Can We Sing the LORD’s Song in a Strange Land?

Taught by Prabhudas Koshy

Transcript:

Psalm 137:4—“How shall we sing the LORD’S song in a strange land?”

This is a cry of the captive Israelites from the depths of their despair. Carried captive to Babylon, they sat weeping by its rivers, remembering Zion, where they had worshipped the Lord according to His covenant ordinances (vv. 1–3). Their captors mockingly demanded “one of the songs of Zion”, the sacred temple music intended exclusively for the worship of the LORD. To perform these songs as mere amusement for pagan conquerors felt like a betrayal of their identity. Hanging their harps on the willow trees, they faced a crisis of expression in a foreign landscape.

Their Babylonian captors mockingly demanded songs of Zion for entertainment, but the exiles replied, “How shall we sing the LORD’S song in a strange land?” Their question was not born of unbelief but of reverence. The sacred songs of Jehovah were not to be turned into amusement for idolaters or divorced from heartfelt worship.

What a reminder that worship belongs to God alone! True praise is not a performance to satisfy men but the sincere offering of hearts devoted to the Lord (John 4:23–24). The “LORD’S song” is holy because its subject is the holy God. It cannot be separated from faith, obedience, and covenant fellowship with Him.

Believers today also live in a “strange land” (1 Peter 2:11), surrounded by a world that neither knows nor honours the Lord. While we continue to sing His praises in every circumstance, even in suffering (Acts 16:25), we must never allow our worship to become worldly, superficial, or designed merely to entertain. Our songs should always exalt God’s truth and glory.

Let every hymn we sing arise from hearts that remember our heavenly Zion. Though we are pilgrims on earth, our worship should bear witness that our true citizenship is in heaven, where one day we shall sing the new song before the throne forever.