Emotional Turmoil

Hebrews 10:24-25 English Standard Version

24 And let us consider how to stir up one another to love and good works, 25 not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near.

My meditations in Psalm 22 stirred up some old wounds. The only person that knows my struggles over the past few years is my accountability partner. We will not find the term accountability partner within scripture but the sentiment is expressed here in Hebrews.

We would meet once a week when our schedules allowed. I moved four hundred miles away so our meetings have been relegated to emails, text and phone calls. It is not the same.

I shared my turmoil with him in the form of a writing and I agree with his analysis that it is not for general consumption. It is very private, very personal and can only be trusted in the mind of someone who knows me well and has my best interest at heart. That is what love does.

While we all have the potential for being stirred up emotionally by scriptures, our personal experiences will differ in detail. The stronger the emotion the more likely we will be prone to emotional outbursts. In this format my thoughts are being shared with many unseen faces. It is best for their sake that I restrain myself from crying out like a wounded animal.

Women in general are better at confiding in one another. Men are often encouraged to be strong and not to show weakness. Confession of condition is not a weakness but our confessors must be a trusted partner in the gospel of Christ.

We cannot stir up in one another what we do not possess ourselves. Sound counsel comes from those who have experience in taking counsel before coming to an age to give it.

Youths may play together but none of them can give sage counsel to one another.

1 Kings 4:31 English Standard Version (ESV) For he was wiser than all other men, wiser than Ethan the Ezrahite, and Heman, Calcol, and Darda, the sons of Mahol, and his fame was in all the surrounding nations.

Your partner will be known by reputation. Ask around.

Emotional Appeal

Psalm 22 English Standard Version

Why Have You Forsaken Me?

To the choirmaster: according to The Doe of the Dawn. A Psalm of David.

This is the preface to the 22nd Psalm. Let us think about this preface.

The first emotion expressed is one of forsakenness. For an emotional appeal to work, it should be personalized. Our instincts are ones of self-preservation. “This is about me.” Whatever happened to someone else, we can relate to the emotional turmoil.

The instruction to the choirmaster is to play this psalm according to the Doe of the Dawn. What instruments and melodies for “The Doe of the Dawn” are lost in history. There are no accompanying score sheets for that piece of music.

If we were to write a musical score for this psalm, it would be one that struck an emotional cord where the words themselves inspire the music. At the time of the original score there was no basis upon which we now draw our emotions. Looking into the majority of opinions about that work, many have declared Jesus Christ is “The Doe of the Dawn”. Since Christ had not yet been born they acknowledge a possibility that this whole work is prophetic in design.

Even if we decide that Psalm 22 is prophetic in design, that does not remove the emotional appeal that carries us into familiar personal history. We can still relate because we suffer as Christ suffered and He suffered for our sake. It is relatable.

One might address this piece of music as a melancholy song. It is meant to forster deep emotional connections with the subject of the song.

Like any good melancholy song, hope must be granted. Perhaps for this musical piece the last line expresses it the best.

31 they shall come and proclaim his righteousness to a people yet unborn, that he has done it.