Often you wonder why tears come into your eyes

And burdens seem to be much more than you can bear

But God is standing near, He sees your falling tears

And tears are a language God understands.

God sees the tears of a brokenhearted soul

He sees your tears and hears them when they fall

God weeps along with man and He takes him by the hand

Tears are a language that my God He understands.


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It reveals aspects of His human nature, though He was God incarnate, as well as His great care for the people He came to save. By understanding that even the Lord Jesus grieved, experienced sorrow, and felt the weight of loss, this gives believers permission to feel sad when a loved one passes away, even though believers who die go to be with the Lord and will be resurrected bodily one day when Jesus returns. For those left behind, there will be tears, but Jesus understands and is there to provide comfort and hope.

When David wrote this Psalm, he was captured by the Philistines in Gath. If David wrote these words while he was in distress, does it mean he was just using poetic language, or does God really collect and keep our tears in a literal bottle?

I was looking for the lyrics after hearing several times this was not a love song at all. Even a Japanese friend said it was a love song! I have read it was a political protest song, and his tears were over Japan still not being completely independent of American control after WWII. The lyrics certainly do not give any indication. I thought he had died much earlier.

I was watching the closing ceremonies of the 2020 (2021?) Tokyo Olympics, and I was delighted to hear this song. None of the commentators on American TV remarked upon it (even though Johnny Weir spends a lot of time in Japan and is supposed to be fluent in the language). I guess they are all too young to remember how popular it was in the US back in the sixties. I would wager that it was a deliberate choice by the producers of the celebration to include this song as a nod to popular music at the time of the previous Tokyo Olympics. The music was played as an instrumental in a very upbeat manner, much like the original. Without the sad lyrics, it seems to be a rather happy tune.

Jesus it's You

Who understands the language of my tears

(The issues that still hurt to talk about)

The broken parts of me that haven't healed

(I see who really matters, Jesus it's You)

Jesus it's You (yes God)

Who understands the language of my tears

(You know the meaning behind every tear)

The broken parts of me that have been healed

(I thought I was alone but you isolated for intimacy)

It is also another song of Zion. Last week we looked at Psalm 125 which was the first song of Zion in the Psalms of Ascent, and we saw that Zion is a common theme throughout the remainder of these psalms. Mount Zion is a symbol for Jerusalem, which itself represents the place where God dwells with his people. Psalm 126 is a song that looks back to when the captives returned to Jerusalem following their long exile in Babylon. They had suffered so much, and now they suddenly found themselves back in their homeland, back in Jerusalem, back in the beloved city of God. Just like that, God had delivered them. This is a psalm that we need during times of crisis. It is a much needed reminder of how God brings us from tears to joy. (Read Psalm 126:1-6 and pray.) e24fc04721

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