When Memory Becomes Worship
What’s Psalm 105 about?
This isn’t just a history lesson—it’s memory transformed into praise. The psalmist takes us on a journey through God’s faithfulness to Israel, from Abraham’s first call to the exodus from Egypt, showing us how remembering God’s past actions becomes the foundation for present worship and future hope.
The Full Context
Psalm 105 sits right in the heart of what scholars call the “Hallel” psalms—songs of pure praise that were likely sung during Israel’s major festivals. This particular psalm was probably written during or after the Babylonian exile, when Israel desperately needed to remember who they were and whose they were. The author (possibly a Levitical musician) is addressing a community that had experienced devastating loss and was questioning whether God’s promises still held true.
The psalm serves as both liturgical worship and theological education, reminding the covenant community that their God is the same yesterday, today, and tomorrow. Within the broader structure of the Psalter, it pairs beautifully with Psalm 106, which tells the other side of the story—Israel’s repeated failures. Together, they create a balanced theology of God’s faithfulness despite human unfaithfulness. The key interpretive challenge here isn’t complexity but comprehensiveness—this psalm covers nearly a thousand years of history in just 45 verses, requiring us to see the forest rather than getting lost in individual trees.
What the Ancient Words Tell Us
The opening Hebrew word zakar (remember) appears repeatedly throughout this psalm, but it’s not the passive remembering we might think of. In Hebrew thought, zakar is active, intentional, almost aggressive remembering. It’s the kind of remembering that changes you.
Grammar Geeks
The Hebrew verb zakar (remember) in verse 5 is in the imperative form—it’s a command, not a suggestion. The psalmist is literally ordering his audience to remember God’s wonders, creating what scholars call “commanded memory.” This isn’t nostalgia; it’s a discipline.
When the psalmist calls God El Elyon (Most High God) in verse 7, he’s using a title that goes back to Genesis 14:18-20, when Melchizedek blessed Abraham. It’s a deliberate choice—this isn’t just Israel’s tribal deity, but the God who rules over all nations and all creation.
The phrase “he remembers his covenant forever” uses the Hebrew word berith, but notice something fascinating: when God remembers His covenant, the verb is zakar again. The same word used for human remembering is used for divine remembering. There’s a beautiful symmetry here—we remember what God has done, and God remembers what He promised to do.
What Would the Original Audience Have Heard?
Picture yourself as an Israelite who’s just returned from Babylon. Your temple is in ruins, your identity is shattered, and you’re wondering if the God of your ancestors has forgotten you. Then you hear this psalm sung in the rebuilt temple courts.
Did You Know?
Archaeological evidence from post-exilic Judah shows that many returnees from Babylon had adopted Aramaic as their primary language and Persian customs. This psalm would have served as a crucial “identity reset,” reminding them of their Hebrew heritage through sung narrative.
The original audience would have heard this not as ancient history but as present reality. When the psalm recounts God’s promise to Abraham in Genesis 15:18 about the land “from the river of Egypt to the great river Euphrates,” they would have thought, “That’s exactly where we’ve been—from Egypt to Babylon—and God brought us through both times.”
The agricultural imagery wouldn’t have been metaphorical to them. When the psalm mentions God calling for famine and breaking “every staff of bread” during Joseph’s time, they would have remembered their own recent experiences of siege, exile, and hunger. They knew what it felt like to have their food supply cut off.
Wrestling with the Text
Here’s something that might make us uncomfortable: this psalm presents a highly selective version of Israel’s history. It covers Abraham to the conquest of Canaan, but conveniently skips over the golden calf incident, the wilderness rebellions, and most of Israel’s failures. Is this dishonest?
Wait, That’s Strange…
The psalm ends abruptly with Israel taking possession of the land, but says nothing about what happened next—the judges period, the monarchy, the exile. It’s as if the story stops right at the moment of triumph. Why this sudden ending?
Actually, this isn’t revisionist history—it’s purposeful theology. The psalmist isn’t trying to give a complete historical account; he’s demonstrating the character of God through selected episodes. Each story shows the same pattern: God makes a promise, circumstances make it seem impossible, God delivers anyway.
Think about it—if you were counseling someone who was struggling with depression, you wouldn’t rehearse every mistake they’d ever made. You’d remind them of their victories, their strengths, their reasons for hope. That’s what this psalm does for Israel’s collective psyche.
How This Changes Everything
The revolutionary insight of Psalm 105 is that memory becomes prophecy. The psalmist isn’t just saying “remember what God did back then.” He’s saying “remember what God did back then so you’ll recognize what God is doing right now.”
“When we remember God’s faithfulness in the past, we’re not looking backward—we’re calibrating our expectations for the future.”
Notice how the psalm moves from individual promises (Genesis 12:1-3 to Abraham) to family deliverance (Joseph in Egypt) to national redemption (the Exodus) to geographical inheritance (the conquest). Each episode is bigger than the last, showing that God’s faithfulness compounds over time.
This pattern teaches us to read our own stories differently. That time God provided for you in college isn’t just a nice memory—it’s evidence of His character that you can bank on for future needs. That relationship He restored when it seemed impossible isn’t just personal history—it’s a preview of how He works in seemingly hopeless situations.
The psalm also transforms how we understand worship. Most of us think worship is about how we feel in the moment. But Psalm 105 suggests that biblical worship is fundamentally about what we remember. Our emotions follow our memory, not the other way around.
Key Takeaway
True worship isn’t about manufacturing feelings—it’s about remembering facts. When you remember what God has done, praise becomes inevitable, hope becomes reasonable, and faith becomes simply logical.
Further Reading
Internal Links:
External Scholarly Resources:
- The Message of the Psalms by Walter Brueggemann
- Psalms 73-150 by John Goldingay
- The Psalms and the Life of Faith by Samuel Balentine
Tags
Psalm 105:1, Genesis 12:1-3, Exodus 6:2-8, memory, worship, covenant, faithfulness, Abraham, Joseph, Moses, redemption, praise, remembrance, God’s promises, biblical history