Worship

How Majestic Is His Name!

How Majestic Is His Name!
“O LORD, our Lord, how majestic is your name in all the earth!”  Psalm 8:1 NASB
 
“O LORD” - YHWH - the great I AM.  The one who created the universe with merely His Word and wisdom.
 
By wisdom the LORD founded the earth;
by understanding he created the heavens.
Psalms 104:24 NASB
 
O LORD, what a variety of things you have made!
In wisdom you have made them all.
The earth is full of your creatures.
Proverbs 3:19 NASB
 
For when he spoke, the world began!
It appeared at his command.
Psalms 33:9 NASB
 
“Our Lord” – Adonay.  The NASB Strong’s Dictionary says this is “an emphatic word from a root that means to rule.” God is THE ruler. But note here, the Psalmist says “OUR”. How differently you look at creation when God is YOUR Lord!  He is a personal God.
 
“How majestic is your NAME in all the earth!"
 
Surely His creation is glorious.  David goes on to declare in verse three that looking at the heavens causes him to take pause.  Maybe you have personally seen and been astounded at the majesty of the Rocky Mountains, or the ocean, or the incredible variety of landscapes in the USA.
 
Yet it is not God’s creation that David says is majestic.  Let us not worship the creation.
 
"Your NAME" - God’s name - is majestic.  His name is what deserves our praise.
 
Sometimes I think we struggle in our American culture to grasp the significance of a name.  How did you pick your child’s name?  Was it a family name?  Or were you just looking for a first and middle name that sounded good with the last name? Often in our culture we don't pick names based on the meaning of it.
 
Not so in the Bible.  Time and again scripture tells us the meaning of a person’s name - because that was significant to their culture.  We even see times when God changed people’s names (Abram, Sarai, Saul of Tarsus).
 
So it makes sense that God’s name would be significant.  John Piper gives us insight to the significance of the name YWHW.
 
So Yahweh, the name that’s used over six thousand times for God in the Old Testament — it’s usually capitalized L-O-R-D in our English translations — is built on that phrase: “I Am Who I Am.” In other words, every time we read the name of God, the proper name Yahweh, he wants us to remember his essence. That’s the point. “When you say my name, remember my essence. I absolutely am. That’s why I gave myself a name with a meaning. No beginning, no ending, no becoming, no changing. I absolutely am. I am true. I am reliable.” Every time you say L-O-R-D, all caps, Yahweh, remember that. https://www.desiringgod.org/interviews/why-does-the-bible-stress-the-power-of-jesuss-name
 
God’s essence is majestic.  His essence is above what our language can even describe.  It is greater than the highest mountain or the deepest ocean or the vastest desert.  

So worship His majesty today.  Speak it out loud and let it sink in!  

O LORD, our Lord, how majestic - large  powerful, excellent, famous, gallant, glorious, goodly, lordly, mighty, noble, principal, worthy - is your name in all the earth!

What is your favorite display of God's majesty in creation?



 
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Meet Beth

 
Beth was blessed to be raised by parents who taught their children to love the Lord.  She trusted in Christ for salvation and followed in believer’s baptism when she was eight years old.  

Beth thanks the Lord for leading her parents to First Baptist Church in Jefferson City, Missouri, where the youth choir practiced and sang in the 8:15 am Sunday service each week.   This was great preparation for understanding the joy and the responsibility of serving Christ’s church.

Throughout her adult life, Beth has served in many roles across various church ministries – most of them while working full-time.  Her favorite roles involve discipling women by studying and teaching the Bible and its power for our lives.  

She has taught an adult Sunday School class on Sunday mornings since 2010.  In addition, since 2021, she has enjoyed writing and teaching two Women’s Bible studies each year.  She also blogs at bethipock.com about discipleship and daily Christian living. She recently had an article published at thegospelcoalition.org.

Other church roles include co-directing VBS, singing in the choir, chairing the personnel committee, and filling in at the piano when needed.

Beth and her husband, Ellis, have five grown children, three daughters-in-love, 16 grandchildren, and one great-grandchild.

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