A Day in the Life
“And when they had sung a hymn, they went out to the Mount of Olives.” — Mark 14:26
There is something almost startling about this moment in the life of Jesus. I try to place myself there—walking alongside Him, hearing His voice rise in song, knowing what He knows is coming. The cross is not a distant possibility; it is hours away. Betrayal is already in motion. Weakness surrounds Him in His disciples. And yet, He sings. The Greek word used for hymn here is ὑμνήσαντες (hymnēsantes), meaning to celebrate or praise God in song. This is not casual singing; it is deliberate worship. Jesus chooses praise before pain, worship before suffering, and confidence before the visible outcome. That alone reshapes how I understand spiritual discipline.
When I reflect on this, I cannot help but think of 2 Chronicles 20, where King Jehoshaphat sends singers ahead of the army. The Hebrew word for praise in that passage, יָדָה (yadah), carries the idea of extending the hands in gratitude and confession of trust. The people praised not because the battle was over, but because God had already declared the outcome. As Matthew Henry once observed, “Those that trusted in God’s promises were so sure of victory that they praised Him before it was obtained.” That is the kind of faith Jesus embodies in Mark 14:26. He is not reacting to victory; He is proclaiming it in advance. And as I walk through my own life, I begin to see how often I reverse that pattern—waiting for resolution before offering praise, instead of letting praise shape my expectation of God’s faithfulness.
David’s life reinforces this same principle. When he brought the ark into Jerusalem, “David danced before the Lord with all his might” (2 Samuel 6:14). His praise was not reserved or calculated; it was wholehearted. The Hebrew word כָּל (kol)—“all”—reminds me that true worship is not partial. It is not something I give when conditions are right. It is something I offer because God is worthy. A.W. Tozer once wrote, “God is looking for people through whom He can do the impossible—what a pity that we plan only the things we can do by ourselves.” Praise, then, becomes the doorway into that kind of faith. It shifts my focus from what I can see to who God is. It realigns my heart with His nature rather than my circumstances.
What strikes me most in this scene with Jesus is how it connects to the fruit of the Spirit—especially love (ἀγάπη, agapē) as described in Galatians 5:22–23. Love is not reactive; it is rooted. It does not fluctuate with fear or uncertainty. 1 Corinthians 13:7 tells us, “Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.” That is exactly what Jesus demonstrates as He sings on the way to Gethsemane. His praise is an expression of love toward the Father—a trust that transcends the immediate suffering. And if I am becoming who God wants me to be, then my life must begin to reflect that same pattern. I must learn to praise not because life is easy, but because God is faithful.
There is a revealing question embedded in this truth: why do I sometimes struggle to praise? If I am honest, it is often because my attention is fixed on the problem rather than the promise. The absence of praise is rarely about the absence of reason; it is about misplaced focus. When I dwell on uncertainty, fear grows. But when I dwell on God’s character—His hesed (steadfast love) and emunah (faithfulness)—something shifts within me. Praise becomes natural, even necessary. It is not forced; it flows from trust. And in that moment, I begin to experience what Jesus promised in John 16:24: a fullness of joy that is not dependent on outcomes but anchored in relationship.
As I walk through this day, I am learning to carry a song in my spirit even when circumstances feel unresolved. That does not mean ignoring reality; it means interpreting reality through the lens of God’s promises. Jesus did not deny the cross—He walked toward it with a hymn on His lips. That is the invitation before me. To live a life where praise is not postponed until victory is visible, but practiced because victory is assured in Christ. In doing so, I begin to reflect the transforming work of the Spirit, where love becomes the foundation and praise becomes the expression.
For further study on praise as a spiritual discipline, consider this helpful resource:
https://www.ligonier.org/learn/articles/the-importance-of-praise
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