Categories

Psalm 38 Profile

Toni’s Title

A Prayer for Reconciliation

ESV Title

Do Not Forsake Me, O LORD

Literary Type

This is a an individual lament, a penitential psalm.

Laments

More than 1/3 of the Psalms fall into the category of complaints to God in situations of limitation or threat. These laments were a form of prayer and praise based on the conviction that God is concerned about people and answers the human cry in ways surpassing human expectation or understanding. Israel’s laments out of distress were a way of praising God even when he seemed absent. The faith of the psalmists is founded on the good news that God intervenes in desperate situations to help those who are distressed. The psalmists share a deep confidence that God is compassionate, concerned, hearing his people and involved with them; God is faithful and trustworthy. A lament is an outcry to God from a responsive heart. Laments came from individuals or from the community.

Examples: Psalms 3-5, 22, 27:7-14, 42, 51, 69, 90, 130, 137 and many others

NT Prayer Guide

Ro. 6:15-23

Categories

Psalm 37 Profile

Toni’s Title

Wise Living in a Crooked Generation

ESV Title

He Will Not Forsake His Saints

Literary Type

This is a Wisdom Psalm in the form of an alphabetical acrostic.

Wisdom Psalms

Some Psalms reflect the wisdom movement in Israel which taught that the foundation of wisdom is faith in God and reverence for him. Wisdom psalms are meditations on the good life, the blessings of living the wise way of life of dependence on God as opposed to the way destruction which the foolish live who rely on themselves to work out their own destiny.

Examples: Psalms 37, 49, 73

NT Prayer Guide

Ro. 8:1-11

Superscription

Of David.

Categories

Psalm 36 Profile

Toni’s Title

The Blessedness of the Wise

ESV Title

How Precious Is Your Steadfast Love

Literary Type

This is a mixed type, including wisdom, hymn, and lament.

Wisdom Psalms

Some Psalms reflect the wisdom movement in Israel which taught that the foundation of wisdom is faith in God and reverence for him. Wisdom psalms are meditations on the good life, the blessings of living the wise way of life of dependence on God as opposed to the way destruction which the foolish live who rely on themselves to work out their own destiny.

Examples: Psalms 37, 49, 73

Hymns

Hymns extol the glory and greatness of God as it is revealed in nature and history, and particularly in Israels’s history. Hymns praise God in general terms for his power and faithfulness as creator of the cosmos, ruler of history, and creator/redeemer of Israel to bring blessing to all the world. Israel’s hymns stress God’s active involvement in the life story of Israel. Hymns typically demonstrate motives for worshipping and praising God. A clear example is Psalm 117, the shortest psalm, just two verses:

1 O praise the Lord, all you nations; *

praise him, all you peoples.

2 For (= Hebrew ki) great is his loving-kindness towards us, *

and the faithfulness of the Lord endures for ever.

Praise the Lord.


Hymns were used for exuberant worship in the temple and the synagogue. The people of God before the Incarnation invite us to celebrate and praise with them in hope of the kingdom of God and his Messiah. Hymns, like all psalms, show Christians how to praise God who has acted in creation, in revelation, and in redemption, and who is acting decisively in establishing his kingdom on earth. They do not ask anything; they simply rejoice in God’s presence.

Examples: Psalms 8, 19:1-6, 33, 66:1-12, 100, 103, 104, 145-150, and others

Laments

More than 1/3 of the Psalms fall into the category of complaints to God in situations of limitation or threat. These laments were a form of prayer and praise based on the conviction that God is concerned about people and answers the human cry in ways surpassing human expectation or understanding. Israel’s laments out of distress were a way of praising God even when he seemed absent. The faith of the psalmists is founded on the good news that God intervenes in desperate situations to help those who are distressed. The psalmists share a deep confidence that God is compassionate, concerned, hearing his people and involved with them; God is faithful and trustworthy. A lament is an outcry to God from a responsive heart. Laments came from individuals or from the community.

Examples: Psalms 3-5, 22, 27:7-14, 42, 51, 69, 90, 130, 137 and many others

NT Prayer Guide

Gal. 5:16-25

Superscription

To the choirmaster, Of David, the servant of the Lord.

Categories

Psalm 35 Profile

Toni’s Title

A Prayer for Vindication

ESV Title

Taste and See That the Lord is Good

Literary Type

This is an individual lament.

Laments

More than 1/3 of the Psalms fall into the category of complaints to God in situations of limitation or threat. These laments were a form of prayer and praise based on the conviction that God is concerned about people and answers the human cry in ways surpassing human expectation or understanding. Israel’s laments out of distress were a way of praising God even when he seemed absent. The faith of the psalmists is founded on the good news that God intervenes in desperate situations to help those who are distressed. The psalmists share a deep confidence that God is compassionate, concerned, hearing his people and involved with them; God is faithful and trustworthy. A lament is an outcry to God from a responsive heart. Laments came from individuals or from the community.

Examples: Psalms 3-5, 22, 27:7-14, 42, 51, 69, 90, 130, 137 and many others

NT Prayer Guide

1 Peter 1:3-9

Superscription

Of David, when he changed his behavior before Abimelech, so that he drove him out, and he went away.

Categories
Psalms Group

Quotes on Psalms 12 and 13

Psalm 12

From Reflections on the Psalms by C.S. Lewis:

Categories
Psalms Group

Psalms 12 and 13, and “Sadness”

Email preparing for May 10, 2020

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Thanks be to God that we don’t have to fake “fine.”  Life in Christ includes suffering and pain of all kinds and also includes resources to get through it.

Categories
Psalms Group

Psalm 37: A Song of Wisdom and Trust

The Psalter teaches us about the life of faith, about honest dialogue between us and our Creator. The Psalter gives us hope that the life of faith is worth the effort, often by contrasting the righteous and the wicked. Themes from the Wisdom literature of the Bible (Proverbs, Job, Ecclesiastes, and Song of Solomon) are prominent in some psalms. (Examples: Psalms 37, 49 and 73)

People in whom God is acting to make them like Him  are contrasted with
people who deny God and live like He doesn’t matter
.

Categories
Psalms Group Topics

Liturgical Psalms for Advent Worship

During Advent, our group’s focus is on the psalms traditionally selected by the Church for the Sunday worship liturgy.  You can see these 9 psalms listed in the Sunday Lectionary on page 717 in our revised Book of Common Prayer. ( Psalms 24, 50, 72, 80, 85, 122, 126, 132,146) 

Categories
Psalms Group

Parallel Psalms 14 and 53: What They Show Us about the Psalter and about Us

The repetition of Psalm 14 in Psalm 53 reminds us of the 1,000 years of time that Israel was writing and collecting their psalms. These Hebrew poems were evoked out of the life of Israel and used in their public and private worship.  In them, YHWH’s chosen people are sharing His way of life with one another and, ultimately, with all the people of the world.