What Has Your Attention?
What has your attention? Recent studies have concluded that the average human loses focus about every eight seconds.[1] This means you may have already been distracted one sentence into this devotional. It’s okay—I’m not offended because I was distracted more than once while writing that last sentence!
But in an age where distraction abounds, how can we give our attention to what matters most? For just as what we give our attention to while driving determines the direction we go, what we give our attention to in life determines the person we become.[2]
What we give our attention to in life determines the person we become.
How many of you have had a trusted old friend put their hands on your shoulders, lovingly look you in the eye, and gently yet authoritatively remind you of what’s most important? For years, Psalm 27 has been just that for me. It’s a song that the Lord has put on repeat as a much-needed reminder and wake-up call to restore my perspective and reorient my priorities time and time again. This has especially been the case during times of trials and difficulty, which is the precise context of this “Psalm of confidence’ which has arrested my attention more times than I can count.
What Had David’s Attention?
He had recently been anointed to be the next king. Yet his circumstances looked bleak rather than bright. The news of his great defeat of his nation’s enemy was still rippling out through the kingdom, yet he was running for his life from an oppressed and often possessed king who was jealous to keep himself on the throne. On top of all that, he was shut out from the house of the Lord, the subject of gossip and slander, and separated from his family and friends.
This is just a glimpse of the context behind Psalm 27. While his very life and future were being threatened amidst a period of great difficulty and darkness, it was out of this dire situation that an attentiveness to one thing emerged from David’s heart. We find this cry at the apex of the Psalm in verse 4, which powerfully and succinctly declares:
“One thing have I asked of the LORD
that will I seek after;
that I may dwell in the house of the LORD
all the days of my life,
to gaze upon the beauty of the LORD
and to inquire in his temple.” (Psalm 27:4, ESV)
Attentive to One Thing
Of all the things David could ask the LORD for and give his attention to, he asks for one thing. On the one hand, his life is being sought by enemies and he has been rejected by his own family. On the other hand, he holds the promise of future wealth, influence, power, and status as the next king of Israel. Yet the cry of his heart is not for comfort, the destruction of his enemies, or for his path to kingship to be quickened. All of David’s attention and affection are bound up in this one thing. Here we find desire and action working together towards a singular pursuit.
In his seminal commentary on the Psalms, Charles Spurgeon wrote, “Divided aims tend to distraction, weakness, disappointment…the man of one pursuit is successful.” So how can we, like David, refocus our attention upon the Lord amid life’s difficulties and trials? The remainder of verse 4 gives us one action described by three words that we can intentionally choose to commit to right now. Like a three-corded strand, these three attentive words forge within us a strong and single-minded pursuit that will persist through distraction and set the course for ongoing intimacy and fruitfulness with the Lord.
Three Attentive Words: Dwell, Gaze, and Inquire
David’s first desire is to “dwell” in the house of the Lord. This word means to remain; abide; settle; endure; inhabit; sit down; or be still. The reference to the “house of the Lord,” or temple, points our attention to the manifest presence of God. However, it should be noted that this desire of David’s speaks not just of an individual encounter with God but of a return to a communal experience of worshiping God among his fellow people. Notice as well that his desire is not seasonal or circumstantial but is lifelong. Reading this Psalm through the lens of the finished work of Christ, we are reminded that God’s presence has come into us through the indwelling Holy Spirit. Yet we so often forget this remarkable truth!
Next, David declares his desire to “gaze” at the beauty of the Lord. The word to gaze means to perceive; contemplate with pleasure; or to have a vision of something, or in this case, of Someone. Beloved, God is beautiful! But in order to know that, we need to get to know what He is like. If we read over Psalm 27 and ask ourselves the question, “Who is God?”—what would we find? To name just a few things we would see that God is: light; salvation; strong; a refuge; beautiful; gracious; a helper; faithful; teacher; deliverer; leader; and good.
Lastly, David focused his attention to “inquire” in God’s temple. The word inquire here means: to inspect; admire; search out; or consider closely. Other translations use the word “meditate” instead of inquire, but either way the heart of the action is closely connected to the Psalms’ closing admonishment to “wait on the Lord” (v. 14). Doesn’t distraction seem to come most intensely in a season of waiting? The word shows up twice in the repeated phrase, “Wait for the Lord,” which bookends verse 14. This Hebrew word ‘qavah’ has a root meaning of being bound together by twisting. Additionally, the connotation is given of collecting, expecting, and gathering together as one looks with patience, tarries, and waits upon the Lord. Waiting isn’t passive but intentionally active. David had to wait 15-20 years to become king; we will also have to wait. Yet waiting is one of God’s tools for cultivating intimate attention toward His presence. Sometimes what God wants to do in a time of waiting is just as important, or even more so, than what you are waiting for. So be strong and take courage as you wait and give your full attention to the Lord.
Sometimes what God wants to do in a time of waiting is just as important, or even more so, than what you are waiting for. So be strong and take courage as you wait and give your full attention to the Lord.
What Has Your Attention?
We could summarize the heart of Psalm 27:4 in this way: pursue the presence of the Lord. Yet here is the key to seeking or pursuing after God’s presence: God is the initiator, not us. Verse 8 reveals this awe-inspiring dynamic when it says, “You have said, ‘Seek my face.’ My heart says to you, ‘Your face, Lord, do I seek.’” A.W. Tozer had it right when he said, “Before a man can seek God, God must first have sought the man…We pursue God because, and only because, He has first put an urge within us that spurs us to the pursuit.” The Scriptures say that David was “a man after God’s own heart,” yet that is only possible because God is a God who was after David’s heart. The same is true today for each of us! God is pursuing you! Ultimately our pursuit of God and attentiveness to His presence is first and foremost about recognizing, surrendering, and then responding to God’s pursuit of us!
Let’s take a moment on the side here to expose a lie the enemy of our souls tells us. Being distracted does not mean God is disappointed with you. We often succumb to a mindset that we just aren’t good enough for God, and that we will never prove ourselves worthy of the Lord’s love. We don’t pray enough, read our Bible enough, give enough, serve enough, etc. But God’s loving pursuit of us is not based on our fluctuating and inconsistent behavior, but upon the solid rock of His unchanging character.
God’s loving pursuit of us is not based on our fluctuating and inconsistent behavior, but upon the solid rock of His unchanging character.
Contrary to what seems best on the surface, it’s most practical to pursue God’s presence because it’s in those moments of holy and intimate communion with your Creator that your complexities are met with His clarity, your chaos is swallowed up with His calm, and your uncertainties are eclipsed by the certainty of His promises. It’s in His presence where you are delivered from the paralyzing need to achieve and produce and can instead rest in His perfect peace to receive and abide. God’s pursuit of us can reframe our distractions as a pathway to return to an attentiveness to God’s presence.
God’s pursuit of us can reframe our distractions as a pathway to return to an attentiveness to God’s presence.
So, ask yourself—what has your attention? What is occupying your mind? What is demanding your time? Psalm 27 invites us to dwell, gaze, inquire, and turn all these things over to the Lord and to rest in the presence of the God who knows, pursues, and loves us. Beloved, God is not distracted. He has a resolute focus on actively pursuing you until He has your attention. For in that, He is glorified—and in our pursuit of Him, we are satisfied.
Copyright © 2024 Justin Jeppesen. All rights reserved.
[1] Cited from: https://www.goldenstepsaba.com/resources/average-attention-span
[2] Analogy adapted from John Mark Comer’s book, The Ruthless Elimination of Hurry. p. 54