Daniel H. Fletcher

Psalms of Christ


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movement within the psalm parallels the life of Christ at nearly every turn. In other words, when one follows the journey of the psalm in light of Christ’s life, death, and resurrection, it “now predicts that Yahweh will be faithful to his promise to protect and preserve his Messiah at every point in his life’s journey.”153 The journey of the psalmist travels from rest (vv. 1–3), to the threat of death (v. 4), and finally to restoration and abundance (vv. 5–6). This journey is multifaceted, for it describes not only that of the psalmist, David, and his Shepherd in its original context, but also that of Israel who went from rest in the Promised Land to the darkest valley of the exile, and eagerly anticipates the restoration of the temple in Jerusalem at the time of the Psalter’s final shape (i.e., postexilic period).154 However, it ultimately refers to God’s Messiah, whose life tracks with the journey (or pilgrimage) of the psalm. Green’s christological reading mirrors the gospel narrative in six short verses: “Psalm 23 establishes the outline of Messiah’s story. His final destiny will be glorious: a return to the abundance of Eden in the Lord’s temple, with (defeated) enemies arrayed before him (v. 5). Before this climax, however, Messiah must pass through the valley of the shadow of death—perhaps a brush with death, or some deathlike condition.”155 The astute reader knows that the psalmist does not actually die in the psalm, so how can it prophetically speak of Christ who dies on the cross? A Christian reading of 23:4 transposes the psalmist’s near death experience into the actual death of Christ by reading the psalm in light of the gospel story.156 In other words, a grammatical-historical interpretation does not permit an actual experience of death by the psalmist, but a christological interpretation that reads the psalm in light of Jesus’s story does in fact result in the death of the Messiah. Additionally, because Ps 23 follows Ps 22, which the NT ties inextricably to the cross of Jesus Christ, the canonical placement of the two psalms recalls Jesus’s journey from suffering to salvation. In order for Christ to fully rest in the peace of Ps 23, he must first pass through the daunting road of Ps 22.157