Category: What does this PSALM sing to you?

Psalms - 150 songs of worship from the Old Testament
Psalms praise the Lord

Psalms is a hymn book, full of praises and pleas of emotion. Share a favorite Psalm and tell us what it means to you. Do you have a link to a contemporary Christian song with a lyric from Psalms? Please share that with us as well. Share a hymns text. PRAISE THE LORD in our Christian Social Witness for Jesus. COMMENT on a verse or an entire Psalm. How does it affect your? (These speak to so many of our daily troubles and God’s availability to His created ones. How does this Psalm sing about Jesus Christ? What is your WITNESS of Christ Jesus to your SOCIAL friends through this Psalm or song? We praise you for your Post and WITNESS for the LORD.

  • Psalms of a Contrite Heart Before Christ

    Psalms of a Contrite Heart Before Christ

    The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit;
    A broken and a contrite heart, O God, You will not despise.

    Psalm 51:17 LSB

    Contrition: Bowed down before Almighty God

    Last time on Ash Wednesday, we noted from the weeping Prophet, Jeremiah, our great sorrow in being CRUSHED by the enemy – in fact by the hand of GOD on the pestle of Jerusalem’s destruction.

    mortar and pestle with hand of chef

    Like Jeremiah we do NOT want to be CRUSHED by any — either the LORD or our enemy.

    WE are unaccustomed to the pouring out of our spirit into a mortar of refinement.

    YET it is the Lord’s will to refine those whom He will.

    Be contrite or be crushed

    humble .. or humbled.


    Sad Psalms of Lament

    Lamentations, if sung, would be sorrowful elegies similar to some Psalms we would rather not sing. Regardless of the “how” – and we generally know our sin – contrition and humility often escape our notice on the stage of our praise.

    Yet even in the Psalms we must observe the same words which the Lord has written for our worship.

    Strong’s H1794 – dāḵâ – דָּכָה

    to collapse (phys. or mentally):—break (sore), contrite, crouch.

    We’ve all seen it — most have experienced it. And the Psalms remind us as the Lord refines us.

    O Yahweh, reprove me not in Your wrath,

    And discipline me not in Your burning anger.

    I am faint and badly crushed;

    I groan because of the agitation of my heart.

    Psalm 38:1,8 LSB


    Psalm 51:

    51:17 (WLC 51:19) זִבְחֵי אֱלֹהִים רוּחַ נִשְׁבָּרָה לֵב־נִשְׁבָּר וְנִדְכֶּה אֱלֹהִים לֹא תִבְזֶה׃

    • šāḇar rûaḥ
      • broken spirit
    • šāḇar dāḵâ lēḇ
      • a broken and contrite heart

    Psalm 51:17 from MASORETIC Text

    IS that any way to open a post such as this or especially a WORSHIP service?

    IN FACT, the contrition of it's context pleads to Elohim for mercy. So was it ordered for corporate worship by the King.

    [[To the chief Musician,

    A Psalm of David,

    when Nathan the prophet came unto him, after he had gone in to Bathsheba.]]

    Have mercy upon me, O God, according to thy lovingkindness: according unto the multitude of thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions.

    Wash me thoroughly from mine iniquity,

    and cleanse me from my sin.

    For I acknowledge my transgressions:

    and my sin is ever before me.


    Make me to hear joy and gladness; that the bones which thou hast broken [crushed] may rejoice.

    Psalm 51:1-3, 8 KJV

    We have heard the whole story — confessed in a Psalm of worship!

    And the King – David of Israel and Judah – before we reach v. 17 of our opening CALL to Worship today — continues with a more hopeful and familiar plea:

    Create in me a clean heart, O God;
    and renew a right spirit within me.

    Psalm 51:10

    Create in me a clean heart, O God – Psalm 51 stands as an enduring testament to the power of confession, the boundless mercy of God, and the potential for spiritual renewal and transformation.

    It reminds us that even in our deepest frailty, God’s love is unfailing.

    Psalm 51 commentary

    a Plea of the Crushed – Psalm 143

    A Psalm of David

    YET in our distress of being humbled (OPPRESSED, an adjective found in other Psalms) — crushed by the Lord we have hope — as nearly every Psalm ends.

    Teach me to do thy will;

    for thou art my God:

    thy spirit is good;

    lead me into the land of uprightness.

    Quicken [revive] me, O LORD,

    for thy name’s sake:

    for thy righteousness’ sake

    bring my soul out of trouble.

    Psalm 143:9–10 KJV

    Praying the Psalms in Gethsemane

    Picture our Lord, having walked all the paths among evil men toward Gethsemane, full well knowing the charge of His Father in heaven to go forth into the valley of death…

    a humble mortal, a crushed man, a prisoner to be betrayed and bound as a spectacle for evil men…

    humiliated, struck on the cheek, beaten on the back and hung ignominiously on a tree by the rulers of this world and city.

    .. “Sit here while I pray.” ,, “My soul is overwhelmed with sorrow to the point of death,” he said to them. “Stay here and keep watch.” ..

    Then he returned to his disciples and found them sleeping.

    excerpt from the Gospel of Mark 14

    Psalm 10

    11 He says to himself, “God will never notice;

    Psalm 10:12-11 NIV

     The Hebrew word for "crushed" can also imply being broken in spirit, indicating the deep emotional and psychological impact of such suffering. 

    This aligns with the broader biblical narrative where God is portrayed as a defender of the oppressed (Psalm 9:9).

    The imagery here can also be seen as a type of Christ, who was "crushed" for our iniquities (Isaiah 53:5), highlighting the ultimate sacrifice for the redemption of humanity.

    BibleHub.com Study Bible commentary


    JESUS, the Son of Man, Son of David and Son of God sang and prayed such Psalms in worship in the presence of God the Father.

    Do YOU?

    Talk of JESUS .com

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  • in the time of old age

    in the time of old age

    Funerals and Feasts

    It seems that Providence has brought me to more funerals than feasts lately. We thank God for those wedding feasts and monthly social gatherings of friends. Births of children and grandchildren bring great joy to the hearts of the living and memories of our aging generation.

    But now that I have surpassed three score years and ten Solomon’s reminder returns my thoughts near to home more often.

    Better to go to a house of mourning
    Than to go to a house of feasting
    Because that is the end of all mankind,

    And the living puts this in his heart.

    Ecclesiastes 7:2 Legacy Standard Bible

    Heaven and earth – Glory and dust

    earth rise from Apollo
    In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth

    Consider both the mourner and the reveler: they are without excuse in acknowledging that their flesh will wither and fail. All men and all women will bow down to our Maker, even those who fail to repent in dust and ashes during our brief days of glory.

    תְהִלִּים (Psalm) 71

    We are about to sing a Psalm – a plea to Almighty God:

    Be to me a rock of habitation to which I may continually come;

    You have given the command to save me,

    For You are my rock and my fortress.

    .. For You are my hope;

    O Lord Yahweh, You are my trust from my youth..

    My mouth is filled with Your praise
    And with Your beauty all day long.

    O God, do not be far from me;

    O my God, hasten to my help!


    .. O God, You have taught me from my youth,

    And I still declare Your wondrous deeds.

    You, who have shown me many troubles and evils,

    Will revive me again,

    And will bring me up again from the depths of the earth.


    My lips will sing for joy when I sing praises to You;

    And my soul, which You have redeemed.

    My tongue also will utter Your righteousness all day long;

    For they are ashamed, for they are humiliated who seek to do me evil.


    Mourners and Scoffers

    Observe three types of souls destined to live and breathe their last one day:

    • The worshiper of God who lives out their days remembering the blessed ones of God.
    • The scoffer who denies the One God, Creator of all things and Judge of all mankind.
    • The Redeemed in Christ Jesus, the Son of Man, sacrificed for sinners (like us) that those who believe will be granted the resurrection of everlasting life.

    Psalm 71 – Proclaimed as Gospel

    Charles Haddon Spurgeon (1834-1892), often known today as the Prince of Preachers, began his pastorate at London's New Park Street Church in 1854.. 
    

    A strong emphasis in Spurgeon’s preaching was God’s grace and sovereignty over man’s helpless state. He also knew well the terrible joy that comes only through suffering as he lived quite afflicted (both by illness and slander).

    C.H. Spurgeon left this earth for his heavenly hope in 1892.

    BlueLetterBible.org
    Just a few brief points from Spurgeon:
    • “In thee, O Lord, do I put my trust.” Jehovah deserves our confidence; let him have it all. Every day must we guard against every form of reliance upon an arm of flesh, and hourly hang our faith upon the ever faithful God. Not only on God must we rest, as a man stands on a rock, but in him must we trust, as a man hides in a cave.
    • “Cast me not off in the time of old age.” Old age robs us of personal beauty, and deprives us of strength for active service; but it does not lower us in the love and favour of God.. To be forsaken of God is the worst of all conceivable ills, and if the believer can be but clear of that grievous fear, he is happy: no saintly heart need be under any apprehension upon this point.`

    Here is faith’s inference from the infinite greatness of the Lord. He has been strong to smite; he will be also strong to save.. and though I have been almost dead and buried, he will give me a resurrection, and “bring me up again from the depths of the earth.”


    A Lament of Job

    If a Man Dies, Will He Live Again?

    Daffodils coming back to life and blooming in early spring

    “Like a flower he comes forth and withers.

    He also flees like a shadow and does not stand.

    Job 14:2
    • “Who can make the clean out of the unclean?
    • Man breathes his last, and where is he?
    • “If a man dies, will he live again?

    These are the QUESTIONS of a righteous man.

    ARE you so right before Almighty GODRemembered, REDEEMED or simply a scoffer soon to be JUDGED?


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    Lent 2024 C.E. #1 in preparation for Easter 
    + To be continued, God-willing

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  • He Leadeth me beside still waters – Psalm 23

    He Leadeth me beside still waters – Psalm 23

    He leadeth me beside the still waters.

    He restoreth my soul:


    Psalm 23 – a song of calm confidence

    Many of us know it well. Perhaps we even recite the six verses of Psalm 23 even as I learned in the melodic flow of the King James Version of the Bible.

    The LORD is my shepherd; I shall not want.

    David’s focus introduces his encounters with death. Believers and unbelievers alike frequently hear his psalm in the context of a life already lain down in the stillness of death.

    No more want then…

    So why would today’s want worry me today?


    Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, 

    I will fear no evil: 


    Questions from fear

    These are the words of Psalm 23 we know so well, yet in our DOUBT we do fear the death casting a deep shadow upon our days ahead.

    We walk quickly along in our quickened last days of a mortal life spent yet not finished, an ending of struggle along a ledge between Light and complete darkness.

    • Have I missed the table which the LORD hath prepared for me?
    • Hath the LORD anointed me with prosperity?
    • Doth the LORD overfill my cup with abundance?

    Goodness and Mercy?

    Surely goodness and mercy seem NOT to have followed me in these last days of my mortal life!

    Certainly the LORD did bless King David all the days of his life, BUT what is missing in mine?

    I walk in the shadow looking to my end in the valley, yet David seemed rested even before those somber last words:

    May he rest in peace.


    • WHAT have I missed that David seems to sing in this 23rd Psalm?
      • REST and PEACE along this treacherous path toward the VALLEY of the SHADOW of DEATH.

    He Leadeth Me

    The reaffirming metaphor of the still waters assumes the still waters assumes the same role as that of the green pastures. Just as the grass of the green pastures is deep enoughto lie in, so also we must understand that still waters rund deem. Any deep experience with the Shephers can only be accomplished by time spent with the Shepherd, as the words lie down indicate.

    King James Bible Commentary Psalm 23, p534

    In addition to my memory of Psalm 23 in the King James, a 19th century hymn sung frequently by our local church encourages believers both corporately and individually.

    Many may sing He Leadeth Me from the shadowed hillsides of our own valleys.

    “He leadeth me, he leadeth me, for by his hand he leadeth me..

    He Leadeth Me from Psalm 23

    YET in our DOUBT and FEAR, let us remember the place of peace by which we may have quickly passed in Psalm 23.

    for Thou art with me

    I cannot cross into the Light with you.


    The lonely lament of this shepherd so accustomed to the place of darkness in many fields of so many sheep among wolves does not lift me.

    David was a king 3000 years distant from my own walk in the fields of death’s fear. He does not comfort me and my most beloved ones cannot go to the place where I must go in a time unknown to any of us.

    Yet David’s Psalm was not addressed to ME, but to the LORD as well as his own beating mortal heart.

    The LORD is my shepherd; I shall not want.

    יְהוָה רֹעִי לֹא אֶחְסָֽר׃

    Yᵊhōvâ LORD rāʿâ my shepherd

    תְהִלִּים (Psalm) 23:1

    It is THE LORD who David asks to lead him.

    And how?

    By the LORD’s own actions this mortal shepherd will follow and obey the Shepherd of shepherds and the LORD of Lords.

    We all like sheep have gone astray.


    So ask Him: Where will He lead you?

    Like me, you may have missed this:

    He maketh, he leadeth, He restoreth, he leadeth

    Do you see a tread of connection here in David’s Psalm?

    He, THE LORD, leads — that is, IF we will humbly allow Him. BUT like sheep WE don’t particularly like to follow any lead other than our own.

    AND we may have missed yet another comfort to David due to our own rebellion again the leadership of God (or anyone else, for that matter).

    thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.

    OUCH!

    Authority? Bowing down humbly to the LORD because HE IS more powerful than YOU?

    Yet in death as in life, we remain powerless.

    THY ROD speaks more to our relationship as people of the Shepherd than to the power and authority capable of beating us into obedience (which is not like the Lord who called us).

    His staff which pulled you into mortality will lead you into eternity.

    Therefore David concludes his Psalm from the valley of the shadow of death with a first person assurance with the LORD.

    Where is the house of the Lord?

    Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies:

    Thank you Lord.

    thou anointest my head with oil;

    Thank you Lord.

    my cup runneth over.

    Thank you Lord.

    Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life


    David concludes with confidence of good in God’s mercy — why he trusts in the LORD and does not fear the evil of death — death before the Lord’s own appointed time. His confidence speaks forward to where he shall dwell once the LORD does raise him up from the valley of the shadow of death into the Light of the LORD’s own presence.


    Where are YOUR still waters when you consider the valley of DEATH?

    How do you envision this place beyond the deep waters and above the highest heavens of this temporal mortal place?

    Who do you trust to lead you into the house of the LORD, forever?

    Please SHARE your COMMENT or Questions about Psalm 23
    
    AND
    
    Look for my Part 2 New Testament take on Christians humbly helping each other to navigate this shadowy path where sheep of the Lord should fear no evil.

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