God -- the Global Hope
- Where can people find hope? God alone is the hope of all people, including those at "all the ends of the earth."
- Christians have not always been passionate about the need for Christ-followers to go across
"the farthest seas" to proclaim the Good News that bring hope.
- Psalm 65:5 is one of the 120 Old Testament verses that point to the urgent need for world
missions activity that will speak of hope.
- If Psalm 65:5 is true, can we be content with anything less than an all-out effort to tell all
people on earth of the hope in God our Savior?
What meaning and significance does Psalm 65:5 have for us today?
Missions: The Heart of God
Commentary on Psalm 65
"God our Savior,
the hope of all the ends of the earth
and of the farthest seas," -- Psalm 65:5
The world today is a delightful mosaic of cultures. My own little corner of the world -- the
Oklahoma City metro area -- has an Asian district, a German Oktoberfest, cowboy rodeos, a
Syrian food festival, Native American pow-wows, a Czech festival, and a multitude of Italian and
Mexican restaurants. Recently, the annual cultural festival of a local community college focused
on Haiti.
So, even here in central Oklahoma, we celebrate cultural diversity. In the middle of that
celebration, we must shout aloud the words of Psalm 65:5 proclaiming that God alone is the hope
of all peoples, including those at "all the ends of the earth."
Passages like Acts 1:8 -- "be my witnesses . . . to the ends of the earth" -- clearly
expect God's people to be spreading the news of hope far and wide. Indeed, Paul wrote in 2
Corinthians 3:12, "Since we have such a hope, we are very bold."
Sadly, through the centuries, believers have not always been passionate about making sure
God-called Christians go across "the farthest seas" to share the Good News. It's almost as
if we have found a cure for a disease like cancer but feel no urgency to tell those suffering from
the disease about that cure.
A story from 19th century China involving missionary Hudson Taylor shows how slowly the Church has moved to proclaim the hope we have in God our Savior.
One day, a former Buddhist who had converted to Christianity asked Taylor how long people
in the missionary's home country had known about the Gospel. Taylor somewhat reluctantly
acknowledged in his homeland, people had known the saving hope of the Gospel for more than a
thousand years.
"What?" exclaimed the new Chinese Christian, "Is it possible that for hundreds of years, you
have had these glad tidings and yet have only just now come to preach them to us?"
Lamenting that his own father had fruitlessly looked for hope throughout life, the man cried
out to Hudson Taylor, "Why did you not come sooner?"
That question should nag at us today. Missions mobilizer Phil Bogosian has expressed
dismay that of all the people who die each day across the world, 70,000 of them have never had
the chance to hear the gospel not even once.
The words in Psalm 65:5 about "ends of the earth" and "farthest seas" call us
to look beyond our neighborhood, beyond even our own country to huge cities and remote
villages elsewhere on earth where the gospel is not being preached. Sadly, as Carl F.
H. Henry has written, "The Gospel is only
good news if it gets there in
time."
Does the Psalmist speak the truth when he proclaims Yahweh (also pronounced as Jehovah)
as the hope of all people on earth? If Psalm 65:5 is true, how can we be content with anything
less than an all-out effort to tell all people on earth of the hope in God our Savior?
Reflection questions
- How does Psalm 65:5 relate to the cultural diversity coloring so much of the world today?
- How do you react to the idea that the Church has far too slowly worked to spread the message of hope to people across the globe?
- How do you respond to the question a convert from Buddhism posed to missionary Hudson Taylor: "Is it possible that you have had these glad tidings for hundreds of years and have only just now come to preach them to us?"
- How does the statement "The Gospel is only good news if it gets there in time" relate to our efforts to spread the message of hope to all people on earth?
- What should individuals and churches be doing to contribute to an all-out effort to spread the message of hope in God to people across the world?
-- Howard Culbertson,
This blog on a world missions Bible passage is one of more than three dozen in the "Heart of God" series published in Engage, a monthly online magazine. That series looks at what the Bible says about world missions.
Afterword: "Ends of the earth"
Psalm 65:5 announces the global nature of hope and salvation in God. The wording of the verse signifies that God's saving power extends to all corners of the earth, from the farthest reaches to the deepest seas. It's a poetic way of expressing the omnipresence and omnipotence of God. Hope in and salvation through Him are not limited by geographical or cultural boundaries. The verse speaks of God's power, righteousness, and how salvation is extended to all people, regardless of their location or circumstances. It aligns with what Jesus said in John 3:16 about God loving "the world" and that salvation is offered to "whosoever."
The phrase "ends of the earth" often appears in the Bible. In addition to Psalm 65:5, other places where it is used in way relevant to world evangelism include:
- Deuteronomy 28:64, 33:17
- 1 Samuel 2:10
- Job 28:24, 37:3
- Psalm 2:8, 19:4, 22:27, 46:9, 48:10, 59:13, 61:2, 67:7, 72:8, 98:3, 135:7
- Proverbs 17:24, 30:4
- Isaiah 5:26, 24:16, 40:28, 41:5, 41:9. 10. 43:6, 45:22, 48:20, 49:6, 52:10, 62:11
- Jeremiah 10:13, 16:19, 25:31, 31:8, 50:41, 51:16
- Daniel 4:11
- Micah 5:4
- Zechariah 9:10
- Matthew 12:4
- Luke 11:31
- Acts 1:8, 13:4
- Romans 10:18
Memorable Quotes About Psalm 65:5 and Its Relevance to World Evangelism
- John Piper: "Psalm 65:5 reminds us that the God who answers with awesome deeds is not only the God of Israel, but the hope of all the ends of the earth. This is the global God of the Great Commission—the one who sends us because He intends to save from every nation." — in a sermon on "Let the Nations Be Glad"
- David Platt: "When Jesus commands us to make disciples of all nations, it is with the assurance that God is already at work in the farthest seas, just as Psalm 65:5 declares. He is the hope of the world, and our mission is to proclaim that hope." — Radical
- Christopher J.H. Wright: "The global mission of the church is grounded in the global nature of God's redemptive work. Psalm 65:5 celebrates God as the hope of the whole earth, which is exactly the confidence we carry into obedience to Jesus’ Great Commission." — The Mission of God
- Charles Spurgeon: "God's mercy, mighty and majestic, extends 'to the ends of the earth'—and this is no poetic flourish, but the foundation of missions. Psalm 65:5 opens the gates for the King’s commission: Go ye therefore." — The Treasury of David
- N.T. Wright: "The Psalms like 65:5 portray a universal hope, which the early Christians understood as being fulfilled in the resurrection and the commission to make disciples of all nations. The Great Commission echoes the psalmist's vision." The Case for the Psalms
- Elisabeth Elliot: "God is not a tribal deity. Psalm 65:5 proclaims His sovereignty and salvation over all the earth, which is why obedience to the Great Commission is not optional — it’s the natural response to such a glorious truth." — Keep a Quiet Heart
- C. H. Dodd: "In Psalm 65, God’s reign of peace and provision . . . extends to the farthest reaches of the world. The poetic language signals a universal longing for divine justice and salvation—a hope that transcends geographic and ethnic barriers."
- Derek Kidner: "'The hope of all the ends of the earth' expresses not only God's role as Creator but also as Redeemer. It points to the time when the nations will be drawn to Him."
- Alexdander MaclarenL "Even those sailing the farthest seas, separated by watery expanses, are still within the reach of God's care and salvation. The remotest and most isolated are not beyond hope."
- Timothy Keller: "Psalm 65:5 . . . is a missionary psalm, pointing to the day when all tribes, tongues, and nations will call upon the Lord."
Memorable Quotes About Other Bible Verses
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