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The first five stanzas of Psalm 103 are reminders that forgetting the blessings that we receive from God can be spiritually deadly, debilitating, damaging and destructive. Any such incidence of “spiritual amnesia” dampens and detaches our worship from its True Source who is the LORD. According to the Psalmist, the LORD “satisfies our desires with good things” (stanza 5a). Because of our sin nature, worship is not a natural response but requires us to be intentional about remembering what the LORD has done and blessing or worshipping Him. This sermon focuses on three components of that response: our temptation, our task and our testimony.
By Dr. T. D. Stubblefield4.6
99 ratings
The first five stanzas of Psalm 103 are reminders that forgetting the blessings that we receive from God can be spiritually deadly, debilitating, damaging and destructive. Any such incidence of “spiritual amnesia” dampens and detaches our worship from its True Source who is the LORD. According to the Psalmist, the LORD “satisfies our desires with good things” (stanza 5a). Because of our sin nature, worship is not a natural response but requires us to be intentional about remembering what the LORD has done and blessing or worshipping Him. This sermon focuses on three components of that response: our temptation, our task and our testimony.