An insightful reflection from Kayla McClurg, Church of the Saviour, on Psalm 82... a faith that can demand of God, a faith that dares to pray, hope and work for a different world. 
 
"The
 psalmist has experienced God as a God of justice and mercy, but when he
 looks at the vast needs of so many, the rich getting richer and the 
poor getting poorer, the nations failing to serve, he has to wonder. 
He interrogates the Holy One, demanding response. “What’s going on, God?
 How long will you judge unjustly and show partiality to the wicked? How
 long will you delay?” 
Would we dare such boldness? Do we have such raw and intimate relationship with God? 
 
The
 psalmist talks to God as one might a spouse—a spouse who has been quite
 a disappointment lately. Not only does he take the risk of haranguing 
God, he lays out in plain language what he thinks needs to be done. The 
psalmist gives God a “honey-do” list, a reminder of what awaits 
repair if God hopes to clean up the mess the world is in. Here is the 
psalmist’s list (I wonder what would be on mine): Give justice to the 
weak and the orphan; maintain the right of the lowly and the destitute; 
rescue the weak and the needy. Just do it already! 
 
Do
 you notice the psalmist does not ask for God’s intervention in his 
personal life and community? The relationship between them is 
greater than that. For the psalmist, God is not a personal peddler of 
goods, a well-stocked pantry to whom he goes for replenishment. 
In the psalmist’s daring, we hear what a deeper, more intimate 
connection sounds like, what it means to be in alignment with God’s own 
heart.  
 
When
 we dare to speak honestly on behalf of the silenced ones, perhaps it is
 because we know that God and we want the same things, that we are 
bonded with a covenant love that can be trusted., and we will be yoked 
together in the tasks at hand. In the depths of this kind of love, we 
can dare to ask boldly, dare to call God, our beloved, to task. C’mon, 
God, show us the right hammer and nails for the job. You know how to fix
 this!" 
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