Psalm 112:1–9
Praise ye the Lord. Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord, that delighteth greatly in his commandments.
His seed shall be mighty upon earth: the generation of the upright shall be blessed.
Wealth and riches shall be in his house: and his righteousness endureth for ever.
Unto the upright there ariseth light in the darkness: he is gracious, and full of compassion, and righteous.
A good man sheweth favour, and lendeth: he will guide his affairs with discretion.
Surely he shall not be moved for ever: the righteous shall be in everlasting remembrance.
He shall not be afraid of evil tidings: his heart is fixed, trusting in the Lord.
His heart is established, he shall not be afraid, until he see his desire upon his enemies.
He hath dispersed, he hath given to the poor; his righteousness endureth for ever; his horn shall be exalted with honour.
Reflection
There are some passages of Scripture that speak quietly enough to be missed by those listening for drama. Psalm 112 is one of them. It does not announce itself with thunder or paradox. It simply describes a life, patiently, line by line, as though inviting the reader to notice what usually goes unremarked.
I find myself returning to it when I am tempted to measure life by outcomes rather than orientation. The psalm does not describe a hero, nor even a particularly remarkable figure. It describes a good man — and seems content to let that be enough.
Delight, Not Display
The psalm opens not with achievement, but with disposition. The blessed man delights in the commandments of the Lord. There is no sense of compulsion here, no grim adherence to duty. Delight suggests affection, familiarity, even ease.
In the Lodge, we often speak of obligation, but obligation alone does not sustain a life. What shapes us most deeply are the things we return to willingly, the principles we do not have to be forced to remember. A man who delights in what is good will not need constant correction; his course is already set.

This delight is private before it is public. It does not announce itself. It is cultivated quietly, over time, in habits that may never be noticed by anyone else.
Generations and Continuity
The psalm moves outward, from the individual to those who come after him. His children are described as strong upon the earth; his influence extends beyond his own lifetime. This is not framed as ambition, but as consequence.
Freemasonry speaks often of continuity — of building not for ourselves alone, but for those who follow. Yet this passage reminds me that legacy is not engineered; it is transmitted. What we truly pass on is not instruction, but example. Children inherit not our words, but our posture toward the world.
Strength here is not dominance. It is steadiness. A generation shaped by integrity will be strong not because it prevails, but because it endures.

Wealth Reconsidered
“Wealth and riches shall be in his house,” the psalm says, and I pause every time I read it. The line is too easily misread. The psalm does not praise accumulation, nor does it linger over abundance. Wealth is mentioned only briefly, and then immediately reframed: righteousness endures.
The contrast is subtle but decisive. Wealth resides; righteousness persists. One is housed; the other continues. The psalm refuses to confuse possession with permanence.
In Masonic language, we might say that material success is scaffolding, not structure. It can support a life, but it cannot define it. When wealth becomes the measure, fear follows close behind. Psalm 112 describes a man who is free from that fear.
Light in Darkness

One of the most tender lines in the psalm appears almost in passing: “Unto the upright there ariseth light in the darkness.” There is no promise that darkness will be avoided. Only that it will not be absolute.
This light is not attributed to cleverness or foresight. It arises. It comes, unforced, to those whose orientation is already set toward what is right.
I think of how often we seek illumination before commitment, certainty before action. The psalm suggests the reverse: that light is something encountered along the way, not secured in advance.
Discretion and Stability
The good man is described as generous, but also careful. He lends, but guides his affairs with discretion. This balance matters. Compassion without judgment can become chaos; judgment without compassion becomes cruelty.
In the Lodge, discretion is not secrecy for its own sake. It is the discipline of proportion — knowing when to speak, when to act, and when to refrain. The psalm honours this quiet wisdom. It does not glorify impulse. It respects steadiness.
Because of this steadiness, the man “shall not be moved for ever.” This is not stubbornness. It is rootedness. His life is not easily shaken because it is not built on reaction.
A Fixed Heart
Twice the psalm returns to the heart. It is fixed. It is established. The repetition feels deliberate, as though the writer knows how fragile the heart can be.
This man is not fearless because nothing bad happens to him. He is unafraid because his trust is settled elsewhere. Evil tidings come, but they do not govern him. His emotional life is not hostage to circumstance.
There is a quiet dignity in this description. It does not promise victory over enemies, only perspective. Even the mention of enemies feels secondary, almost reluctant.
The Shape of Generosity
The psalm closes where it might have begun: with giving. The man disperses; he gives to the poor. His righteousness endures, not because it is preserved, but because it is shared.
This is perhaps the most Masonic image in the whole passage — not in symbol, but in spirit. What is hoarded decays. What is given circulates. A life that gives itself away does not diminish; it takes on shape.
If there is a line here that stays with me, it is this: a good life is not loud, but it is weight-bearing. It supports others, often without being seen.
The psalm does not ask me to become extraordinary. It asks me to become settled — to delight in what is good, to act with discretion, to give without fear, and to trust that such a life, quietly lived, will be remembered.
