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  <title>Praise: Psalm 126</title>
  <description> The Text: Psalm 126 (New Living Translation) — a psalm of praise recalling Israel's return from exile in Babylon.  Opening Hook — The &amp;quot;Fresh Start&amp;quot; Effect Vijay begins by observing the universal human longing for a fresh start — at New Year, birthdays, or even a Monday morning. Beneath that, he argues, is a deeper desire: not just to improve, but to be made new — to undo mistakes and mend what's broken. That longing, he says, sits at the heart of Psalm 126.  The Historical Context The psalm recalls Israel's return from decades of Babylonian exile. When the Persian king Cyrus allowed them to go home, it seemed impossible — like a dream. The surrounding nations even marvelled: &amp;quot;The Lord has done amazing things for them.&amp;quot; Vijay notes this sits at the literal centre of the psalm — the focus is on what God did, not what Israel achieved.  The Deeper Exile Israel's real problem was never Babylon — that was just a symptom. Their deeper problem was distance from God. And Vijay broadens this: it's everyone's story. All humanity was created for relationship with God but has wandered far — making us all spiritual exiles.  Jesus as the Way Home Jesus didn't come merely as a moral teacher or inspiring figure. He came to bring exiles home. At the cross, he experienced the exile we deserved — crying out &amp;quot;My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?&amp;quot; — so that we could be brought in, adopted as children of God, and welcomed home.  Restoration Is a Process When the psalmist prays &amp;quot;restore our fortunes,&amp;quot; it seems puzzling — weren't they already home? Vijay explains: restoration has begun, but it isn't finished. He illustrates this with a vivid image of a derelict house. When someone buys it, the ownership changes instantly — but the renovation takes time. Similarly, when someone trusts Christ, they belong to God immediately, but God then begins the ongoing work of rebuilding from the inside out.  The Desert Image The psalmist prays for restoration &amp;quot;as streams renew the desert&amp;quot; — referring to the Negev, where dry riverbeds suddenly burst to life when the rains come. The prayer is: Lord, do that for our dry places — our regret, grief, guilt, and shame.  Closing — Sowing in Tears The psalm ends with a farmer image: he weeps as he plants, because every seed buried could have fed his family — yet he trusts the harvest. That, says Vijay, is what faith looks like. Not just believing in your head, but entrusting yourself fully to God's promises even when you can't yet see them. Every act of obedience — forgiving someone, resisting temptation, keeping on praying through disappointment — is sowing seed in hope.  The final promise: tears are real, but they're not the last chapter. The harvest is coming. The Bible ends not with sorrow or exile, but with joy — every sin removed, every tear wiped away, every exile brought safely home.  0:00 Introduction &amp;amp;amp; Series Context 1:18 The Fresh Start Effect 2:19 The Deeper Longing to Be Made New 3:32 Psalm 126 — Reading 4:46 Israel's Exile and the Impossible Return 6:44 God's Amazing Things — The Centre of the Psalm 7:16 Israel's Story Is Everyone's Story 8:49 Jesus — The Way Home 10:33 Restoration Has Only Just Begun 12:09 The Derelict House Illustration 14:36 Streams in the Desert 15:29 Sowing in Tears — What Faith Looks Like 18:28 The Final Chapter Is Joy 19:32 Baptism — Being Brought Home </description>
  <author_name>Sermons from Aberdeen Christian Fellowship</author_name>
  <author_url>http://www.aberdeencf.com</author_url>
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