Christ Street Fellowship

Ascent: Psalms 128-129 - Ascending through the fear of God despite persecution

Gary Beasley

This week at Christ Street Fellowship, Pastor Nate continued our fall series Ascent: Walking up the Pilgrims’ Pathway, by exploring Psalms 128 and 129 and showing how we can ascend through the fear of God, even in times of persecution.

Psalm 128 reminds us that true blessing flows from a holy fear of the Lord. The fear of the Lord, although not definable in a single, short definition, is about awe, reverence, honor, obedience, and intimacy with a God who is both powerful and good. We will learn that the fear of God doesn’t drive us away, it draws us closer. We also learn that nearness to God is a place of safety, not danger. From Isaiah’s trembling vision of the throne room to Jesus’ delight in the fear of the Lord, Scripture shows that reverent awe leads to deeper friendship, wisdom, and blessing.

Then, turning to Psalm 129, as pilgrims we are reminded that affliction will come, but it will not prevail. “The plowers plowed upon my back,” the psalmist writes, yet the Lord “cut the cords of the wicked.” We see parallels to Paul’s words in 2 Corinthians 4 and Peter’s encouragement in 1 Peter 5: though we suffer for a season, the God of all grace will restore, strengthen, and establish us.