk to the rock, as he was told. He hit the rock with his stick. Then he hit it again. And the water gushed out. The people scrambled to fill up their canteens. And while they were busy, God said to Moses, “You did not listen to me. You have just cooked your own goose. Because of your disobedience, you will not enter the Promised Land. You did not listen.”[2]
Remember what the psalm says? O, that today you would listen to the voice of God! You see, it’s one thing to call the people to worship. It’s another thing for them to listen to the One they have come to worship. That’s really the heart of it all. That’s why, for three thousand years, Jews and Christians put the reading and interpretation of scripture at the heart of their worship service.
Worship is more than a “celebration,” which is how it is being marketed in some places. “Come to our worship celebration.” It’s about more than cranking up the crowd, or energizing the audience, or telling a good joke as if that is the only reason we are here. Worship calls us to listen. God wishes to offer us wisdom. God calls us to hear what he says. God calls us away from all the superficial substitutes and empty idolatries to receive teaching of deep substance. The message is more than we digest in one appearance, so we keep coming back, and bit by bit we are fed.
It is easy to stop listening. Listening is hard work. Receiving wisdom requires maturity. Understanding God’s ways requires practicing God’s ways. Sometimes, the sheep of God’s hand are still grumbling about the same things they grumbled about forty years ago.
Thirty-six years ago, I rolled into town. People were grumbling, “Sundays aren’t sacred anymore. Kids’ sports are killing off Sunday School. The stores are all open. The restaurants are running brunch specials. People have traded the Sabbath for something called ‘the weekend.’ Everybody wants leisure, but nobody understands true rest.” Guess what. Massah and Meribah, once again, in another kind of spiritual desert. Nearly forty years later, has nothing changed?
But we could change. We could be called to worship, and then we could come and listen. We could decide there is something more important than ceaseless activity and the emptiness of entertainment. There are so many gifts God provides for us: wisdom, instruction, peace, companionship, a clarity between right and wrong, forgiveness, and communion – to name just a few.
But we cannot receive the gifts of God if we grumble rather than listen. We cannot be refreshed if we move so fast that we pass by the springs of Living Water.
So, this old psalm calls us to join
together, to be refreshed in our singing, our thanksgiving, and our joyful
noise. And then, in our exuberance, if we listen, really listen, we might receive
something that makes all the difference in our lives.