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							Psalm 121Assurance of God’s Protection
 
 I lift up my eyes to the hills—
 from where will my help come?
 My help comes from the HOLY ONE,
 who made heaven and earth.
 
 
 God will not let your foot be moved;
 God who keeps you will not slumber.
 God who keeps Israel
 will neither slumber nor sleep.
 
 
 The HOLY ONE is your keeper;
 the HOLY ONE is your shade at your right hand.
 The sun shall not strike you by day,
 nor the moon by night.
 
 The HOLY ONE will keep you from all evil;
 God will keep your life.
 The HOLY ONE will keep
 your going out and your coming in
 from this time on and for evermore.
 
 
 There is a big difference between having and 
							keeping. For instance, I have a favorite hooded 
							sweatshirt—the Chicago Cubs one that you probably 
							see me wearing all the time. This is my possession. 
							However, unlike my sweatshirt, I keep my dog, 
							Silas. He is not a mere possession; he is my pup, my 
							companion, my beloved dog. He is dear to me: I watch 
							over him, not just for my own sake and with my own 
							interests in mind, but for his sake, too. I love 
							Silas, and protect him from harm, because if he 
							suffers, it hurts me too.
 
 Likewise, God, the Creator, does not merely possess 
							us. God, instead, keeps us. God engages with 
							us. God woos us and dances with us through this gift 
							we call life. We are God’s beloved, and immeasurably 
							dear to God. We are not propertied possessions in 
							the eyes of God, nor pawns in the game of life. We 
							are, most importantly, not instruments in and 
							through which God purposefully inflicts pain or 
							suffering to “teach us a lesson” or to “make God’s 
							plan known.”
 
 In fact, quite the opposite is true. We are the 
							children, the companions, of a God who understands 
							suffering, who knows distinctly the experience of 
							pain. Psalm 121 reminds us that God does not merely 
							have or own us: God keeps us and relates to 
							us as God’s own.
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			 Notice 
			the repetitiousness forms of “keep?” As often as we feel 
			ourselves “lose our grip” on God, it is nice to know that God does 
			not lose God’s grip on us. We may find peace knowing that we need 
			not base our identities, both individual and communal, on the 
			assumption that we need to have a firm hold on all things, and get 
			everything “right.” Rather, we need to remember that even after we 
			were beautifully made, God proclaimed we are also good. Thus, we can 
			release ourselves into rejuvenating rest because we know God’s 
			watchful eye and creative hand never let us go.
 Friends, while there may be pain—and yes, even death— in this 
			journey, we do not go alone. There will be hardship, trouble, and 
			there will be danger, but God is with us, will never forget us, and 
			will always, yes always, love us on this journey we call 
			life.
 So, take a breath knowing that as you do, God is keeping you. There 
			is much good waiting to be found along the way.
 
 
 Something my pal Silas reminds me of every time we go for a walk.
 
 
 [Adam Quinn, First Presbyterian Church in Lincoln]
 
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