December 20: Hiding Place
♫ Music:
Day 21 - Saturday, December 20
Title: Hiding Place
Scripture #1: Psalm 32:7 (NKJV)
You are my hiding place; you shall preserve me from trouble; you shall surround me with songs of deliverance.
Scripture #2: Psalm 91:1–2 (NKJV) He who dwells in the secret place of the Most High shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty. I will say of the Lord, “He is my refuge and my fortress; My God, in Him I will trust.”
Poetry & Poet:
“The Sea Here, Teaching Me”
by Moira Linehan
the sea saying, This is how you pray
to your rock of a god, your massive cliff
of a god, sheer drop into the bay,
immovable, not-going-anywhere
kind of god. Look at photos from a hundred
years ago. Your god’s not moved. Glacial remains
of a god. Impenetrable. Can’t-wear-it-
down god. Rock face of a god. Face it.
You’re a dot on the landscape, a sheep’s droppings
before this god. The sea telling me, Maybe
the wind will side with you. Maybe it won’t.
So you wait, wait for a day in November,
a day like yesterday, the wind wild
off the Atlantic, but backing you up,
making you come wave upon wave face to face
with the wall of your god. Telling me,
You stand up as wave, are shattered to spray,
lifted as mist. You keep being lifted up
and over the fields beyond that cliff, mist
falling now over the matted wet wool
on the backs of sheep, their faces pushed
into grass. The sea, teaching me to say,
“So be it. So be it.”
A Hiding Place
Even if only plinked out on a toy piano, the first six notes of “You Are My Hiding Place” will surely evoke a wave of emotion in any of the millions of Christians across the world to whom the Holy Spirit has brought comfort and peace that passes all understanding through this beautiful psalm song. Having grown up in the church home of the Maranatha Singers, I remember desiring my parents to play this song or sing it to me every night a childhood fear wedged its way into my heart. Each minor chord combined with the uplifting truth of the psalmic lyrics brought pools of tears to my eyes as fears began to shed away, because my heart remembered that Jesus and not my bed was my real hiding place. A geographic place to hide may offer temporary safety from danger, but we have far more than a mere location in which to hide. We have a Father who gave us His only begotten Son as a Savior who himself is our Hiding Place. He doesn’t need to build a refuge and a fortress for us, He is our refuge and fortress.
Tissot’s masterful portfolio consists of hundreds of paintings illustrating the gospel including today’s work of art, The Apostles’ Hiding Place, and its companion piece The Disciples Having Left Their Hiding Place Watch from Afar in Agony. In the former, the disciples appear quite exposed, and their physical hiding place offers little protection. Their faces are fearful and without hope as they crouch and lie scattered among the rocks and crevices. They are sheep who have left their Good Shepherd—their only true Hiding Place. In the latter painting we see them only from the back, having crept out of their scant refuge in the direction of their True Refuge. Tissot magnificently captures the vast distance that still lies between them and the cross. At that moment, what would it have been like for them to have remembered the sound of Jesus’ voice reciting the words from today’s psalms? To remember that they may still abide under the shadow of the Almighty, even as darkness came over the land? Their Hiding Place, the Son of God, was making a way for them from death to life. The power of sin and death was broken and their accuser and enemy was disarmed. He was, and is, and always will be our Hiding Place who fills our hearts with songs of deliverance, and in whom we can and indeed must trust whenever we are afraid.
I don’t know if Mary sang these psalms to her baby boy in the manger, or if she whispered them in his small ears as they escaped to Egypt; but I am grateful for King David’s faithfulness to give them to her, to the apostles, and to us. May we never grow too old to sing this song of comfort and protection as we remember the Father’s gift of the Son, our Hiding Place in whom we can dwell forever without fear.
Prayer:
Almighty Father, as we approach Christmas Eve and the dark of night surrounds us, may our hearts be filled with the knowledge of our full security in your incarnate Son Jesus Christ, our Hiding Place, a rock and fortress impregnable by any earthly power or principality. Let your songs of deliverance never depart from our hearts. When we think of the shepherds on those hills outside of Bethlehem who saw your angels and were sore afraid, let us remember that you sent them straight to your Hiding Place. For unto us a child was born, a Savior you have given. We pray these words in the sweet and safe name of Jesus.
Amen.
Dr. Matt Van Hook
Associate Professor
Torrey Honors College
Biola University
About the Artwork:
The Apostles' Hiding Place (La Retraite des Apotres)
James Tissot
1886–1894
Opaque watercolor over graphite on paper
17.1 x 23.8 cm
Brooklyn Museum of Art
Brooklyn, New York
Public Domain
The disciples went into hiding after Jesus' arrest and crucifixion. Confused and feeling vulnerable, they undoubtedly feared facing similar consequences from the authorities for following Jesus. The death of Jesus most certainly shattered their expectations of a Messiah who would overcome the power of the Roman government and establish a new kingdom on earth. While Jesus had prophesied His death and resurrection, the disciples struggled to grasp the full import of His words and teachings. It wasn't until their encounter with the resurrected Jesus that they were transformed into fearless apostles who spread the Christian faith near and far.
About the Artist:
James Tissot (1836–1902) was a French painter and illustrator. He was a successful painter of fashionable, modern scenes and society life in Paris before moving to London in 1871. A friend and mentor of the impressionist painter Edgar Degas, Tissot painted scenes and figures from the Bible. In 1885, Tissot had a revival of his Catholic faith, which led him to spend the rest of his life making paintings about biblical events. Moving away from impressionism and postimpressionism, Tissot returned to traditional, representational styles and narratives in his watercolors. To assist in his completion of biblical illustrations, Tissot traveled to the Middle East to make studies of the landscape and people. His series of 365 gouache illustrations showing the life of Christ were shown to critical acclaim and enthusiastic audiences in Paris, London, and New York, before being bought by the Brooklyn Museum in 1900. Tissot spent the last years of his life working on paintings of subjects from the Old Testament, which he unfortunately never completed.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Tissot
https://www.artbible.info/art/biography/james-tissot
https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/exhibitions/james_tissot
About the Music: “You are My Hiding Place” from the album Hiding Place
Lyrics:
You are my hiding place
You always fill my heart
With songs of deliverance
Whenever I am afraid
I will trust in You.
I will trust in You
Let the weak say
I am strong
In the strength of the Lord.
You are my hiding place
You always fill my heart
With songs of deliverance
Whenever I am afraid
I will trust in You.
I will trust in You
Let the weak say I am strong
In the strength of the Lord
I will trust in You.
You are my hiding place
You always fill my heart
With songs of deliverance
Whenever I am afraid
I will trust in You.
I will trust in You
Let the weak say I am strong
In the strength of the Lord
I will trust in You.
About the Composer:
Michael Ledner (b. 1952) is an American psalmist, tender shepherd, pastor, and composer. He composed "You Are My Hiding Place" during a difficult season in his life in which he wrote many songs. Nine months later, Ledner shared this particular song with a group while they were serving at a kibbutz in Israel. His friends took the song back to California, where they introduced it to Maranatha! Music, who then contacted Michael to record "You Are My Hiding Place" on their next album.
https://thesimplefarm.net/blogs/journal/you-are-my-hiding-place-by-michael-j-ledner
About the Performers:
From their inception, the musical group Selah has been synonymous with the singing of hymns. In fact, the understated beauty of the trio’s 1999 debut album, Be Still My Soul, helped initiate a hymn revival in Christian music that continues today. Selah’s discography has significantly re-popularized the church’s greatest songs and hymns while decorating the ensemble with numerous Dove Awards, number one singles, sold-out concert tours, and over two and half million sold albums.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selah_(band)
https://selahonline.com/
About the Poetry & Poet:
Moira Linehan (b. 1945) is an American poet. She graduated from Boston College and Vermont College of Fine Arts with an M.F.A. She lived in Winchester, Massachusetts, where she worked as an academic administrator. She has been a resident at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts and the Millay Colony, a community of artists with a legacy of creativity. Her work has appeared in Alaska Quarterly Review, Green Mountains Review, Indiana Review, and Notre Dame Review.
https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/moira-linehan
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moira_Linehan
About the Devotion Author:.
Dr. Matt Van Hook
Associate Professor
Torrey Honors College
Biola University
Matt Van Hook teaches in Torrey Honors College at Biola University. He received his doctoral degree in political science from the University of Notre Dame. His research and teaching cross boundaries between philosophy, politics, literature, and history but often land somewhere close to the realm of statesmanship and American political thought. He is a retired officer who previously served as a US Air Force pilot and a professor at the US Air Force Academy.
