Psalms (163)
  1. A call for God to hear our cries, a call for the Good Shepherd to carry His people. Going down to the pit, a prayer that God rescue him, lest he end up stuck there forever.
  2. In Psalm 3, David is fleeing from Absalom, and many are saying there is no God that will save him.
  3. Psalm 7 is a prayer that gives expression to those who have experienced persecution.
  4. As this Psalm is set in the the time of the Babylonian exile, Chad Bird meditates on the types of exile we find in scripture and in our lives.
  5. There are times when we feel farther away from God than we used to be. This reminds us that even though we feel exiled, God is with us in our exile.
  6. Look away from me, that I may smile again. Rather than putting on a happy face, it might be better to honestly grieve during seasons of heartbrokenness.
  7. Don't let people convince you that staying home is heroic. Unless of course you are listening to Ringside while staying home! Than you, my friend, are an Erol Flynn! Luther on the Resurrection.
  8. Long ago, the people of Israel began to sing words of encouragement to each other in times of distress. In their songs, the psalms, are three Hebrew words that provide stability for us. They are more than just words—each one encapsulates the way of God with his people. They serve as helpful handholds in times of stress and upheaval. The words are these: רָפָה (be still), קָוָה (wait), and שָׁמַר (watch).
  9. Psalm 13 is a story of sorrow and joy, confession and absolution, it declares that God has answered all our trouble.
  10. Psalm 55 instructs us to call out to God and look to His sure promises when sin and darkness assails us.
  11. Is there any assurance when it doesn't feel like God is with you?
  12. The Psalmist speaks about how God delivers the poor and needy.
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