Psalm 95: 1–7a reminds us that we belong to God and that God is like a benevolent king who desires his people to flourish, or like a shepherd who will go to great lengths to make sure all the sheep are safe and healthy. These verses function well as an antiphonal psalm of praise between a leader and those gathered. They could also be read as presented here by the congregation divided into two parts. How you split those gathered and the language you give to each is very contextual, so, for our purposes, the regular font is “Group A” and the bold is “Group B.” The text in italics should be spoken together.
These first verses are the part of the psalm that we are most familiar with as they are often used to call us to worship. But what starts off so positively takes a sharp turn as the tone shifts from praise to God recounting Israel’s past sins.
Initially the change in tone may be hard to comprehend until we examine our own selves. Like God’s people in the Old and New Testaments, indeed throughout all of history, we are fickle and quickly change our allegiances to fit our fancy. On Sundays and other convenient moments we declare God to be our Lord and King and then promptly deny that reality. We deny it through our words, thoughts, and actions towards God’s creation that he told us to care for, towards God’s people whom God loves so deeply and whom we are called to love, and even towards ourselves, God’s beloved. While we might not have been physically present at Meribah, we have had plenty of our own Meribahs, our own acts of denial. This human fickleness is reflected in the second half of the psalm which functions as a call to confession and is laid out here as a litany between a leader who reads Psalm 95:7b–11 and those gathered who use an adaptation of the first line of verse 7 as a refrain.
It is understandable that the first half of Psalm 95 gets a lot of airplay in worship services, but let us not forget the warning the second half of the psalm presents. The hinge between the first and second half of the psalm is the plea, “O that today you would listen to his voice!” Let us respond with open ears and open hearts.
Psalm 95:1–7a—An Antiphonal Litany For the Beginning of Worship
The translation used in these litanies is the NRSVUE
Group A |
Group B |
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O come, let us sing to the Lord; |
let us make a joyful noise |
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Let us come into his presence |
let us make a joyful noise to him |
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For the Lord is a great God |
and a great King above all gods. |
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In his hand are the depths of the earth; |
the heights of the mountains are his also. |
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The sea is his, |
and the dry land, |
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O come, let us worship and bow down; |
let us kneel before the Lord, our Maker! |
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For he is our God, |
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and we are the people of his pasture |
and the sheep of his hand. |
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Leader: |
O that today you would listen to his voice! |
Psalm 95:7b–11—A Call to Confession
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Leader: |
O that today you would listen to his voice! |
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All: |
You are our God. |
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Leader: |
Do not harden your hearts, as at Meribah, |
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All: |
You are our God. |
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Leader: |
For forty years I loathed that generation |
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All: |
You are our God. |
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Leader: |
Therefore in my anger I swore, |
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All: |
You are our God. |
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Leader: |
O that today you would listen to his voice! |
Prayer of Confession in Response to Psalm 95
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Leader: |
Recognizing the tension that exists within our own hearts and lives, Holy, righteous, and loving God, Forgive us for forgetting that you are the Creator, Forgive us for forgetting that you are the Creator, Forgive us for forgetting that you are the God of love, Forgive us for forgetting that you are the God of love, Forgive us for intentionally plugging our ears Unstop our ears so that we may once again listen to your voice |
Revised Common Lectionary
Year A: Lent 3, Proper 29/Christ the King