Psalm 23 (King James Version)
The LORD is my shepherd; I shall not want. He maketh me to lie down in green pastures: he leadeth me beside the still waters. He restoreth my soul: he leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for his name’s sake.
Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil:
for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies: thou anointest my head with oil; my cup runneth over.
Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life: and I will dwell in the house of the LORD for ever.
The psalm begins without argument or explanation.
It does not defend its confidence, nor does it ask permission to trust. It simply states a relationship and allows everything else to unfold from there. The Lord is my shepherd. The rest follows at the pace that truth requires.
In the Lodge, we are accustomed to working steadily rather than quickly. The tools do not reward haste. They ask for patience, attention, and a willingness to accept that progress is often measured over time rather than announced in moments. Psalm 23 speaks from that same register.

Learning to Be Led
The image of a shepherd is familiar enough that it can pass too quickly through the mind. Yet the psalm does not describe constant motion or urgent direction. It speaks instead of being made to lie down, of being led beside still waters, of having the soul restored rather than driven forward.
That language resists our habits. We are more comfortable with movement than with rest, more inclined to trust effort than guidance. Even when we assent to the idea of being led, we often imagine it as brisk instruction rather than quiet accompaniment.
In Freemasonry, there is an early lesson about restraint. The work is not improved by force. Precision matters more than speed. The psalm seems to assume the same discipline. Provision is not wrested from the world; it is received in due course.
“I shall not want” is not bravado. It is a settled statement, spoken by someone who has learned that need is not always answered immediately, but it is addressed faithfully over time.
Paths That Do Not Hurry
The psalm speaks of being led in paths of righteousness, not as an achievement, but for the shepherd’s name’s sake. The grounding of trust lies outside the speaker. It does not depend on mood, circumstance, or self-assessment.
That distinction is easy to miss. We often speak of trust as something we generate internally, as if it were a personal resource to be cultivated and managed. Here, trust arises because the one who leads is worthy, not because the one who follows is strong.

In the Lodge, responsibility is given gradually. A brother is not hurried into work for which he is not ready. He is allowed to learn the paths, to make small errors, to correct his bearing. Progress comes through attention rather than pressure.
The psalm’s pace honours that same wisdom. Restoration comes before direction. Stillness precedes movement. The soul is tended before the path is named.
When the Light Fades
The tone of the psalm shifts quietly. There is no dramatic announcement, only a change in landscape. The speaker walks through the valley of the shadow of death, and the confidence expressed earlier is not withdrawn.
What changes is the language of presence. The psalm moves from speaking about the shepherd to speaking directly to him. For thou art with me.
This is not poetic flourish. It is a recognition that certain places strip away abstraction. In the valley, companionship matters more than explanation.
Fear is acknowledged, but it is not granted authority. “I will fear no evil” is not a denial of danger. It is a decision shaped by presence. The rod and the staff do not remove the valley, but they make it passable.
Freemasonry does not promise immunity from difficulty. It offers something quieter: fraternity, steadiness, and shared labour when clarity is scarce. The psalm’s comfort is of the same kind. It does not deny the darkness; it refuses to walk through it alone.

The Table That Appears
The psalm does something unexpected next. Without transition, the scene changes again. A table is prepared in the presence of enemies. Oil is poured. The cup overflows.
This is not triumphal language. It is domestic, almost ordinary. The enemies are not expelled. They remain present. What changes is the speaker’s relation to them. Provision, here, is not escape. It is sustenance. The table is set where pressure remains visible. The oil is applied not as ornament, but as care.
In the Lodge, a man may be burdened by concerns that do not disappear when he enters the room. The work does not remove those pressures. It offers a different posture toward them. Fellowship does not abolish conflict, but it steadies the one who must live within it.
“My cup runneth over” does not suggest excess. It suggests sufficiency that has reached its proper measure.
What Follows Quietly
The psalm closes as it began, with a statement rather than a plea. Goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life. The verb is gentle. These things do not chase or compel. They follow.
That image is easy to overlook. We are accustomed to seeking what we need, pursuing what we value. Here, the speaker trusts that what matters will come in time, unforced and unannounced.
In Freemasonry, character is not assumed to arrive fully formed. It is shaped slowly, often noticed only in retrospect. A man looks back and realises that certain virtues have been following him, step by step, through ordinary days.
To dwell in the house of the Lord, in this psalm, is not primarily about location. It is about orientation. It names a life lived with attentiveness rather than anxiety.
The psalm does not end with certainty about circumstances. It ends with trust in companionship. That, perhaps, is its quiet instruction. The pace of trust is not hurried. It keeps step with the one who leads, and it learns to wait without resentment.
