153 Consider my affliction and rescue me,
for I have not forgotten your instruction.
154 Champion my cause and redeem me;
give me life as you promised.
155 Salvation is far from the wicked
because they do not study your statutes.
156 Your compassions are many, Lord;
give me life according to your judgments.
157 My persecutors and foes are many.
I have not turned from your decrees.
158 I have seen the disloyal and feel disgust
because they do not keep your word.
159 Consider how I love your precepts;
Lord, give me life according to your faithful love.
160 The entirety of your word is truth,
each of your righteous judgments endures forever.

We now come to the twentieth stanza of Psalm 119 (ר/resh, pronounced raysh), and many of the thoughts and themes are a continuation from the previous stanza (qoph). Our psalmist begins by asking God to “consider my affliction and rescue me.“ Clearly, our psalmist is experiencing some measure of personal suffering and sorrow. And we must affirm that suffering and difficulty are a regular part of the life of faith. The Christian life is not lived apart from suffering, but through it. The question is not whether we will suffer and face difficulties, but how we will suffer and face difficulties. Our psalmist’s suffering drives him toward God, not away from him, as he says, “for I have not forgotten your instruction.” In other words, in the midst of his suffering and troubles, our psalmist clings to God’s Word, because he believes that God is fundamentally faithful to his promises. His suffering may be real, but so too is the steadfast faithfulness of the God who speaks.
This is why he goes on to pray in verse 154, “Champion my cause and redeem me; give me life as your promised.” Notice that the psalmist appeals not to his own personal merits, but to God’s covenant mercy. He understands that he cannot ultimately save himself and that he depends entirely upon God’s intervention. And this is exactly the point, namely that our affliction and difficulties are meant to expose our weaknesses and our inabilities to sustain ourselves apart from God. Yet the psalmist does not collapse into despair or hopelessness. Rather, he cultivates a posture of active dependence upon the Lord. His suffering does not destroy his faith; it drives him more deeply into dependence upon God and his promises. He prays, he cries out, he seeks the Lord, and he clings to the certainty of God’s covenant faithfulness. This is what true dependence looks like. It is not passive resignation, but persevering trust that continues to hold firmly to the faithfulness of God even in the face of suffering and uncertainty.
Of course, this is not true for those who stand outside of covenant relationship with God. Verse 155 reads, “Salvation is far from the wicked because they do not study your statutes.” This is not merely a rejection of moral instruction in an abstract sense; rather, it is a wholesale covenant repudiation. The wicked are described as those whose lives are fundamentally oriented away from God and his Word. By contrast, the righteous cling to God’s promises and seek refuge in his instruction. This distinction is incredibly important because the psalmist understands that salvation and deliverance cannot be separated from relationship with God himself. Life, truth, obedience, and salvation all belong together. This stands in direct contrast to the instincts of our fallen nature. So often, we desire comfort, peace, and deliverance while resisting submission to God and his Word. We want the blessings of covenant without the God of the covenant. But the psalmist refuses to separate these realities. To reject the Word of God is ultimately to reject the God who gives life, because his Word is the very means through which he reveals himself, sustains his people, and leads them into salvation and truth.
The God of the Bible is the only one who can truly give life, as our psalmist prays, “Your compassions are many, Lord; give me life according to your judgments.” Of course, our psalmist is not merely praying for physical preservation, though that is certainly included within his request. The “life” he prays for is spiritual, covenantal, and relational; it is grounded in the Lord’s many compassions. This is why he repeatedly prays for God to revive him according to his steadfast love, his judgments, and his Word. True and abundant life, a life that is full and flourishing, flows from the character of God as he reveals himself through his Word and remains faithful to his covenant promises. In other words, the Word of God is not abstract information, bare command, or mere doctrine; it is life-giving revelation. And this notion stands in direct contrast to the instincts of our modern world. We often seek life and renewal through changing circumstances, distractions, self-help strategies, or emotional experiences, but none of these things can truly sustain the soul. The psalmist understands that real life can only be found in God and in his Word. Scripture does not merely inform the people of God; it sustains, revives, and gives them life.
And so, our psalmist concludes in verse 160, “The entirety of your word is truth, each of your righteous judgments endures forever.” In many ways, this is the theological climax of the stanza. The psalmist’s confidence ultimately rests not in changing circumstances, nor even in the immediate easing of his affliction, but in the enduring truthfulness of God’s Word. As we saw in the previous stanza, the details and circumstances of human experience change constantly, sometimes day by day, even moment by moment. Our emotions fluctuate, our trials intensify, and the uncertainties of life often leave us feeling unstable and weary. But the truthfulness of God does not change. His Word remains fixed, enduring, and eternally true. This is why the stability of the Christian life ultimately depends upon the stability of divine revelation rather than the instability of human experience. Like the psalmist, then, we are able to persevere through every season of suffering and uncertainty because the God who speaks remains faithful and true, and his Word endures forever.
In the end, then, the Resh stanza of Psalm 119 teaches us what it means to seek life through the Word of God in the midst of suffering and affliction. The psalmist cries out, waits, longs for deliverance, and pleads for God to revive him, and yet throughout the stanza he continually turns back to the certainty of God’s promises and covenant faithfulness. Affliction does not sever his relationship with God; rather, suffering becomes the very context in which his dependence upon God deepens. And the same is true for the people of God today. We continue to seek life not in changing circumstances or fleeting comforts, but in the enduring faithfulness of the God who speaks. Though affliction surrounds the people of God, true life is found in the God who speaks, whose Word remains forever true and whose covenant faithfulness never fails.
For further study:
Introduction
Psalm 119.1-8
Psalm 119.9-16
Psalm 119.17-24
Psalm 119.25-32
Psalm 119.33-40
Psalm 119.41-48
Psalm 119.49-56
Psalm 119.57-64
Psalm 119.65-72
Psalm 119.73-80
Psalm 119.81-88
Psalm 119.89-96
Psalm 119.97-104
Psalm 119.105-112
Psalm 119.113-120
Psalm 119.121-128
Psalm 119.129-136
Psalm 119.137-144
Psalm 119.145-152
