Listen to my heart, O Love Divine; heart the cry within me!
Heed my prayer form lips that would utter truth! For in You do I seek justice!
Be Thou my eyes that I may see with clarity.
If You try my heart, if You visit me by night, if You test me, You will discover
My only desire is to draw closer to You.
I see the injustice and the oppression piercing the hearts of your people.
Be Thou my feet that I may walk along your paths;
that I may be a benevolent presence on life’s highway.
I call upon You knowing You will answer me,
Heart of my heart; incline your ear to me, hear my words.
Wondrously show your steadfast love, O Love Divine,
You walk beside me giving me strength to face the fears that dwell within.
Keep me as the apple of your eye; hide mean the shadow of your wings,
from all that would separate me from your Love.
Open my heart that compassion may be my companion;
Where I meet pride, humble me; Where I meet anger, calm my fears;
Where I meet injustice, cause me to act in love’s way.
May I be as gentle as the doe, as fearless as the lion, as faithful as the dog.
Arise, O Heart of Love! confront all within me that is not whole!
Deliver me from deadly fear and doubts, shine your Light not my darkness.
May my heart receive the bounty of your Love,
may my children and their children walk with You in gratitude and joy.
For I shall behold your face in Truth, when I am fully awake,
I shall dwell in the house of love and peace and joy!
Nan C. Merrill Psalms for Praying
Reflection:
Psalm 17 sounds a lot like how I pray when I’m overwhelmed. There are days when I want nothing more than to crawl into God’s lap and be held like a child. God keep the crazy away and hold me tight so that I feel nothing but love and peace. I crave the comfort of steadfast love.
Psalm 17 is also the kind of prayer I say when I need to do something brave. Similar to the Breastplate of St. Patrick, asking God to be with me, around me, to go before me and behind me, helps me to feel surrounded by love.
Prayer sustains me and allows me to be compassionate and loving towards others.

Check out other psalm reflections in the links below or find more of my writing published in Presbyterian Outlook or listen to my experiments in podcasting on the Period Pastor Podcast. Follow me @periodpastor
I began writing Psalm reflections during Lent of 2020. Shortly after, we decided to close the church building, work from home, and worship via zoom. Many churches use the Revised Common Lectionary (RLC) that rotates scripture on a three-year cycle (A, B, and C). Starting in Advent 2019, the church decided to worship with the texts from Year D, which is still not circulated as are years A, B, and C. Year D was created with the goal of including scriptures that were left out or not used as frequently as others. While we were using Psalms in year D, most other lectionary followers were using Year A. In Advent of 2020 we rejoined those who use the lectionary in year B. Advent of 2021 year C. When we returned to in person worship, we took the psalm reflections out of the order of worship. I continued to write them for the blog. Advent of 2022 year A. I left church work in July of 2023 but continued the practice of writing psalm reflections. Advent of 2023 year B.
I use the Vanderbilt Divinity Library’s resource for lectionary readings to make text selections.
1st Sunday in Advent Psalm 25, 2nd Sunday in Advent instead of a Psalm the lectionary gives Luke 1:68-79, 3rd Sunday in Advent instead of a Psalm the lectionary gives Isaiah 12:2-6, 4th Sunday in Advent Luke 1:46b-55 or Psalm 80, Christmas Eve or Christmas Day Psalm 96, Psalm 97, Psalm 98, 1st Sunday after Christmas, Psalm 148, New Year’s Day Psalm 8, 2nd Sunday after Christmas Psalm 147, Epiphany Psalm 72, 1st Sunday after Epiphany Psalm 29, 2nd Sunday after Epiphany Psalm 36, 3rd Sunday after Epiphany Psalm 19, 4th Sunday after Epiphany Psalm 71, 5th Sunday after Epiphany Psalm 138, 6th Sunday after Epiphany Psalm 1, 7th Sunday after Epiphany Psalm 37, Transfiguration Sunday (Sunday before Lent) Psalm 99
Lent: Ash Wednesday Psalm 51, 1st Sunday in Lent Psalm 91, 2nd Sunday in Lent Psalm 27, 3rd Sunday in Lent Psalm 63, 4th Sunday in Lent Psalm 32, 5th Sunday in Lent Psalm 126, 6th Sunday in Lent (Palm or Passion Sunday) Psalm 118 or 31
Easter: Easter Psalm 118 or Psalm 114, 2nd Sunday of Easter Psalm 118 or Psalm 150, 3rd Sunday of Easter Psalm 30, 4thSunday of Easter Psalm 23 or 114, 5th Sunday of Easter Psalm 148, 6th Sunday of Easter Psalm 67 or 109, Ascension Psalm 47 or Psalm 93, 7th Sunday of Easter Psalm 97 or Psalm 2, Day of Pentecost Psalm 104
Season After Pentecost (Ordinary Time): 1st Sunday after Pentecost (Trinity Sunday) Psalm 8, 2nd Sunday after Pentecost Psalm 42 and Psalm 43 or Psalm 22, 3rd Sunday after Pentecost Psalm 77 or Psalm 16, 4th Sunday after Pentecost Psalm 30 or Psalm 66, 5th Sunday after Pentecost Psalm 82 or Psalm 25, 6th Sunday after Pentecost Psalm 52 or Psalm 15, 7thSunday after Pentecost Psalm 85 or Psalm 138, 8th Sunday after Pentecost Psalm 107 or Psalm 49, 9th Sunday after Pentecost Psalm 50 or Psalm 33, 10th Sunday after Pentecost Psalm 80 or Psalm 82, 11th Sunday after Pentecost Psalm 71or Psalm 103, 12th Sunday after Pentecost Psalm 81 or Psalm 112, 13th Sunday after Pentecost Psalm 139 or Psalm 1, 14thSunday after Pentecost Psalm 14 or Psalm 51, 15th Sunday after Pentecost Psalm 79 or Psalm 113, 16th Sunday after Pentecost Psalm 91 or Psalm 146, 17th Sunday after Pentecost Psalm 137 or Psalm 37, 18th Sunday after Pentecost Psalm 66 or Psalm 111, 19th Sunday after Pentecost Psalm 119 or Psalm 121, 20th Sunday after Pentecost Psalm 65 or Psalm 84, 21st Sunday after Pentecost Psalm 119 or Psalm 32, 22nd Sunday after Pentecost Psalm 145 or Psalm 98 or Psalm 17, 23rdSunday after Pentecost Psalm 98, 24th Sunday after Pentecost Psalm 46.
Sources and notes:
I’m including the previous reflection because I still love these quotes about prayer.
The lectionary suggests Psalm 17:8-14(15), not the entire Psalm, so I want to focus the reflection time on what it means to see God’s face or to be in God’s presence. Perhaps prayer is being aware of the presence of God wherever we are. So what does it mean to be present in God’s presence? What does it mean to pray?
“Prayer to me is anything we do that opens our heart, mind and soul to the always-with-us presence of Sacred Cosmic Mystery Creator with the intention to give thanks for gifts of grace in our lives. And in connecting with the infinite light and love of Spirit, we are asking to be used as a channel for those gifts into the world, sending God/Goddess Love into others without attachment to a result.” Tom Pinkson, in “How do you Pray?” edited by Celest Yacoboni
“My belief that God is love–that love is everything, our true destiny–sustains me. I affirm these beliefs through daily meditation and prayer, through contemplation and service, through worship and loving kindness. …. All awakening to love is spiritual awakening.” Bell Hooks, All About Love
“The longer I practice prayer, the more I think it is something that is always happening, like a radio wave that carries music through the air whether I tune in or not.” Barbara Brown Taylor, An Alter in the World
Psalm 17 “is composed of petitions for deliverance (vv. 1-2, 6-9), a plea of innocence (vv. 3-5), a description of the adversaries and a petition for their defeat (vv. 10-12, 13-14), and a concluding assertion of trust.” Mays p. 89
“The concluding statement of confidence (v. 15) makes it clear how important the relation to God is in the theology of these prayers. Their purpose is not simply to gain relief from dangers and difficulty. The real trouble with the trouble reflected in these prayers is that one’s relations to God is troubled. Deliverance not only brings relief but restores a sense of acceptance and communion. Acceptance bestows righteousness. Communion occurs in the experience of the presence. The prayer anticipates an answer given as a vision of the form o fate presence (face) of the LORD. The vision will convey justification; ti will be a sign of the acceptance that makes the relation to God right. “The upright shall behold his face” (11;7; see Matt. 5:8). Just how the vision of the presence occurred is not known. Israel was forbidden to make any likeness of the LORD in the form of an image (Exod. 20:4; Deut. 5:8). But Moses and the elders “saw the God of Israel” in the ritual meal that concluded the Sinai covenant. Moses as officiant in the tent-tabernacle “beheld the form of the LORD” (Num. 12:8). In the psalms there are references to seeing God or the face of God in the temple (e.g., 42:2; 63:2; 3:7-9). There is a seeing that comes with prayer and waiting that transcends what eye can behold.” Mays pp. 89-90
“In Christian interpretation there is along tradition that sees a reference to the resurrection in verse 15. “When I awake from the sleep of death, my life will be finally fulfilled when I see God.” In the context of Israel’s religion, “when I awake” may have referred to a ritual of spending the night at the holy place after prayer for help waiting for the propitious time of the morning. But the verse can be read with a second sense, because it is only the resurrection to be with the LORD that brings the final and full justification of the life of the faithful.” Mays p. 90
“There may be other ways that Israel and we see God–in momentous historical events, like the exodus or the dismantling of apartheid in South Africa, or in daily rituals that sustain and nourish, or in the faces of friends and loved ones, or in the faces of strangers, who may be among the least of our sisters and brothers. In any case, the psalmist is convinced of and apparently transformed by the possibility of experiencing unbroken communion with God. The psalmist anticipates the expertise hat Jesus proclaimed: “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God” (Matt. 5:8 NRSV). Christian tradition has interpreted v. 15 as a reference to the resurrection. While the psalmist probably had no doctrine of resurrection, her or his language pushes toward the notion of a communion with God that nothing –not even death– can interrupt” NIB p. 348
v.1 “A David prayer. This is one of several times in Psalms in which tefilah, prayer, is used instead of the anticipated mizmor, psalm. The generic distinction is not clear because this poem is essentially a psalm of supplication. The speaker is beset by enemies who threaten to destroy him as he entreats God to confound his foes and rescue him. Perhaps the note of inwardness in the first part of the poem, in which the speaker proclaims the integrity of his prayer (tefilah is the term he uses), and his having met the challenge of God’s probing are what qualify this text as prayer.” Alter p. 48
V. 14 “This line employs the strategy of incremented repetition that tis common in the oldest stratum of biblical poetry, –as, for example, in the Song of Deborah. The idea of the line is to remind God that these bloody-sided series are mere morals, and of a sort whose actions warrant that their fate of morality be instantly full fined. The reference to God’s hand is motivated by the fact that this hand wields a sword.” Alter p. 50
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Brueggemann, Walter. Davis Hanskins, Editor. 2022. Our Hearts Wait: Worshiping Through Praise and Lament in the Psalms Westminster John Knox Press, Louisville KY.
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