When God Gets Down on His Knees
What’s Psalm 113 about?
This is the psalm where we see God doing something shocking – stooping down from heaven to lift up society’s forgotten ones. It’s a song about divine reversal that turns the ancient world’s power structures completely upside down.
The Full Context
Psalm 113 sits at the beginning of the Egyptian Hallel (Psalms 113-118), a collection of praise songs that became central to Israel’s most important festivals. Picture this: families gathering around Passover tables, voices rising together as they remembered not just their escape from Egypt, but the kind of God who made that escape possible. This wasn’t just historical memory – it was a manifesto about who their God was and how he operated in the world.
What makes this psalm extraordinary is how it captures the heart of Israel’s revolutionary understanding of divinity. While surrounding nations worshipped distant, aloof gods who demanded tribute from the weak, Israel sang about a God who descends to elevate. The psalm addresses anyone willing to listen – servant, slave, or king – because its message levels every human hierarchy. It’s structured as a perfect sandwich: praise brackets (verses 1-3, 9b) surrounding the stunning portrait of God’s character in the middle.
What the Ancient Words Tell Us
The Hebrew here is absolutely electric. When the psalmist says God “yasheb on high” in verse 5, he’s using a word that means “to sit enthroned.” This is the cosmic King on his throne. But then – and here’s where it gets wild – the very next verse uses “shaphel” (to humble oneself, to stoop down).
Grammar Geeks
The Hebrew phrase “mi-gabo’ah lashabet” (who is exalted to sit) in verse 5 uses an intensive form that emphasizes God’s supreme height. But verse 6’s “ha-mashpili lir’ot” (who stoops down to see) creates an intentional grammatical whiplash – the God who is highest makes himself lowest.
This isn’t just poetic language – it’s theology in motion. The same God who sits above the heavens chooses to get down on his hands and knees to see what’s happening in our world. Think about that image for a moment. The Creator of the universe, bending down like a parent getting eye-level with a crying child.
What Would the Original Audience Have Heard?
When ancient Israelites heard this psalm, they would have immediately thought of their own story. Here’s a God who saw Hebrew slaves making bricks in Egypt and came down (Exodus 3:8). A God who noticed a barren woman like Hannah and opened her womb (1 Samuel 1:19-20).
But they also would have heard something that scandalized the ancient world. Other gods demanded that you climb up to them – build ziggurats, offer sacrifices, prove your worth. The God of Israel? He comes down to you.
Did You Know?
Archaeological evidence shows that ancient Near Eastern temples were built as “cosmic mountains” – artificial heights designed to bring worshippers closer to their gods. Israel’s God flipped this concept entirely by descending to meet people where they were.
Verses 7-8 paint a picture that would have been revolutionary: “He raises the poor from the dust and lifts the needy from the ash heap; he seats them with princes, with the princes of their people.” In a world where social mobility was virtually impossible, where you died in the class you were born into, this was dangerous talk. This God doesn’t just notice the marginalized – he gives them thrones.
How This Changes Everything
The most stunning verse might be verse 9: “He settles the childless woman in her home as a happy mother of children.” In the ancient world, a barren woman was considered cursed, forgotten by the gods, a social dead-end. But this psalm declares that God specializes in impossible transformations.
“The God of Psalm 113 doesn’t just change circumstances – he rewrites entire life stories.”
This isn’t just about individual blessing – it’s about God’s fundamental character. He’s not impressed by the impressive. He’s not drawn to the powerful. He’s magnetically attracted to the overlooked, the written-off, the forgotten. That’s not charity – that’s justice. It’s how his kingdom works.
Wrestling with the Text
But here’s what might puzzle us: if God really operates this way, why doesn’t he fix everything? Why do we still see barren women and homeless poor and forgotten people? The psalm doesn’t give us easy answers, but it does give us something else – a vision of God’s heart and a pattern for how his people should live.
Wait, That’s Strange…
Notice that the psalm doesn’t promise God will eliminate poverty or barrenness entirely. Instead, it celebrates his pattern of intervention – he consistently notices and elevates those whom society overlooks. The emphasis is on character, not universal outcomes.
Maybe the point isn’t that God waves a magic wand and fixes everything instantly. Maybe the point is that we serve a God who sees differently, values differently, and acts differently than any earthly power structure. And if we’re his people, we should start seeing and acting the same way.
Key Takeaway
The God who rules from the highest heaven chooses to get down on his knees to see your situation – and when he sees it, he doesn’t just sympathize, he acts to elevate what the world has dismissed.
Further Reading
Internal Links:
External Scholarly Resources:
- Tremper Longman III, Psalms: An Introduction and Commentary
- John Goldingay, Psalms: Volume 3, Psalms 90-150
- Derek Kidner, Psalms 73-150: An Introduction and Commentary
Tags
Psalm 113, Exodus 3:8, 1 Samuel 1:19-20, praise, worship, divine reversal, social justice, God’s character, poor, marginalized, barren women, Egyptian Hallel, Passover, humility, sovereignty, elevation