Psalm 113
This is the first song of what the Jewish people called the ‘Hallel,’ Psalms 113-118. These Psalms were sung or recited in unison during the most solemn feast. Passover, for example, was a grand thanksgiving event. Jesus, on the night of the institution of the Lord's Supper, led the disciples in a ‘hymn’ likely taken from one of these psalms.
This beautiful and simple song doesn't require explanation so much as contemplation. There are a couple of pictures that are moving. In verses 5-6 we see that God is so great and grand that He must stoop down to look on the sky so far above us. While we look up at the mountaintops and the planets or stars, God stoops down, like a granddad with a toddler, to reach their level. Second, coming down to this humble level, He can lift up the most lowly person and place him in with royalty. He can even take the lonely, sad individual and surround them with the delight of being adored by a family. Which takes us to verse 5: Who is like the Lord our God?
“Thank you, God, for your beautiful condescension. AMEN.”