“He makes
What David the poet says in
this line is not a problem.
What he means, is; unless, of course, it’s a metaphor, in which case all
bets are off because he’s merely flashing his poetic license.
No lightning, no
thunderstorm—no matter how mammoth—ever made mountains skip, at least that I
know of. In summer especially, the eastern
edge of the Rockies, in
Volcanoes forever alter the
shape of some of the world’s most impressive mountains. When they blow, nothing remains the same. But
David isn’t talking volcano
here. The line has an antic tone,
created by the kid-ishness of the animals and "skipping." We don’t have to unpack much in this verse to
note the joy—the mountains are skipping along to the melodies of the voice of the
Lord, like my own great-granddaughter will be doing soon enough.
The only image I can come up
with is from old TV westerns: some tough
hombre pulls out a revolver and gets some poor sucker to dance as he peppers
the dust around the guy’s feet. Is that
anywhere near to what David is seeing here?
The Lord God almighty unloading bolts of lightning from some heavenly six-gun?
Cute, but I don’t think
so. David knew nothing about Wyatt Earp?
Seems to me that there’s just
too much cartoon in this line. It just
doesn’t match up all that comfortably with the shock and awe of the surrounding
verses. Mountains dancing like calves in
spring? It’s mud-luscious, really, isn’t
it? It’s darling. It’s as if David pulled a punch all of a
sudden. After snarling away with some
prophetic finger-pointing aimed at the earth’s big wigs, warning them about
God’s divine power and authority, just for a moment he got sidetracked with a
fleeting vision of something out of Walt Disney: mountains skipping. An antic verse in the very heart of one
terrifying Jeremiad.
A flaw in the poem?
Dumb question, really. David wasn’t thinking about taking home a
Pulitzer. He’s got an aesthetic sense,
but in lots of other Psalms he doesn’t let his sense of proportion get in the
way of his enthusiasm. Psalm 23, you
remember, has some delightfully mixed metaphors. Creating the perfect poem isn’t what he’s up
to. Praising God in a way that turns the
heads of the high-and-mighty is.
So what exactly does he mean? Read in context, the psalm praises God’s mighty hand, a hand that shivers timbers and raises cane all through the natural world. But, think about this—it also makes the mountains skip like antic calves. The voice of the Lord sometimes shakes us into giggles, leaves us speechless, even sets us to slapping our knees.
On the day after Easter, my
cousin-in-law died, his body a victim of the chemicals doctors were using,
purposefully, to try to rid him of cancer that otherwise would have taken
him. Two weeks ago, he felt tired, went
in for a check-up. Now he’s gone.
This morning, this little
verse, what seems almost a mistake in a psalm of dire warning, seems the right
bromide for our mutual grief. God’s voice makes mountains skip along like a kid on the sidewalk out front the house. Like a calf.
Really.
I don’t blame Him for what
happened. Cancer isn’t His fault. Death isn’t His design.
Still, this morning me and a
ton of others need just that kind of antic God, some smiling someone to make
the mountains skip.
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