During the brief four years we home-schooled, one of the biggest helps was a great support group, and one of their activities was a monthly meeting where we sometimes had guest speakers (my favorite was Booker T. Washington’s granddaughter — she gave quite a fascinating talk), sometimes had the kids doing activities, like an annual talent show, and sometimes members of the group would speak about their work or hobbies. One time my husband, whose job title for many years was Research Microscopist and who collects, buys, and sells microscopes, spoke about microscopes and brought a few for kids to look at whatever they wanted to under the microscope. He also spoke about Psalm 34:3: “O magnify the LORD with me, and let us exalt his name together.” He pointed out that we don’t make God bigger than He is: He’s already so big we can’t comprehend it. But we focus on Him, bringing out thoughts of His greatness.
I’m rereading Let Every Heart Prepare Him Room: Daily Family Devotions for Advent by Nancy Guthrie, and the selection for today comes from Mary’s song after learning that she will be the mother of the Messiah. “And Mary said, My soul doth magnify the Lord, And my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour” (Luke 1:46-47). Guthrie explores the concept of what it means to magnify God and says:
The truth is, we can never fully take in or understand God’s greatness. But we can magnify Him. We magnify God not by making Him bigger than He truly is, but by making Him greater in our thoughts, in our affections, in our memories, and in our expectations. We magnify Him by having higher, larger, and truer thoughts of Him. We magnify Him by praising Him and telling others about His greatness so they can have bigger thoughts about Him, too.
I looked up the meaning of “magnify” in Dictionary.com, and part of the definition is: “to cause to seem greater or more important; attribute … importance to; to intensify; dramatize; heighten; to extol; praise.”
Mary magnified Him out of joy and gladness. The psalmist (Psalm 64 and 69) magnified Him out of deep need and affliction. They both speak of deliverance and answered prayer and expectation. The KJV speaks once of God magnifying Himself: “Thus will I magnify myself, and sanctify myself; and I will be known in the eyes of many nations, and they shall know that I am the Lord” (Ezekiel 38:23).
I don’t think God “needs” us to magnify Him: He doesn’t have an ego that needs stroking. Even when He magnified Himself, the purpose was that others would know who He was. But we need to magnify Him. It’s so easy to magnify the cares of this world, our needs, our weaknesses, our duties. That gets discouraging, distracting, defeating. But when we magnify Him, we see Him as He truly is, we remember how great and good He is, how He has strength He will provide us in our weakness, how He can easily take care of whatever need we have. The more we praise Him, the more rightly we relate to Him, then the more we praise Him and testify of Him to others, so they can focus on Him and see for themselves how great He is and how He can meet their needs as well. The more we magnify Him, the more we worship Him.
I will praise the name of God with a song, and will magnify him with thanksgiving.
This also shall please the Lord better than an ox or bullock that hath horns and hoofs.
The humble shall see this, and be glad: and your heart shall live that seek God.
Psalm 69:30-32.
Amen. Wonderful thoughts, Barbara. Thank you for sharing them.
Thought provoking! I never thought of magnify as the idea of the microscope. That analogy is soooo good, especially to think about finding out more and more about God by looking closely at Him. Love it!
Thank you, Barbara!
What a great post, Barbara. The last paragraph especially spoke to my heart.
I enjoyed this. For lack of a better illustration, when I stick my hand up to my face, that’s all I see is my hand. Everything else around is still there, but I can’t see it. I guess that’s the way I see magnifying God. Trouble and problems may still be there but knowing God is much larger than the problems helps me through.
Let Christ be magnified in me!
Brenda, that’s good, right there…another great & meaningful analogy!
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the highest total praise be given to God with the clear heart of devotion.the greatest description of adoration is attributed to the supreme being who cared the inhabitants of the cosmos. praise be the Lord God forever.
I woke up this morning with Ps 34 – so i thought Lord i want to ‘really’ magnify you today…so i got to your page…Now i know, every issue of my life right now is minute, tiny, inconsequential…God alone is MAGNIFIED in and around me.
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Your post really helped me to understand the full meaning of “magnify the Lord”. Thank you!
I fully comprehend what it is to magnify the LORD by reading your post. Thanks for sharing!
Wow! Thank you for this blog post. This really helps me. I was just thinking and asking God why do you want us to praise you. I know he commands us to and like you said God is not doing it for ego and this answered my prayer. I have been struggling in my life for healing in my body and like the father who told Jesus “I believe, help my unbelief!” I say the same thing. This morning I read Psalms 35:27 and I started thinking what does it mean to magnify The Lord. Thanks again! God Bless you!
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I want above anything else to magnify the LORD. As I praise Him testify about His greatness and goodness see Him for themselves and they tell others , He is magnified. Thank you for magnifying HIM.
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Barbara, I am so grateful for your beautiful insight into what “magnify” means to each of us. My scripture study this morning has been deepened and my heart and mind enlightened by what you have shared. Thank you for sharing such wonderful thoughts.