Psalm 51: The Prayer That Begins at the Bottom
David's great penitential psalm is not, as we might expect, the prayer of a man making excuses. There are no mitigating circumstances offered, no careful explanations of how the thing happened. "Against thee, thee only, have I sinned" — the words of a man who has stopped looking for the nearest exit and turned to face the full weight of what he has done. And what does he ask for? Not merely forgiveness, but creation. "Create in me a clean heart, O God." The word is the same used in Genesis — the making of something from nothing. David knows, as only the truly penitent can, that no amount of moral renovation will do; what is needed is not repair but resurrection. And here is the turn that makes this psalm immortal: the sacrifice God desires is not a bull upon an altar but a broken spirit. The God of the universe, who could demand anything, asks for the one thing we are most reluctant to give — our shattered honesty. A broken and contrite heart, He will not despise. It is perhaps the most hopeful sentence ever written, because it means the door is never locked from God's side.
00:00 Have Mercy Upon Me, O God
01:00 Create in Me a Clean Heart
02:00 The Sacrifice God Desires