The Pilgrim Life
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Dear CG Leader,
Happy Memorial Day.
I hope you are using and benefiting from the daily devotions. In Psalm 119, the psalmist recognizes the day-after-day influence of Scripture on his life. His daily dependence on the Bible epitomizes the saying, “truth plus time will transform your life.”
I also hope your CG members are also using the daily devotions. We have 23 sermons and 176 days to watch God’s grace spiritually form us into a blessed people, living the blessed life and being a blessing to those around us.
That’s another way of saying, “the more disciples we make here, the more disciples we can make around the world.” We are, as God said of Abraham, blessed to be a blessing (Genesis 12:2-3). Each of these thoughts – disciple making and blessing – are essentially the same thing. As the gospel permeates the world, it is blessed by its impact. Wherever the gospel goes, people, communities, cities, nations, etc., are blessed. The more disciples we make, the more disciples are made around the world and the greater blessing it enjoys.
This particular section of Psalm 119 reminds us that the more heavenly minded we are, the more earthly good we are. Remembering our pilgrim status benefits us and blesses the world. Here is the basic sermon out line for this Sunday –
Psalm 119:17–24 — Gimel Title: The Pilgrim Life
Intro: This Sunday we look at the third section of Psalm 119, the Gimel stanza. The psalmist speaks as a servant who depends on God and as a sojourner who knows this world is not his final home. That identity shapes the whole passage.
The movement of this text is simple but rich: because we are pilgrims in this world, we need God’s Word to give us life, open our eyes, guide our steps, reshape our desires, correct our wandering, steady us under opposition, and counsel us along the way.
The Big Idea: The Word-shaped life is the pilgrim life; dependent on God’s grace, guided by God’s truth, and sustained by God’s counsel until we reach home.
Sunday’s sermon will look something like this -
First: We need God’s grace to live and obey.
Verse 17 begins with dependence: “Deal bountifully with your servant.” Grace comes before obedience. The psalmist asks God for life so that he may keep God’s Word.
I’ll do a word study on “bountifully.”
Second: We need God’s help to see the wonder of His Word.
Verse 18 reminds us that reading the Bible and truly seeing its wonder – being enthralled by its glory and beauty - are not the same thing. We need God to open our eyes.
I’ll do a word study on “wondrous.”
Third: We need God’s Word because we are pilgrims.
Verse 19 is the heart of the stanza: “I am a sojourner on the earth.” Pilgrims need guidance because they travel a road not yet taken and are not home yet.
I’ll do a word study on “sojourner.”
Fourth: We need God to reshape our longings.
Verse 20 shows a soul consumed with longing for God’s Word. The Bible is not only meant to
inform us but to retrain what we love.
I’ll do a word study on “consumed.”
Fifth: We need God’s correction and strength under pressure.
Verses 21–23 shows the danger of pride, wandering, reproach, contempt, and opposition. Yet the
psalmist keeps returning to God’s Word.
Sixth: We need God’s Word as our delight and counselor.
Verse 24 closes the stanza with in the same place as the last section: “Your testimonies are my delight; they are my counselors.”
I’ll do a word study on “delight.”
Seventh: This is Where the Gospel Meets Us
Ultimately, this stanza points us to Christ Himself. Jesus is the true Pilgrim who walked through a hostile world without wandering from God’s ways. And through His death and resurrection, He not only forgives wandering people like us, but now leads us home by His Word and through His Spirit.
Conclusion: Psalm 119:17–24 paints the portrait of the pilgrim life. The psalmist knows he cannot guide, sustain, or transform himself. He needs God’s grace to live, God’s light to see, God’s Word to guide him, God’s correction to keep him, and God’s counsel to steady him along the way. This world is not his home, so he refuses to build his life upon its values, approval, or direction. Again and again, he returns to the Word of God because he knows it alone leads to the blessed life here and the blessed life forever.
One final word:
As you prepare for Sunday and your group discussion afterward, remember how Observation, Interpretation, Correlation, and Application work together naturally in the text. You do not have to force the process. Often it unfolds simply by slowing down and asking the right questions.
For example, take the third point of the sermon which reads, “We need God’s Word because we are pilgrims.” (Psalm 119:19)
Observation asks: What does the text actually say? The psalmist says, “I am a sojourner on the earth.” He describes himself as someone who is traveling through a world that is not ultimately home.
Interpretation asks: What does the text mean? What is a sojourner? It is a pilgrim? A traveler? The psalmist understands that believers live as sojourner whose identity, values and direction are shaped by God rather than by the surrounding world that is temporary to him.
Correlation asks: Where else do we see this in the Bible? Abraham lived as a stranger looking for a better country (Hebrews 11). Peter calls believers “sojourners and exiles” (1 Peter 2:11).
Application asks: How should this shape our lives? If we truly believe this world is not our home, we will stop looking to the world for ultimate identity, security, values, or direction. Instead, we will continually return to God’s Word to shape our priorities, desires, decisions, values and hope.
That is the kind of movement we want in our Community Groups. None of these 176
verses are static. They don’t merely provide information but direction, movement toward the blessed life. So, we are not merely gathering information from the Bible. We are learning to live under its transforming influence together.










