Artwork for podcast Psalms Explained: A Bible Study
Towering Yet Tender God
27th May 2026 • Psalms Explained: A Bible Study • Dr. Toby Holt | New Geneva Theological Seminary
00:00:00 00:23:46

Share Episode

Shownotes

Why would a God this great care about you?

In Psalm 8, David looks at the night sky and asks, "What is man that You are mindful of him?" Dr. Toby Holt shows how God is both towering above all things and tender toward each of us. David is overwhelmed by God's majesty — the heavens, moon, and stars, all the work of His fingers. Against that vastness, people seem tiny. Yet the wonder is that this towering God stoops to care for us, crowning humanity with honor and dignity. We bear His image, and the God who set the stars in place is mindful of you.

Questions this study answers:

1. What is so striking about Psalm 8? That the God who made the vast heavens also cares about small, sinful people. His greatness and tenderness meet here.

2. Why does David focus on the "name" of God? Because God's name carries His nature and majesty. To praise His name is to praise who He truly is.

3. What proof do you have that God loves you? That the towering Creator stoops to be mindful of you and crowns you with dignity.

"What is man that You are mindful of him, and the son of man that You visit him?" — Psalm 8:4 (NKJV)

Dr. Toby Holt is President of New Geneva Theological Seminary, and his sermons have been downloaded more than 1.9 million times on SermonAudio. Find more verse-by-verse Bible teaching at newgeneva.org; support this ministry at newgeneva.org/give.

Transcripts

Speaker:

When King David considered the heavens, he marveled at the scope of all that God had made.

2

:

Who is man, David asked, that God should be mindful of him?

3

:

In today's study, we'll consider the towering yet tender Creator who has formed us and holds us in His hands.

4

:

You know, I've mentioned in times past that our family has a lot of dogs.

5

:

We do have a lot of dogs.

6

:

If there's any stray dogs within a country mile, rest assured they end up in our backyard.

7

:

We have a lot of dogs, but what is not known as much is that we have a couple of cats.

8

:

And we have one cat in particular that we've had for a number of years.

9

:

Now, I have an interesting relationship with this cat.

10

:

The cat knows I exist. I know the cat exists.

11

:

We nod as we pass one another, and I'm reminded that I'm grateful for the cat's size.

12

:

You know the only reason, the only thing that prevents my cat from eating me?

13

:

Do you know what it is? He's smaller than me.

14

:

We talk about this in our household, the things we talk about.

15

:

We say, you know, if the cat was bigger than us, we'd already be dead.

16

:

We know that about this cat.

17

:

And the thing is, the cat seems to know it too.

18

:

He just recognizes his size.

19

:

He smiles at us from time to time when we wonder what's going through his mind.

20

:

It's a fascinating cat.

21

:

With that said, the thing that allows us to survive is that we're a fraction of a fraction of a fraction.

22

:

Against the cosmic totality of the universe, I'm a fraction of a fraction of a fraction larger than the cat.

23

:

And that is the reason that I am not his meal and rather he is my pet.

24

:

Now, throughout the Bible, size and scale and the like comes up again and again and

25

:

again, even in the smallest increments.

26

:

The smallest increments on the scale of the universe can be sufficient to cause the hearts

27

:

of men to quiver.

28

:

I'll give you an example.

29

:

Anyone remember a guy named Goliath?

30

:

Goliath was a big guy.

31

:

Goliath was undoubtedly the biggest guy of his age.

32

:

Goliath was a big man, but against the scale of the mountains behind him, against the scale

33

:

of the universe itself, the size by which Goliath was bigger than the average Israelite

34

:

was only a couple of feet.

35

:

It really was not that large in contrast to everything else.

36

:

It was a fraction of a fraction of a fraction.

37

:

When the Israelites crossed the Jordan River, when they go into Canaan and they see there

38

:

the impressive city of Jericho, they're apprehensive about Jericho.

39

:

Why?

40

:

Because Jericho had a large wall.

41

:

The size and scale of the wall itself, along with the people behind the wall, but the size

42

:

and scale of the wall was foreboding.

43

:

It looked impenetrable, like it couldn't be conquered.

44

:

There's a lot of examples in the Bible by which the people were petrified because that

45

:

which they were opposed by was slightly larger than them or seemed insurmountable in their eyes

46

:

every time the israelites encountered an army but the philistines the midianites the canaanites

47

:

the roman legions pharaoh's army pressing them against the red sea the number one thing that

48

:

they did at that time was they measured their strength such as it was against the strength

49

:

their adversary and time and time again god allowed them to seem smaller in their eye than

50

:

that which opposed them and the reason why god allowed that to happen time and time again even

51

:

to the point of shrinking Gideon's army down to 300 men against 100,000 was because when this 300

52

:

men or when the small conquered the great, the small wouldn't get the glory, but rather God

53

:

himself would. He regularly allowed his people, he regularly allows us to face situations that

54

:

seem like they cannot be overcome. That's just part and parcel to the biblical narrative. It's

55

:

part and parcel to what God may be doing in your own life. Because when we encounter those

56

:

circumstances, something slightly bigger than us, we're inclined to look skyward and say,

57

:

oh God, my God, how majestic is your name? If you could conquer all the problems in your life,

58

:

then you would be your own God. Why would you need him? If you could breathe into your life

59

:

all the things that you need just by snapping your fingers, what would your need be for a

60

:

transcendent God? With that said, when circumstances come up on our eyes and when a Goliath enters your

61

:

life, it's part and parcel of God's plan to teach you something about yourself and your need for

62

:

him. In Psalm 8, we see a lot of these things. King David had seen impressive soldiers. He saw

63

:

Goliath firsthand. He knew what a Goliath looked like. He saw impressive armies, men, mountains,

64

:

stars, the universe around him. But that said, how impressive were any of those things

65

:

contrast with the God who had made them? Well, the answer is not much. Elsewhere in the book of

66

:

Isaiah, Isaiah 40 says this, behold, the nations, all the nations, all the people, all the enemies,

67

:

all the armies, behold, the nations are a drop in the bucket and are counted as the small

68

:

dust on the scales they are as nothing what isaiah was saying is what we're going to see david saying

69

:

in psalm 8 that when you look at god in contrast to anything else when you look at god in contrast

70

:

to everything else added up together god is greater you could take every army on this planet

71

:

every warhead every sword every gun every pistol everything we have to offer you could charge

72

:

against god's holy hill you could charge against god himself and it would be like a gnat pounding

73

:

its head against a mountain of granite, it wouldn't make a dent. God is infinitely greater than us,

74

:

not just a little bit, not in a way you can measure, not like three feet, five feet, ten feet,

75

:

infinitely greater than us. And because he's infinitely greater than us, it begs the question,

76

:

what in the world is he doing with us? If he's that big, that great, that large, that magnificent,

77

:

then why in the world would he waste his time with a lot of us? Small, tiny, weak, frail, sinful

78

:

human beings. Who is man, O God? Who is man, given who you are, that you would condescend

79

:

to so much as speak a word to me, let alone to give me your hand to raise me up? And every

80

:

question is what David is going to answer in today's text. All right, let's return now to

81

:

verses 1 and 2, and then we'll work our way through this psalm. Verse 1, O Lord, our Lord,

82

:

how excellent, how majestic is your name in all the earth. You have set your glory above the

83

:

heavens. Out of the mouth of babes and nursing

84

:

infants you have ordained strength because of your

85

:

enemies that you may silence the enemy and

86

:

the avenger. You know, there's an

87

:

old rhetorical question. It goes like

88

:

this. What's in a

89

:

name? What's in a name?

90

:

Well, when it comes to the name of God,

91

:

quite a bit. Now, why is that? Why

92

:

is the name of God so important? Why do we

93

:

pray in the name of Jesus, right?

94

:

Why are we baptized in the name of the Father,

95

:

Son, and the Holy Ghost? Why does God say

96

:

don't take my name in vain? Why does the

97

:

name matter? Now, you and I, we don't have a

98

:

cultural context for that because our names are kind of interchangeable. They don't mean a whole

99

:

lot and they don't convey a whole lot. If you meet a man named Bob, what do you know about Bob other

100

:

than his name? Well, not much. Why? Because the name doesn't convey anything about Bob. There's

101

:

no such thing as Bob-ness. Bob-ness. You understand this? A name in our culture doesn't really mean

102

:

anything. Bob, Susan, Michelle, Joe, Biff, whatever. It doesn't convey anything. However, the name

103

:

Adonai, the name Jehovah, the name Yahweh does. This name is above all names because embedded

104

:

in the name is the nature of the one who bears the name. Embedded in the name of God is a whole

105

:

lot of meaning. God means God. God means God. God equals signs God. The name itself represents who

106

:

he is and his powers, nature, and his might. So when you say the name of God, you're referring

107

:

not only to him in the abstract, but also in the particular with regards to his nature and his

108

:

essence. So to praise God's name is to praise his nature. At the same time, to denigrate his name

109

:

is to denigrate his nature, which is why it's a sin to do so. Don't take his name in vain as a

110

:

sin because you're not only denigrating a name in the abstract, but his holy nature in the particular.

111

:

You shall not take the name of your Lord your God in vain, for he will not hold him guiltless who

112

:

does so. In any case, this verse, how excellent is your name in all the earth, it is the book

113

:

ends to this whole psalm. He starts with it and he ends with it. So we'll return to that name here

114

:

in just a moment. But let's look at verses three through five. Verse three, when I consider your

115

:

heavens, the work of your fingers, the moon and the stars that you have ordained, what is man then

116

:

that you are mindful of him and the sons of men that you would visit? For you have made him a

117

:

little lower than angels and you have crowned him with glory and with honor all right at the

118

:

outset of this psalm he's just said how glorious god is your name is glorious your character is

119

:

glorious your majesty all the things that make you god are worth all the praise i have to offer

120

:

but then there's a transition here in verse 3 where it's almost like david's walking on top of

121

:

his palace there in jerusalem it's nighttime and he's thinking these thoughts and he's composing

122

:

his psalms and the like, and as he's doing so, he looks up and he sees the canvas which God has

123

:

painted before him. Now, we look around the world around us and we see a lot of beautiful things,

124

:

even outside these windows in the courtyard and like, there's a lot of beautiful things.

125

:

In first century Israel, when someone looked at the stars, it was more beautiful than any stars

126

:

you and I have ever seen, and the reason why is because it's something that we suffer now that

127

:

David didn't suffer then. Without getting political, it's the phrase light pollution.

128

:

What's light pollution? If you go down to Biloxi Beach and you look up at the stars,

129

:

you'll see stars but you'll also see stars against the backdrop of all the other neon all the other

130

:

things that are kind of being cast up in the sky there's other lights that are competing with those

131

:

lights and because that's true when you and i look up in any given night even on a fairly cloudless

132

:

night when we look up you might see something around 100 stars give or take maybe sometimes

133

:

less maybe sometimes more but in david's day the astrophysicists have said that back in about the

134

:

first century that you would see if you looked up a lot more than about 100 stars at that time

135

:

against the relative blackness of the world around you

136

:

and the lack of any real lights

137

:

other than the occasional candles and torches.

138

:

But against the backdrop and blackness of the sky itself,

139

:

what you would see is somewhere over 40,000 to 45,000 stars in the sky.

140

:

So when David looked up, it's more than what you're seeing.

141

:

When David would have looked up, it was a sea, it was a canvas,

142

:

more than he could possibly count it,

143

:

even if he stayed up all night to do the counting.

144

:

So there he is, presumably, looking up at all that, amazed by all that.

145

:

He didn't have to know how far away those stars were in order to understand the scale and scope of the universe around him, how large it was.

146

:

He was no astrophysicist himself, but he was able to make two scientific conclusions that we see in verses 3 through 5.

147

:

First of all, he says this.

148

:

He looks up at that which he has made, and his conclusion is not, wow, what a coincidence.

149

:

I'm so glad the Big Bang happened or I wouldn't be able to see all this.

150

:

That was not his conclusion.

151

:

He didn't go, this is amazing how centuries and centuries and centuries ago

152

:

we all evolved from some singularity and everything I now see.

153

:

How wonderful.

154

:

He doesn't do that.

155

:

Instead, he immediately appeals to something we'll just call intelligent design.

156

:

He looks up at the stars.

157

:

He looks up at that which seems to be designed,

158

:

and he makes the rational deduction that there must be a designer.

159

:

And he talks about the designer as one who willfully, of his own volition, did things.

160

:

Through your fingers, we see the word fingers in this text.

161

:

Through your fingers, you have painted, you have created, you have designed.

162

:

that which is above me. When I consider this, verse 3, when I consider the heavens, the work

163

:

of your fingers, which speaks to God fashioning the cosmos. When I consider the moon and the stars

164

:

that you have ordained, which he's saying means that God is above that which he has ordained. God

165

:

transcends all of it. When he says all this, he's making his first conclusion. There must be a

166

:

creator. And secondarily, the conclusion he makes is that this creator must be a lot more powerful

167

:

and amazing than he was, even though he himself was a famous king. And we know that because in

168

:

verse 4, he immediately speaks how wonderful God is and then immediately talks about himself as if

169

:

he's nothing. There's two theological precepts we see in this text, the doctrine of God and the

170

:

doctrine of man. The doctrine of God says that God equals God and God is impressive and amazing

171

:

and majestic and transcends all he's made. The doctrine of man says against that I'm nothing.

172

:

The first theological class I ever took in seminary, the first thing a professor ever

173

:

wrote on the border, these words, there is a God, you are not him. All good theology starts with that

174

:

at its foundation. There is a God, you are not him. That's what David is saying here. When I consider

175

:

the cosmos and the work in your hands, how amazing, how great thou art, right? How great thou art that

176

:

thou should make all this. But then in verse 4, but then who is man? When I see who you are, who in the

177

:

world am i and not only who in the world am i but who in the world am i that you given who you are

178

:

would care about me and he doesn't have a ready answer to that says what's man ah it's like his

179

:

brain breaks there on the top of the palaces he's contemplating these things what am i what's man

180

:

i know people say i'm great but in reality what is man what is man that you are mindful of him

181

:

and the son of man that you visit him you made him a little lower than the angels you crowned

182

:

with glory and honor. Why? Why? Why? Goodness knows I've given you no reason to do so. The same palace

183

:

rooftop with which he looks out and sees the cosmos and says how wonderful God is and praises

184

:

and worships him is the same sort of palace rooftop by which he saw Bathsheba and dove into sin. You

185

:

understand this? Who is God? Holy and righteous and wise and virtuous and just. Who am I? The same guy

186

:

who can look at you and say you're awesome and look at Bathsheba and go sin. That's who man is

187

:

in contrast with who God is.

188

:

How great thou art.

189

:

I think we'll sing it.

190

:

I think it's in our bulletin.

191

:

It's our last song today.

192

:

How fitting.

193

:

How great thou art, says this.

194

:

O Lord, my God, when I am awesome wonder,

195

:

consider all the worlds thy hands have made.

196

:

I see the stars, I hear the rolling thunder,

197

:

thy power throughout the universe displayed.

198

:

Then sings my soul, my Savior God, to thee.

199

:

How great thou art.

200

:

How great thou art.

201

:

If God is so big and so majestic, the million-dollar question becomes, why does he care for us?

202

:

Now, before we answer that question or address it, let me insert one other thing here.

203

:

A few moments ago, we talked about my cap, right?

204

:

We talked about the difference in size and scale and scope when we compare one person, one thing, against another thing in the created world around us.

205

:

But with that said, when we talk about God's size, such as it is, when we talk about God's size, we know this,

206

:

that the reach of his arm knows no bounds, the power of his word can do anything that he intends

207

:

it. There's no scale, there's no rule, there's no calculator by which you can measure God. However,

208

:

it's not just the size that matters. It's not just God's infinite size and scope and scale

209

:

and the like that matters. It's also his substance. And I'll prove this. If you took a soccer ball,

210

:

you know, kick a soccer ball, you got a soccer ball, let's say that soccer ball goes rolling

211

:

and it encounters a planet, right? Just a planet. So a tiny soccer ball against a planet, who wins?

212

:

well we know that the planet wins why because it's the planet the size is greater than the

213

:

soccer ball dwarfs it overcomes it soccer ball would be eviscerated like that so on the one hand

214

:

we think of god's size is so foreboding and impressive and he just dwarfs us and absolutely

215

:

that's part and parcel of the text but it's not simply god's size that's the issue it's also god's

216

:

substance let's say you take the soccer ball you take the soccer ball and you kick a soccer ball

217

:

Now, let's say that soccer ball encounters a bowling ball of the exact same size.

218

:

As you look at them, they're the same size objects.

219

:

A soccer ball coming at the same speed against a bowling ball coming at the same speed.

220

:

Who's going to win?

221

:

Bowling ball.

222

:

But why?

223

:

It's what it's made of, the substance of the bowling ball.

224

:

When it encounters the soccer ball, the bowling ball will not slow down at all.

225

:

Why?

226

:

Because the substance, the essence of it is so much superior to that which it has encountered.

227

:

It's not simply that God is bigger than us that matters.

228

:

I mean, that's important to consider.

229

:

He is majestic and transcendent and all that, but also his nature.

230

:

His nature is greater, superior to ours, and that's embedded in this text as well.

231

:

All right, let's look at our remaining verses, and then we'll try to tie all this together.

232

:

Verses 6 through 9.

233

:

He starts talking about man again, and he says,

234

:

Oh, God, you've made us, you've made man, to have dominion over the work of your hands.

235

:

You understand? He says, you're greater than the creator is greater than the created.

236

:

God transcends. The creator is greater than the created.

237

:

But then he says, within the scope of the created, you put us at top.

238

:

God, you are wonderful. You made everything.

239

:

And you're transcendent over that which you have made.

240

:

But within the scope of that which you have made, for reasons that escape me,

241

:

you have put us at the top.

242

:

And you've given us dominion over everything else.

243

:

God, you've made man to have dominion over the works of your hands.

244

:

You have put all things under his feet.

245

:

Not just some things in the created realm, but everything.

246

:

We scale mountains, we fish the deepest seas, right?

247

:

You've given all of it to us.

248

:

You've put all things under his feet, all of the sheep, all the oxen, the beasts of the field,

249

:

the birds in the air, the fish of the sea that go through the paths of the sea.

250

:

That's his way of saying everything.

251

:

Everything we have dominion over.

252

:

And then verse 9, O Lord, our Lord, how excellent is your name in all the earth.

253

:

All right, what's going on here?

254

:

Why is he lingering on this?

255

:

And why is he closed, of course, again by referring to the name?

256

:

Well, back in verses 3 through 5, David acknowledged that mankind himself is small compared to God.

257

:

If you get nothing else, I trust you got that.

258

:

There is a God, you're not him, right?

259

:

Mankind is beneath God.

260

:

And because that's true as a side note, the right response, the thinking man's response is to say,

261

:

if there is a God and he exists and he's bigger than I, what do I need to do to be right by him?

262

:

What has he told me about how he wants me to live?

263

:

And whatever it is, I ought to do, right?

264

:

That just makes common sense.

265

:

If he's bigger, he made me, he's in charge of me, he's authority over me.

266

:

If this is true, then the least response I can have is to take my life and walk it in accordance

267

:

with whatever he wants me to do. He's God, I'm not. There is a God, I am not him. So that was

268

:

in verses three through five. But then here, he starts talking about man and says, at the same

269

:

time, God, I can't quite fathom this. It's wonderful, but you've made us and you've given

270

:

us to have dominion over all of these different things. So that's what we see in verses six

271

:

through eight. Now there's a phrase, there's a Latin phrase sometimes we use to describe what

272

:

it means to be made in the image of God. What's the Latin phrase? The image of God is what? The

273

:

imago Dei, right? Image of God. We are made in God's image. Now, what does that mean?

274

:

It means that we share aspects of his nature. Now, there's attributes of God that we don't have.

275

:

What's one thing God has as an attribute that you and I will never have? For one, we're not infinite.

276

:

I'm not omnipresent. Let's do the omnis. I'm not omnipresent, right? I'm not omniscient, right?

277

:

There's a lot of things God is that I am not.

278

:

But there's also a lot of things that God is that I am and that you are.

279

:

Someone give me an example of what we would call a communicable attribute,

280

:

an attribute he has that you and I have.

281

:

What's one?

282

:

Creativity.

283

:

Yes, interesting.

284

:

That's actually wonderful.

285

:

So God is creative.

286

:

Amongst his many attributes is this.

287

:

He is the cosmic Bob Ross.

288

:

Bob Ross, I'm a big fan of Bob Ross.

289

:

You know this.

290

:

He's the infinite cosmic Bob Ross.

291

:

His canvas scopes everything.

292

:

He is creative.

293

:

the things that he makes, the things he can think of.

294

:

Dear heavens, you and I have only seen just a scooch of a scooch of all that.

295

:

I've said before, Moses lived a long time.

296

:

Moses never saw a kangaroo.

297

:

Moses never saw a starfish.

298

:

Moses never saw a lot of things on this earth.

299

:

There's a lot of things you haven't seen on this earth,

300

:

and that's just one planet amongst the whole cosmos.

301

:

It's the backdrop of all the things that God might have created.

302

:

And that's just here.

303

:

What about in the heaven of heavens, the heaven yet to come?

304

:

The canvas of God is infinite.

305

:

is creative, and at the same time, he made you to be creative too. He put in your heart a desire to

306

:

take your hands and your skills and apply it creatively to the canvas he's given you, whatever

307

:

that might be. It might be through song. It might be literally through paint. That might be through

308

:

any manner of different means by which we can create things. That's one example. There's many

309

:

more. God is loving. He's patient. He's kind. Can you be loving, kind, and patient? I hope so. So

310

:

those attributes God has that we share. Now, there are other attributes that we share with God that

311

:

are completely foreign to the animal landscape around us. You can take a million monkeys in a

312

:

room for a million years, they'll never hammer out the words of Shakespeare, let alone words of

313

:

scripture, let alone anything halfway legible, right? Why? Because for whatever God has equipped

314

:

monkeys to do, which isn't a whole lot, he has not equipped them with the creativity to compose

315

:

Shakespeare or a sonnet to do ballet, do any number of different things, but he has us. We are all

316

:

together different. The things in the world around us are kind of neat and nifty. I like going to the

317

:

aquarium. I really, really do. The aquarium is a lot of fun for me. Gazoos are a lot of fun for me.

318

:

There's probably a reason why we have so many animals. I like what God has made, and yet at the

319

:

same time, I know that what God has made in the animal kingdom is nothing compared to mankind who

320

:

is made in the image of God and who is creative and has many of the attributes that God himself

321

:

has. And God himself, it's like if you're a home builder, let's say that was your job to build

322

:

homes, and you have a child, small child, and as he gets a little older, you give that child

323

:

his first hammer. Isn't it cool? You've used a hammer all your life. You've used it, you've

324

:

wielded it, you've constructed things, you've built things, and you give your child the first

325

:

hammer. I don't know what he's going to do with it, but your idea is something good, his first

326

:

hammer to be utilized and to build and to create and to construct things and the like. In a sense,

327

:

That's our opportunity as God's children to emulate our Father using the tools that he has given us.

328

:

So that's just a small representation of what we see in these verses when he reflects on the dominion that we've been given.

329

:

But let's close by looking again at verse 9, which brings us back to the name of God.

330

:

Verse 9 said this,

331

:

O Lord, our Lord, how excellent, how majestic, some translations have it, is your name in all the earth.

332

:

Let me ask you a question.

333

:

Do you remember a guy, a guy named Nebuchadnezzar?

334

:

And if so, what do you remember about Nebuchadnezzar?

335

:

Well, Nebuchadnezzar's story, it's in the book of Daniel.

336

:

It has really two different parts.

337

:

Now, initially, Nebuchadnezzar is a pretty proud guy.

338

:

Nebuchadnezzar, like David, is a king.

339

:

Nebuchadnezzar, like David, ruled over a lot of people.

340

:

People would come bowing and scraping into his presence, right?

341

:

But here's the thing.

342

:

Unlike David, Nebuchadnezzar let all that stuff go to his head.

343

:

And do you remember what happened to Nebuchadnezzar?

344

:

One day he's out on his palace.

345

:

One day he's out in the palace in Babylon.

346

:

He's looking out over all that he has made.

347

:

And what does he say?

348

:

I'm paraphrasing here, but in essence, he looks over all he's made.

349

:

And he says, how wonderful I am for all that I have made.

350

:

In essence, what he says is, how majestic is my name.

351

:

He looked around specifically.

352

:

He looked around at everything that existed in Babylon.

353

:

And he said that these things exist for the glory of my majesty, is the phrase that he used.

354

:

And what happened?

355

:

What happened in Nebuchadnezzar like that?

356

:

God struck him.

357

:

Came dumb as a beast. Came dumb as a beast, was sent out to live in the field, lived like an

358

:

animal did, right? And it was only, only when ultimately God permitted him, God allowed him to

359

:

look up. Interestingly, to look up as David looked up. When Nebuchadnezzar looked up, what happened?

360

:

His reason returned him. Maybe it was that canvas. Maybe it was all the stars. Maybe it was the

361

:

thought that all that was more impressive than the palace in Babylon. Whatever the case is, God used

362

:

that moment to restore his senses and the response of Nebuchadnezzar to this recognition of who he

363

:

really was in comparison to who God is, is that there in Daniel chapter 4, he has this wonderful

364

:

admission, this wonderful moment where he praises the God of all creation and admits that he is

365

:

nothing in comparison. Nebuchadnezzar, Nebuchadnezzar, through the hand of God, was disciplined, and yet

366

:

there was grace in that discipline. I've preached in the past that I believe Nebuchadnezzar was

367

:

saved. You'll have to go look for it in the Sermon Archives. Different story. But God gave Nebuchadnezzar

368

:

grace in that moment to have an understanding of who he was versus who he was. And Nebuchadnezzar

369

:

responded with praise towards his maker. What that said this morning, O Lord, our Lord, how excellent

370

:

is your name in all the earth. Nebuchadnezzar initially looked at his environment and praised

371

:

himself. David praised his God. When you go out these doors, when you go down and look at the

372

:

beach, we are blessed to live in a place where we can look at the canvas of creation in a way that

373

:

not many people can. When you look out at the vastness of those waters, so vast you can't even

374

:

see the end from the beginning. When you look at all that, remember how majestic is the one who

375

:

made those things. And remember at the same time, this towering God that made all that yet still

376

:

condescends to care about you. A towering God is yet tender. The same God whose fingers paint the

377

:

stars above will one day wipe away your tears. Let's pray.

Links

Chapters

Video

More from YouTube