The world often feels overwhelming, filled with narratives of anxiety and despair. Yet, we are invited to lift our eyes to a greater reality: the unsearchable greatness of God. His power and majesty are beyond our full comprehension, yet He is knowable. He is the Creator and Sustainer of all things, and His rule is eternal and unchallenged. Filling our minds with this truth is the antidote to the world’s despair. [50:58]
Great is the LORD, and greatly to be praised, and his greatness is unsearchable. (Psalm 145:3 ESV)
Reflection: What specific aspect of God’s creation—from the vastness of space to the complexity of life—most stirs your heart to acknowledge His unsearchable greatness?
God’s greatness is not a distant, cold reality. He is a personal God who desires to be known by His creation. He has made us for relationship with Himself, to find our deepest satisfaction and joy in Him. We are most human and most fulfilled when we are rooted in knowing and praising Him. This personal encounter transforms our perspective and fills us with purpose. [57:45]
The LORD is near to all who call on him, to all who call on him in truth. (Psalm 145:18 ESV)
Reflection: In the quiet moments of your day, how can you intentionally shift from merely knowing about God’s greatness to personally encountering and enjoying His presence?
The Lord is not only great; He is fundamentally and simply good. His goodness is not a mood or a variable trait but the very essence of His character. He is gracious, merciful, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love. This goodness is extended to all people everywhere through His common grace, providing rain, seasons, and sustenance for all humanity. [01:10:17]
The LORD is good to all, and his mercy is over all that he has made. (Psalm 145:9 ESV)
Reflection: Where have you recently witnessed God’s common grace—His kindness to all people—in your community or in the world around you?
Our internal meditation on God’s character must naturally overflow into external proclamation. We are designed to share what delights us most. When we are captivated by God’s greatness and goodness, our lives become a story worth telling. This isn’t about forceful arguments but a natural sharing of the hope and satisfaction we have found in Christ. [01:02:54]
One generation shall commend your works to another, and shall declare your mighty acts. (Psalm 145:4 ESV)
Reflection: What is one specific, recent example of God’s faithfulness in your life that you could share with someone as a simple story of praise?
God’s kingdom breaks into the world’s brokenness through the praises and deeds of His people. Our calling is to mirror God’s goodness in our actions, introducing others to His character through both our worship and our work. Our joy in God finds its completion when it is expressed publicly, offering a counter-narrative to the despair and anxiety of the age. [01:14:15]
My mouth will speak the praise of the LORD, and let all flesh bless his holy name forever and ever. (Psalm 145:21 ESV)
Reflection: Considering your unique relationships and circles, what is one practical way you can embody God’s goodness and praise Him through your actions this week?
Psalm 145 is presented as a rallying call to worship, focusing attention on two pillars: God’s unsearchable greatness and his abundant goodness. Drawing on the fact that this is David’s final psalm and an acrostic that closes the Psalter, the sermon frames the song as a deliberate tonic for a people tempted by despair. In a culture fed by fear, outrage, and addictive negativity, the Psalm redirects affections toward a God whose works far exceed human achievement and whose character is both utterly great and reliably kind.
The greatness of God is described not as distant unknowability but as inexhaustible worth: one can meditate on God’s attributes for a lifetime and still not run out of reasons to praise. Creation itself—vast oceans, unexplored lands, and the immensity of the cosmos—serves as a backdrop to that claim, but the argument moves from cosmic awe to personal encounter. Human beings are made in God’s image not simply to marvel but to be satisfied by him; the triune God is both majestic and intimately accessible, the “my God, my King” who sustains and satisfies.
Equally central is the claim that God is simply good. God’s goodness is indivisible and consistent—merciful, gracious, slow to anger, abounding in steadfast love—so that his mighty deeds are expressions of faithful character, not arbitrary power. That goodness is not reserved for a select few: common grace is highlighted, the regular, generous provision that allows human life to flourish amid a fallen world. The presence of brokenness does not negate God’s kindness; it shapes the church’s calling.
That calling is practical and public. Meditating on God’s historic acts—exodus, provision, deliverance—should overflow into testimony and deeds. Praise is not merely private emotion but public witness: when Christians publicly delight in and demonstrate God’s goodness, their joy becomes contagious and credible. The Psalm’s story finds its fulfillment in Christ, whose life and work concentrate and consummate God’s mighty acts. The result is a devotional posture that resists cultural despair, fills everyday life with praise, and invites others to encounter the greatness and goodness that meet in Jesus.
We are made to praise god. We are made to find our humanness in praising god and not because he needs it but because when we are filled with his content, we are most satisfied. We are most at peace. We are most human and we are most joyful. This is one of the key claims of the Bible in Christianity that god has created humans in his in his image to enjoy him, to to love him, to be cared by him, to find provision in him, and to be deeply satisfied in him and out of that is to give praise and thanks.
[00:56:22]
(41 seconds)
#MadeToPraise
David continues in verse three to describe the greatness of god. God deserves more praise than we could give him because he is simply great and that greatness is unsearchable. Now unsearchable doesn't mean unknowable. Unsearchable means that you can't come to the end of it. You can start meditating on god, on on the attributes and the qualities, the works, the mighty works of god, and all these things, but you will never run, but you will run out of time before you run out of content of material.
[00:50:48]
(37 seconds)
#UnsearchableGreatness
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