When Life Feels Like It’s Falling Apart
What’s Psalm 71 about?
This is the raw, honest prayer of someone who’s been walking with God for decades but now faces their darkest hour. It’s what faith sounds like when you’re backed into a corner with nowhere to run except straight into God’s arms.
The Full Context
Psalm 71 emerges from the pen of an elderly believer facing what feels like the fight of their life. While we can’t pinpoint the exact historical moment, the psalmist’s language suggests someone in their later years – they reference being taught by God “from my youth” and worry about being abandoned “in old age.” This isn’t a young person’s crisis; it’s the desperate prayer of someone who’s seen enough of life to know that even the faithful aren’t immune to devastating seasons. The urgency in their voice suggests enemies are closing in, perhaps taking advantage of perceived weakness or vulnerability that comes with age.
The psalm fits within the broader collection of individual lament psalms, but what makes it unique is how it weaves together quotes and echoes from other psalms – almost like the psalmist is drawing on a lifetime of memorized prayers to find words for an unspeakable situation. You’ll catch phrases from Psalm 22, Psalm 31, and others, suggesting this is someone who’s lived so deeply in God’s word that it flows out naturally in crisis. The theological heart of the psalm beats with the tension between present desperation and lifelong trust – how do you reconcile decades of faithful relationship with God when everything seems to be falling apart?
What the Ancient Words Tell Us
The opening Hebrew word ’eleka (“to you”) hits like a direct punch – there’s no preliminary small talk, no easing into the conversation. The psalmist is essentially saying, “God, it’s you or nothing.” This isn’t polite religious language; it’s the cry of someone who’s exhausted all other options.
Grammar Geeks
The Hebrew verb chasiti in verse 1 is in the perfect tense, meaning “I have taken refuge” – not “I am taking” or “I will take.” Even in crisis, the psalmist speaks of their trust as an accomplished fact, something already settled in their soul.
When they use the phrase “my rock and my fortress” in verse 3, they’re employing military metaphors that would have resonated powerfully in ancient Israel. A sela (rock) wasn’t just any stone – it was an inaccessible cliff face where armies could make their final stand. A metsudah (fortress) was a fortified city built on high ground, visible from miles away. The psalmist is saying, “God, be my unassailable position.”
But here’s what’s fascinating: in verse 9, the Hebrew phrase “when my strength fails” literally reads “when my strength is consumed” – the word kichlot suggests something being completely used up, like a candle burning down to nothing. This isn’t just feeling tired; it’s describing complete depletion.
What Would the Original Audience Have Heard?
Ancient Near Eastern culture held deep reverence for elders, making the psalmist’s situation even more shocking. To be an older person facing abandonment and attack would have been seen as a violation of the natural order. When they cry out “Do not cast me away when I am old” in verse 9, they’re appealing to a fundamental social contract that even pagan societies honored.
Did You Know?
In ancient Israel, gray hair was considered a “crown of glory” (Proverbs 16:31). For enemies to target an elderly person was not just cruel – it was seen as an affront to the divine order itself.
The original hearers would have been struck by the psalmist’s bold use of birth imagery in verse 6: “You have been my support from birth; you brought me forth from my mother’s womb.” In a culture where infant mortality was high and birth was dangerous, this language emphasized the miraculous nature of life itself. The psalmist is essentially saying, “God, you didn’t preserve me through the dangers of birth just to abandon me now.”
The enemies mentioned throughout the psalm would have been heard as more than just personal antagonists. In ancient thought, attacking God’s faithful was tantamount to challenging God himself. When the psalmist quotes their enemies saying “God has forsaken him” in verse 11, this wasn’t just personal mockery – it was theological warfare.
Wrestling with the Text
Here’s something that strikes you when you sit with this psalm: the psalmist never actually tells us what’s wrong. We know there are enemies, we know they feel abandoned, we know their strength is failing – but the specific crisis remains mysteriously hidden. Why would someone pour their heart out so completely yet keep the details so vague?
Wait, That’s Strange…
Verses 14-16 contain some of the most triumphant praise language in the entire Psalter, yet they come right in the middle of this desperate plea for help. It’s like someone switching from panic to praise mid-sentence.
Maybe that’s exactly the point. By keeping the specifics vague, the psalmist creates space for anyone in crisis to insert their own story. The emotions are so raw, so honest, that the particular circumstances become secondary to the universal human experience of feeling overwhelmed and alone.
And then there’s this jarring shift in verse 14 where suddenly we’re hearing about hope and praise and telling others about God’s righteousness. It’s not a smooth transition – it feels almost like whiplash. But maybe that’s what real faith looks like in crisis: not a steady climb from despair to hope, but this back-and-forth wrestling where trust and terror exist in the same breath.
How This Changes Everything
What transforms this psalm from ancient poetry into living truth is how it reframes our understanding of faithful aging. We live in a culture that worships youth and sees aging as decline, but the psalmist presents a radically different vision. They don’t ask God to make them young again or to remove the difficulties that come with age. Instead, they ask for the privilege of declaring God’s power “to the next generation” and God’s might “to all who are to come” (verse 18).
“The goal isn’t to avoid life’s final battles, but to fight them as a witness to God’s faithfulness across the decades.”
This completely reframes how we think about life’s difficult seasons. The psalmist isn’t asking to be rescued from their circumstances so much as asking to be sustained through them in a way that brings glory to God. Their prayer essentially becomes: “Don’t let my story end in a way that makes people question your faithfulness.”
Notice how the psalm ends – not with resolution of the crisis, but with commitment to praise. Verse 22 promises future worship with musical instruments, verse 23 anticipates joyful singing, and verse 24 commits to ongoing testimony. The psalmist chooses to end with faith rather than fear, with promise rather than petition.
This is what mature faith looks like: not the absence of struggle, but the determination to worship through it. Not the guarantee of easy answers, but the commitment to trust when answers don’t come. The psalmist teaches us that the goal isn’t to have a life free from crisis, but to have a crisis that doesn’t destroy our capacity for praise.
Key Takeaway
When life feels like it’s falling apart, the question isn’t whether God will remove every difficulty, but whether we’ll trust Him to sustain us through it in a way that tells a story of His faithfulness to the next generation.
Further Reading
Internal Links:
External Scholarly Resources:
- Tremper Longman III, Psalms: An Introduction and Commentary
- Derek Kidner, Psalms 1-72: An Introduction and Commentary
- John Goldingay, Psalms Volume 2: Psalms 42-89
Tags
Psalm 71:1, Psalm 71:9, Psalm 71:18, Trust, Refuge, Aging, Enemies, Praise, Testimony, Faithfulness, Crisis, Hope, Strength, Deliverance, Old Age, Birth, Rock, Fortress