Sermon Summary — Psalm 121: The Lord Who Keeps His People
Sermons from Aberdeen Christian Fellowship
Release Date: 06/03/2026
Sermons from Aberdeen Christian Fellowship
Speaker: Vijay Main Bible passage: Psalm 121 Theme: Trusting God to keep us through the whole journey of life. Vijay closes the Psalms of Trust section of the series by preaching from Psalm 121, one of the Songs of Ascents sung by pilgrims travelling to Jerusalem. He frames life as a pilgrimage: we move through changing seasons, uncertainty, weakness, ageing, and eventually death. Psalm 121 speaks to travellers who know the road may be long and difficult, but who are promised that the Lord will keep his people all the way home. The sermon gives four reasons why the Lord can be trusted on...
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Speaker: James Main Bible passage: Psalm 62 Theme: God is completely trustworthy as our refuge in every circumstance. James continues the church’s series through the Psalms, moving through the theme of trust. After Psalm 23 showed the Lord as shepherd and Psalm 27 showed the Lord as protector, Psalm 62 presents the Lord as our refuge. Trust, James says, is not optional for Christians; it is part of the whole journey of faith from beginning to end. He explains that Psalm 62 is not abstract theology. David wrote it out of real experience: enemies, danger, betrayal, and pressure. David...
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Speaker: Cheri Main Bible passage: Psalm 27 Theme: Trusting God when we feel under attack. Cheri presents Psalm 27 as a prayer and song for those who feel afraid, accused, misunderstood, mistreated, or under threat. The Psalms are described as the prayer book and songbook of God’s people, giving us words to pray when we do not know what to say. The sermon focuses on God as light, salvation, and stronghold. Because the Lord is our protector, we do not need to fight our battles in our own strength or react out of fear. Cheri uses images of ancient fortresses, Scottish hill forts, and historic...
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Main Bible passage: Psalm 23 Theme: Trusting God reshapes our inner life. Vijay introduces this sermon as the beginning of ACF’s move from Psalms of Lament into Psalms of Trust. He explains that trust is central to the whole life of faith, even in lament, because lament brings suffering towards God rather than turning away from him. The sermon defines biblical trust as placing yourself in the care of God. Unlike mechanical trust, such as trusting a car to work, trusting God is personal: it means becoming vulnerable before him because of who he is. Psalm 23 is then explored as a...
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Sermon summary Florence preaches on Psalm 77 as part of a series on lament, trust, and praise, focusing especially on lamenting unanswered prayer. She begins by naming the “noise inside our heads” — worry, doubt, distress — and explains that the Bible does not sugarcoat painful realities. Biblical lament is presented as a faithful practice: crying out to God, bringing complaints honestly, asking God to act, remembering what he has done, and ultimately reaffirming trust. Psalm 77 shows Asaph in deep distress. He cries out to God, prays through the night, cannot sleep, and asks raw...
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Derek’s sermon on Psalm 58 explores how Christians should respond to widespread injustice, corrupt rulers, and evil actions in the world. He explains that lament is biblical: believers do not need to pretend everything is fine, but should bring suffering, injustice, and wrongdoing honestly before God in prayer. He distinguishes lament from grumbling. Lament brings complaint to God in faith; grumbling complains without prayer and can imply giving up on God’s goodness or power. Psalm 58 is then presented as both a lament and an imprecatory psalm—a prayer asking God to restrain or punish...
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Vijay preaches on Psalm 51, David’s great psalm of repentance after being confronted by Nathan over his sin with Bathsheba and Uriah. The sermon begins by distinguishing between healthy and unhealthy guilt. False guilt can burden people for things that are not their fault, while real guilt can become unhealthy if it traps us in the past. But healthy guilt faces sin honestly and leads us towards repentance, change, and restoration with God. Vijay explains that Psalm 51 teaches us that repentance begins not with ourselves, but with God’s character. David appeals to God’s steadfast love and...
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In this opening message in our Psalms series, Florence introduces Psalm 13 and shows how biblical lament gives us a faithful way to bring our pain, confusion, and sorrow to God. Lament is not grumbling or faithlessness. It is an honest expression of faith that teaches us to: cry out to God complain to God honestly ask Him to act reaffirm our trust in Him Through Psalm 13, we see David move from “How long, Lord?” to renewed trust, rejoicing, and praise. Even when circumstances do not immediately change, God remains good, present, and worthy of our trust. This sermon encourages us not to...
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"Hope Against Hope" — Easter Sunday Sermon Vijay opens with a vivid image: a man walking through a village destroyed by a storm finds a rooster standing on the wreckage, chest out, crowing with full confidence. It seems absurd until you realise the rooster isn't responding to the ruins. It's responding to the risen sun. That image sets up the whole sermon: Christians can speak of hope even amid devastation, because of what God has done through the resurrection of Jesus. The central idea is that hope is not denial of reality. It's giving more weight to God's promises than to what...
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Dave opens with a lighthearted reflection on early birds vs. night owls, using his five-year-old son Douglas (who storms in at 5am in full builder's gear) as a bridge into the day's theme - Palm Sunday and the clocks going forward giving him a welcome extra hour's sleep. He then explores the Palm Sunday story from Matthew 21 through four questions: Where : Jerusalem was deeply significant, chosen by God as his dwelling place since the time of David and Solomon, and a city Jesus clearly loved and wept over. Its history stretches back to Abraham's encounter with Melchizedek, and it was always...
info_outlineSpeaker: Vijay
Main Bible passage: Psalm 121
Theme: Trusting God to keep us through the whole journey of life.
Vijay closes the Psalms of Trust section of the series by preaching from Psalm 121, one of the Songs of Ascents sung by pilgrims travelling to Jerusalem. He frames life as a pilgrimage: we move through changing seasons, uncertainty, weakness, ageing, and eventually death. Psalm 121 speaks to travellers who know the road may be long and difficult, but who are promised that the Lord will keep his people all the way home.
The sermon gives four reasons why the Lord can be trusted on life’s journey.
First, God is powerful enough to keep his people. When the psalmist says, “I lift up my eyes to the hills,” Vijay explains that ancient pilgrims would not only see beauty but danger: exposure, robbers, exhaustion, and uncertainty. The answer is not found in the hills themselves, but in the Lord, “who made heaven and earth.” Faith lifts our eyes beyond the problem to the Creator.
Second, God is attentive enough to preserve his people. Vijay highlights the repeated word “keep” in Psalm 121. God does not promise a pain-free life, but he does promise that suffering, evil, and calamity will not finally destroy his people. Like a harness on an aerial adventure course, God may not prevent every stumble, but he prevents the final fall.
Third, God is always near. The Lord is described as “your shade at your right hand.” Vijay explains that the right hand was the vulnerable side in battle, so this image shows God standing close to his people at the place of greatest weakness. God does not merely send help; he himself is the help who walks beside us.
Fourth, God’s keeping is total and comprehensive. The psalm’s language, heaven and earth, day and night, going out and coming in, now and forevermore, shows that no time, place, season, or circumstance lies outside God’s care. Vijay notes that the psalm leaves the danger unspecified so each believer can fill in the blank: diagnosis, grief, family heartache, uncertainty, or anything else. The promise remains: the Lord will keep you.
Vijay ends with the image of a turbulent overnight flight. The passengers may panic because they cannot see the route, but the journey depends on the pilot, not the passengers. In the same way, our hope is not in our own strength or understanding, but in the Lord who keeps us. One day the journey will end, the final hill will be behind us, and we will look back and say, “He kept me.”
Key Takeaway
Psalm 121 assures God’s people that the journey may be hard, frightening, and uncertain, but the Lord who made heaven and earth is powerful, attentive, near, and faithful. He will keep his people from now and forevermore.
00:00 Opening thanks and OM update
02:23 Psalms series: moving from trust to praise
03:01 Life as a pilgrimage
04:58 Introducing Psalm 121
06:57 Reading Psalm 121
08:26 God is powerful enough to keep us
11:11 “My help comes from the Lord”
16:34 God is attentive enough to preserve us
18:02 What “keep you from all evil” means
21:16 “He will not let your foot be moved”
23:53 The God who never slumbers or sleeps
26:55 God is always near
30:42 God’s keeping is total and comprehensive
35:10 The turbulent flight illustration
37:06 The promise: the Lord will keep us
38:46 Closing prayer