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Psalm 74: Praying Through The Ruins

with Michael Easley
  • Sermons

Psalm 74: Praying Through The Ruins

with Michael Easley
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Psalm 74 reminds us that even in devastation and silence, God remains the eternal King who brings salvation from ruins.

Psalm 74: Praying Through The Ruins

This series was originally recorded at The Cove in Asheville, NC.

Summary

In this sobering message from Psalm 74, Dr. Michael Easley walks through one of the darkest laments in the Psalms—a prayer written from the ruins of devastation, loss, and apparent silence from God. Using the imagery of 9/11, Easley connects the grief of national tragedy with the personal ruins many believers experience through broken relationships, unanswered prayers, suffering, and disappointment.

Psalm 74 captures Israel standing amid the destruction of God’s sanctuary, asking the painful question: “How long?” The psalmist does not deny God’s discipline, but struggles with the feeling that God has forgotten His people forever. Yet in the middle of despair comes a turning point: God is still the eternal King who works deeds of deliverance.

Easley highlights the repeated reminders in the psalm—“remember” and “you”—showing how the psalmist clings to God’s past faithfulness while pleading for present mercy. Ultimately, the sermon points beyond the ruined temple to Jesus Christ Himself. Just as the sanctuary was destroyed, Christ’s body was broken so true worship and eternal life could be restored.

This message reminds believers that evil only destroys, but God alone creates, resurrects, redeems, and saves.

 

Takeaways

  • Psalm 74 gives believers language to pray honestly when God feels distant and suffering feels endless.
  • The psalmist’s deepest struggle was not God’s discipline, but the fear that God had forgotten His people forever.
  • Repetition in the psalm—especially the words “remember” and “you”—anchors the believer in God’s faithfulness during despair.
  • Evil only desecrates and destroys, but God alone creates, restores, and brings life out of death.
  • The destruction of Israel’s sanctuary ultimately points forward to the crucifixion of Jesus Christ, the true worship center of God’s people.
  • Because Christ conquered death through resurrection, believers can trust God even when life feels like ruins.

To read the Psalms, click here.

Click here for other Michael Easley Sermons.

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Continue Series

Psalm 71: Faith That Finishes Well

Psalm 71 shows aging as loss, but also deep faith, mentoring purpose, and joyful worship rooted in God’s lifelong faithfulness.

Read More »
Psalm 50: God Who Judges The Heart

God exposes empty religion and hypocrisy in Psalm 50, calling His people to true worship marked by gratitude and trust.

Read More »
Psalm 46: Be Still and Know

In fear and uncertainty, Psalm 46 reminds us: God is our refuge, strength, and ever-present help—so we can stop striving and trust Him.

Read More »

Topics

  • Anxiety, Biblical Teaching, Grief, Pain and Suffering, Personal Growth, Prayer, Theology, Trust, Wisdom, Worship

References

Tags

  • divine sovereignty, God's covenant, God's eternity, Jesus Christ, lament, prayer, Psalm 74, Resurrection, worship
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