The US Army's expression "hoo-ah" is a guttural response barked when troops voice approval. Its original meaning is lost to history, but some say it is derived from an old acronym HUAHeard, Understood, and Acknowledged. I first heard the word in basic training.
Many years later it found its way into my vocabulary again when I began to meet on Wednesday mornings with a group of men to study the Scriptures. One morning one of the mena former member of the 82nd Airborne Divisionwas reading one of the psalms and came to the notation selah that occurs throughout the psalms. Instead of reading selah, however, he growled hoo-ah, and that became our word for selah ever after.
No one knows for certain what selah actually means. Some say it is only a musical notation. It often appears after a truth that calls for a deep-seated, emotional response. In that sense hoo-ah works for me.
This morning I read Psalm 68:19: "Blessed be the Lord, who daily [day to day] loads us with benefits, the God of our salvation! Selah" (nkjv).
Imagine that! Every single morning God loads us up on His shoulders and carries us through the day. He is our salvation. Thus safe and secure in Him, weve no cause for worry or for fear. Hoo-ah! I say.
Psalm 68 is written from the historical context of the Hebrew worshipers. The psalmist declares the awesome power of God by calling Him the One of Sinai and the God of Israel (v. 8). By doing this he reminds the Hebrews of Gods faithfulness. Who is this God who goes out before the people? (v. 7). He is the God of Israel who spoke to Pharaoh through Moses and Aaron saying, Let my people go (Ex. 5:1), and He is the One of Sinai who gave them the Ten Commandments (Ex. 1920). The psalmist reminds Israel that the God who heard their cries in Egypt still hears, and the One who provided in the desert still provides.