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Posts Tagged ‘Psalm 034’

The Paradox of the Broken Heart: Why Praising God Changes Everything

When your heart is broken and your spirit is thoroughly crushed, the natural human instinct is to retreat. We pull away from people, we isolate ourselves, and we turn deeply inward, focusing on the weight of our own pain. In those dark moments, it feels entirely like we are completely alone.

But scripture reveals that our feelings lie to us about proximity. Exactly when we feel the most abandoned is the precise moment God draws closest.

“The Lord is near to the brokenhearted and saves the crushed in spirit.” — Psalm 34:18


An Act of Will, Not Emotion

The breakthrough happens when we stop waiting for our feelings to change before we change our focus. True spiritual warfare in times of grief doesn’t begin in your emotions; it begins in your choices.

“I will bless the Lord at all times; his praise shall continually be in my mouth.” — Psalm 34:1

Notice the phrasing here. It says I will—that is an act of the will, a deliberate decision. It also specifies that His praise shall be in your mouth, not just quietly tucked away in your heart.

When you are spiraling inward, looking at your feelings will never fix your feelings. You cannot think your way out of a crushed spirit, but you can speak your way into a shift in perspective.


What You Speak, You Feel

There is a direct connection between the words that cross your lips and the state of your mind. If you talk trash, focus on the negative, and continually vocalize your despair, you will feel like trash.

When you choose to open your mouth and actively thank God that He is near—even when you can’t feel Him—and thank Him that He promises to save you, the atmosphere changes. Praise is the pivot point. By choosing to bless the Lord at all times, you break the cycle of isolation and align your speech with His truth rather than your temporary pain.

Become familiar with Psalm 34, the whole thing is encouraging.

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“Taste and see that the LORD is good” – Psalm 34:8a

Why does the Bible use Taste in its call to experience God?

Taste can change opinions. I was in my 30’s before I tasted broccoli because I could not stand its look and smell. My opinion changed when I actually tasted it with a little cheese. I still don’t like the smell, but the taste is worth it.

Similarly, I don’t always like the presentation of God or religion by some of its proponents, but the firsthand experience God in Christ has made the rest of little consequence.

Taste is different than sight – watching can be done from a distance but taste is up close and personal. Like John Wesley, Anglican priest and founder of the Methodist movement, said after his “Aldersgate experience”,

I felt my heart strangely warmed. I felt I did trust in Christ alone for salvation; and an assurance was given me that He had taken away my sins, even mine, and saved me from the law of sin and death.1

Taste requires a sense of adventure and a willingness to try something new. Experiencing Christ, especially as an adult, happens by a willingness to experience something new and taking a chance without really knowing what the experience will be like.

And taste, while it can be described to anyone, can’t be known without personal experience. Once someone experiences the living Christ, all the contrary chatter in the world is just that, chatter.

– Fritz

1 – Wesley’s Aldersgate Experience

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