Note: Words are shown in their original Hebrew order, which differs from English translations. This reflects the emphasis and structure of Scripture as originally written. Click any word to see its full lexicon entry.
1May God be gracious to us and bless us, and cause His face to shine upon us, Selah
Psalm 67 is a prayer for God's blessing that flows outward from personal petition into a passionate concern for the nations. The psalmist begins by asking God for mercy and favor, then reveals the ultimate purpose: that through God's blessing upon His people, all nations would come to know His ways and turn to Him in worship and fear. This is a missionary psalm at its heart—it teaches us that God's blessings to us are never meant to be kept to ourselves, but always to overflow into a witness that draws the world to the knowledge and fear of the Lord.
The psalmist opens with a prayer drawn from the priestly blessing of Numbers 6:24-26: "God be merciful unto us, and bless us; and cause his face to shine upon us." To ask that God's "face shine" upon us is to ask for His favor, presence, and approval. This is not presumptuous asking; it flows from covenantal relationship. The psalmist then immediately reveals why he asks: "That thy way may be known upon earth, thy saving health among all nations." The blessing is not sought for comfort alone, but for mission. God's mercies toward us exist so that through us, the world might learn of His salvation. Notice the progression: God's blessing → our changed lives → the nations' knowledge of God.
Application: Every blessing you receive—healing, provision, restored relationships, spiritual growth—is given partly so you can testify of God's goodness to others. Ask yourself: how can I use what God has given me to point others to Him?
The middle section of the psalm swells into a chorus of praise: "Let the people praise thee, O God; let all the people praise thee." This refrain appears twice (verses 3 and 5), creating a powerful rhythmic emphasis. It expresses the psalmist's longing that worship would become universal and continuous. Verses 4 adds the reason for this joy: "O let the nations be glad and sing for joy: for thou shalt judge the people righteously, and govern the nations upon earth." The nations will rejoice not in loose freedom, but in righteous judgment. People find deepest joy not in doing whatever they wish, but in living under the just, wise rule of God. This is countercultural: the world promises freedom without accountability; Scripture reveals that true happiness comes through submitting to God's righteous government.
Application: Real joy comes not from throwing off all rules, but from aligning ourselves with God's righteous order. Encourage others to find this gladness by submitting to Christ's lordship.
The psalm concludes where it began—with blessing—but now the circle is complete: "Then shall the earth yield her increase; and God, even our own God, shall bless us." When the nations recognize God's righteousness and join in praise, the earth itself prospers. This reflects the biblical principle that blessing flows from alignment with God's purposes. Finally: "God shall bless us; and all the ends of the earth shall fear him." Fear here means reverence and awe—a right relationship with the Almighty. The psalmist's vision is breathtaking: God's blessing on His people becomes the catalyst for worldwide worship and the fear of the Lord extending to earth's remotest corners.
Application: God's agenda has always been global. He blesses us so we might bless the nations. This motivates our prayers, our giving to missions, and our personal witness.
Application for Today
Psalm 67 invites us to expand our vision of blessing. Don't merely ask God for personal comfort; ask for blessing that overflows into witness. Intercede for unreached peoples. Support missionary work. Live visibly as a believer so your light shines before others. Remember: you are blessed not just for yourself, but so that through your life, the world might turn to fear and worship the true God.
Study Notes — Psalms 67
4 sectionsPsalm 67 is a prayer for God's blessing that flows outward from personal petition into a passionate concern for the nations. The psalmist begins by asking God for mercy and favor, then reveals the ultimate purpose: that through God's blessing upon His people, all nations would come to know His ways and turn to Him in worship and fear. This is a missionary psalm at its heart—it teaches us that God's blessings to us are never meant to be kept to ourselves, but always to overflow into a witness that draws the world to the knowledge and fear of the Lord.
The psalmist opens with a prayer drawn from the priestly blessing of Numbers 6:24-26: "God be merciful unto us, and bless us; and cause his face to shine upon us." To ask that God's "face shine" upon us is to ask for His favor, presence, and approval. This is not presumptuous asking; it flows from covenantal relationship. The psalmist then immediately reveals why he asks: "That thy way may be known upon earth, thy saving health among all nations." The blessing is not sought for comfort alone, but for mission. God's mercies toward us exist so that through us, the world might learn of His salvation. Notice the progression: God's blessing → our changed lives → the nations' knowledge of God.
Application: Every blessing you receive—healing, provision, restored relationships, spiritual growth—is given partly so you can testify of God's goodness to others. Ask yourself: how can I use what God has given me to point others to Him?
The middle section of the psalm swells into a chorus of praise: "Let the people praise thee, O God; let all the people praise thee." This refrain appears twice (verses 3 and 5), creating a powerful rhythmic emphasis. It expresses the psalmist's longing that worship would become universal and continuous. Verses 4 adds the reason for this joy: "O let the nations be glad and sing for joy: for thou shalt judge the people righteously, and govern the nations upon earth." The nations will rejoice not in loose freedom, but in righteous judgment. People find deepest joy not in doing whatever they wish, but in living under the just, wise rule of God. This is countercultural: the world promises freedom without accountability; Scripture reveals that true happiness comes through submitting to God's righteous government.
Application: Real joy comes not from throwing off all rules, but from aligning ourselves with God's righteous order. Encourage others to find this gladness by submitting to Christ's lordship.
The psalm concludes where it began—with blessing—but now the circle is complete: "Then shall the earth yield her increase; and God, even our own God, shall bless us." When the nations recognize God's righteousness and join in praise, the earth itself prospers. This reflects the biblical principle that blessing flows from alignment with God's purposes. Finally: "God shall bless us; and all the ends of the earth shall fear him." Fear here means reverence and awe—a right relationship with the Almighty. The psalmist's vision is breathtaking: God's blessing on His people becomes the catalyst for worldwide worship and the fear of the Lord extending to earth's remotest corners.
Application: God's agenda has always been global. He blesses us so we might bless the nations. This motivates our prayers, our giving to missions, and our personal witness.
Psalm 67 invites us to expand our vision of blessing. Don't merely ask God for personal comfort; ask for blessing that overflows into witness. Intercede for unreached peoples. Support missionary work. Live visibly as a believer so your light shines before others. Remember: you are blessed not just for yourself, but so that through your life, the world might turn to fear and worship the true God.