I don’t want to upset anybody, but I think this psalm
sounds self righteous. The psalmist sounds an awful lot like the pompous
Pharisee in Jesus’ parable of the Pharisee and the tax collector (Luke
18:9-14). Arrogant or not it’s in the Bible; at times like this
it is essential to remember that the Bible is what we call, Divinely
Inspired. The speaker in this psalm is not a religious windbag, but the very Spirit of God, and the
Spirit of God has every right to brag. The Spirit of God cries out on our
behalf, here in this psalm and in every moment. This poem even takes on
new meaning when we read it from a New Testament perspective. Consider
the words, “LORD, I love the house where you live, the place where your
glory dwells” (26:8). The temple
mentioned is us (1 Cor 6:19).
You and I are the house where God lives and the place where his glory
dwells. He loves it here; he loves you. Read this psalm joyfully,
knowing that God finds pleasure in you and his Spirit intercedes for us. (Rom 8:26)