11:41

Psalm 119 — Stanza 5/22 — He: The Listening Heart

by Leslie DMello

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guided
Activity
Meditation
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In He (verses 33–40), the psalmist prays, “Teach me, O Lord, the way of Your statutes.” This is the heart of spiritual listening—an invitation to be guided from within. As you meditate on these verses, imagine your soul leaning toward divine instruction, open and ready. This stanza reminds us that wisdom does not come from striving, but from stillness and surrender. Psychologically, it speaks to receptivity: learning to hear the quiet voice beneath the noise of daily life. Spiritually, He is the prayer of the teachable heart, one that finds joy in being shaped by grace. Let each verse soften you into humility, peace, and renewed curiosity about the ways of God.

SpiritualityMeditationHumilityDivine GuidanceInner TransformationTeachabilityMindfulnessObedienceSimplicityStabilityCompassionHumility PracticeSpiritual LongingMindful AttentionAuthentic ObedienceSimplicity FocusSpiritual StabilityCompassionate Correction

Transcript

The Hei Shtanza is the quiet prayer for student before the divine teacher.

It begins not with bold declaration but with humble request.

Teach me,

Give me,

Make me,

Incline my heart.

Each line breathes of surrender,

Of a soul that longs to be shaped by wisdom rather than driven by will.

These verses hold a tender invitation to slow down,

To open our hearts to divine instruction and to allow our inner world to be reordered by what is eternal.

This is the practice of teachability,

The posture of humility that allows genuine growth.

It is the heart's turning toward trust,

Asking not for control but for guidance.

In these eight verses,

We learn that peace is not the absence of struggle but the presence of direction.

To be taught by God is to be gently transformed from the inside out.

Psalm 119 verses 33 to 40 Hey,

Teach me,

O Lord,

The way of your statues,

And I shall keep it to the end.

Give me understanding,

And I shall keep your law.

Indeed,

I shall observe it with my whole heart.

Make me walk in the path of your commandments,

For I delight in it.

Incline my heart to your testimonies and not to covetousness.

Turn away my eyes from looking at worthless things and revive me in your way.

Establish your word to your servant,

Who is devoted to fearing you.

Turn away my reproach,

Which I dread,

For your judgments are good.

Behold,

I long for your precepts.

Revive me in your righteousness.

Verse 33 Teach me,

O Lord,

The way of your statues,

And I shall keep it to the end.

The psalmist begins as a learner,

Asking God to teach him not just information but formation.

The way suggests not mere rules but a path of living,

A rhythm of being.

This is the prayer of a humble heart to be shaped,

Not just instructed.

It mirrors the readiness for growth that marks every turning point in healing.

When we open ourselves to be taught,

We move from rigidity to receptivity,

From fear to flow.

To keep it to the end means constancy.

The desire for the wisdom that sustains us,

Not just in moments of inspiration,

But in the long seasons of ordinary living.

Verse 34 Give me understanding,

And I shall keep your law.

Indeed,

I shall observe it with my whole heart.

Understanding is deeper than knowledge.

It is insight that reaches the heart,

Wisdom that integrates thought and feeling.

Obedience without understanding can become duty.

But when understanding joins the heart,

Obedience becomes joy.

This is the move from compliance to authenticity.

When we understand why something matters,

It ceases to feel like constraint and becomes an expression of who we truly are.

Verse 35 Make me walk in the path of your commandments,

For I delight in it.

The psalmist asks to walk,

To live actively in God's way,

And his motive is not fear but delight.

Delight transforms discipline.

It is love that makes devotion sustainable.

We know that joy reinforces behavior far more deeply than guilt ever can.

When we find delight in the path we walk,

We no longer drag our feet.

We move freely,

Carried by meaning.

Verse 36 Incline my heart to your testimonies and not to covetousness.

This verse touches the tension between devotion and distraction.

The psalmist recognizes how easily the heart tilts toward desire,

Toward wanting,

Comparing,

Grasping.

This is a prayer for simplicity.

To turn our attention from what depletes us to what nourishes us.

It speaks to the reorientation of attention,

The awareness that what we focus on shapes our inner world.

When we incline the heart toward gratitude,

Contentment grows.

When we lean toward comparison,

Peace fades.

Verse 37 Turn away my eyes from looking at worthless things and revive me in your way.

This verse feels written for that time.

The psalmist asks for protection from distraction,

From the empty and trivial that steals our attention and spirit.

It is a plea to see clearly,

To recognize what drains life and to turn toward what gives it.

It is a call to mindfulness,

To guard the gateways of perception.

What we repeatedly gaze upon,

We internalize.

By choosing what we behold,

We choose what we become.

Verse 38 Establish a word to your servant who is devoted to fearing you.

The psalmist now seeks stability.

To establish God's word within is to let it sink from idea into identity,

To build one's life upon it.

This is the movement from inspiration to integration,

From hearing truth to embodying it.

It is a process of forming values so deeply that they become reflexive.

When pressure comes,

They hold a steady.

Verse 39 Turn away my reproach which I dread,

For your judgments are good.

This verse holds vulnerability.

The psalmist admits fear,

The fear of failure,

Of shame,

Of falling short.

Yet he meets that fear with trust,

Your judgments are good.

This is the healing of the inner critic.

God's correction is never cruel.

It is restorative,

Not punitive.

This verse reflects the difference between shame and growth.

Shame condemns the self.

Wisdom corrects behavior with compassion.

God's good judgments lead us not to despair,

But to dignity.

Verse 40 Behold,

I long for your precepts.

Revive me in your righteousness.

The stanza closes with longing.

Calm,

Clear,

Life-giving desire.

The psalmist's heart reaches not for comfort,

But for righteousness,

Alignment with the divine order of peace.

This longing is love in motion.

It is aspiration,

The healthy yearning that draws us toward what is highest and truest.

To be revived in righteousness is to come alive again in integrity,

To feel the breath of purpose flow back into the soul.

The He Stanza of the Teachable Heart It invites us to live as students of grace,

Humble,

Receptive,

And willing to be reshaped.

It reminds us that true growth comes not through striving,

But through surrender,

Letting God teach,

Guide,

And align us again and again.

In a world that urges us to be self-sufficient,

He whispers a gentler truth,

That peace is born with trust,

That clarity arises from humility,

And that revival flows from the willingness to be taught.

A Prayer Divine Teacher,

Incline my heart toward wisdom and away from distraction.

Turn my eyes from what is empty and establish your truth deep within me.

When I am weary,

Revive me.

When I am restless,

Guide me.

Teach me to walk in your way with joy and let my life reflect the peace of your righteousness.

Amen.

Meet your Teacher

Leslie DMelloDubai - United Arab Emirates

5.0 (5)

Recent Reviews

Betsie

November 23, 2025

TY! Love this prayer🙏🏻 May we have a teachable spirit-if we think we know everything we’re unavailable to learn anything.

Mark

October 23, 2025

The scripture lectio combined with your brief commentary provides a great focal point to begin my day. Thank you!

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© 2026 Leslie DMello. All rights reserved. All copyright in this work remains with the original creator. No part of this material may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.

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