Wineskin hope

Wineskin hope January 9, 2007

The psalmist is parched and his only hope is moisture if the skin is to survive. How does he cope? What can he do? Notice these words:

He longs for God to deliver (119:81a).
He hopes in God’s Word (119:81b).
He does not abandon God’s precepts (119:87b).
He petitions God to preserve him (119:88a).
The image the psalmist uses, the drying, parching wineskin, impresses me: it is so evocative of sterility and frigidity and apathy and depression and hopelessness.
In spite of his condition, the psalmist has the hope of a wineskin — which (of course) has no real hope, but it can signify (by metaphor) a condition of serious need. He longs for God’s deliverance.
One thing strikes me about the Bible: living by faith occurs when there is a challenge beyond our capacities, living by hope occurs when we are hopeless. It is easy to talk about faith and hope; it is hard to live by faith and to live in hope. The psalmist points the way.


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