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    You are at:Home»Quiet Observation»35 Sing a New Song

    35 Sing a New Song

    Long stone reservoir wall receding into the distance.
    Reservoir wall stretching across valley.

    Psalm 96 (King James Version)

    O sing unto the LORD a new song: sing unto the LORD, all the earth. Sing unto the LORD, bless his name; shew forth his salvation from day to day. Declare his glory among the heathen, his wonders among all people.
    For the LORD is great, and greatly to be praised: he is to be feared above all gods. For all the gods of the nations are idols: but the LORD made the heavens. Honour and majesty are before him: strength and beauty are in his sanctuary.
    Give unto the LORD, O ye kindreds of the people, give unto the LORD glory and strength. Give unto the LORD the glory due unto his name: bring an offering, and come into his courts. O worship the LORD in the beauty of holiness: fear before him, all the earth.
    Say among the heathen that the LORD reigneth: the world also shall be established that it shall not be moved: he shall judge the people righteously. Let the heavens rejoice, and let the earth be glad; let the sea roar, and the fulness thereof.
    Let the field be joyful, and all that is therein: then shall all the trees of the wood rejoice Before the LORD: for he cometh, for he cometh to judge the earth: he shall judge the world with righteousness, and the people with his truth.


    A Command That Feels Simple and Demanding

    This psalm begins with a command that feels both simple and demanding. Sing a new song. Not a better song. Not a louder one. A new one.
    Newness, here, is not novelty for its own sake. It suggests attention. Awareness. The refusal to rely only on what has carried us before. A new song requires listening again before the voice can rise.
    That is not easy.

    Open stone-paved public square bordered by buildings.
    Wide civic square under muted light.

    Day by Day Faithfulness

    The psalm does not limit the invitation. All the earth. The call is expansive, but the practice is daily. Shew forth his salvation from day to day. This is not an occasional outburst of praise. It is a steady habit of noticing what continues to hold.
    I am struck by how ordinary that sounds. Salvation is not only proclaimed at festivals or moments of relief. It is shown day by day, through faithfulness that does not wait for drama.
    In Freemasonry, we understand the discipline of repetition. The work is not completed in a single act. It is carried forward through regular attention to measure, line, and level. What is honoured daily is what shapes us quietly.

    Narrow walking path tracing along high coastal cliffs under grey sky.
    Footpath along exposed sea cliffs.

    Strength and Beauty Held Together

    The psalm insists that glory must be declared beyond familiar boundaries. Among the heathen. This is not triumphal boasting. It is contrast. The gods of the nations are named for what they are. Idols. Things shaped by human hands.
    By contrast, the LORD made the heavens. Creation itself becomes testimony. Honour and majesty are said to be before him, as if they go ahead of his presence rather than being demanded by it.
    This reverses the way power is often displayed.
    Strength and beauty are held together. That pairing matters. Strength alone can become oppressive. Beauty alone can become fragile. Here they belong together, neither overwhelming the other.
    In the craft, we are taught to value proportion. A structure that is strong but graceless fails its purpose. One that is beautiful but unsound cannot endure. True workmanship holds both.

    Worship as Alignment

    The psalm calls for offering, not as payment, but as alignment. Give unto the LORD the glory due unto his name. What is due is not calculated. It is recognised. Offering becomes response rather than transaction.
    Worship is described in the beauty of holiness. That phrase resists definition. Holiness here is not severity. It has beauty. Something fitting. Something that draws rather than repels.
    The fear named is not panic. It is reverence. The kind that steadies the body rather than scattering it.

    Wide river curving through countryside viewed from above.
    River bend seen from elevation.

    Creation Rejoices at Righteous Judgment

    Then the psalm widens again. The LORD reigns. The world is established. It will not be moved. Judgment is named, but it is not threatening. It is righteous. True.
    What follows is one of the most generous images in Scripture. Creation itself rejoices. Heavens. Earth. Sea. Fields. Trees. Everything participates.
    This is not coerced praise. It is response. When what is set right is recognised, joy follows naturally. Even what has no voice is given one.
    The LORD comes to judge, but the coming is welcomed. Judgment here is not destruction. It is ordering. Things set back into proper relation.

    A New Song Through Renewed Attention

    There is a line in this psalm that stays with me through the week.
    A new song begins when we notice what is already being sustained.
    This reflection corrects my habit of waiting for inspiration before offering praise. Psalm 96 suggests the opposite. Praise grows out of attention. The song becomes new because the seeing has been renewed.
    In the craft, we learn that excellence is not achieved by constant reinvention, but by fresh care given to enduring principles. The line does not change. Our attentiveness to it must.
    For today, singing a new song may mean doing familiar work with renewed honesty. Offering what is due without calculation. Letting strength and beauty belong together again.
    The psalm does not demand originality. It asks for faithfulness that remains awake. And that, quietly practiced, becomes new enough.

    Memorable Phrase

    “A new song begins when we notice what is already being sustained.”

    Reason: It captures the heart of the psalm’s call to renewed attention rather than novelty.

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