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Psalms overview

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Page 1: Psalms overview

Overview ofPsalms

Presented by Christopher R. SmithTo Capital City Vineyard, Lansing, Michigan

May 5, 2013

Page 2: Psalms overview

Dr. Peter Enns on trying toread through the Bible in a year:

“Things coast along well enough for a while. Genesis is pretty interesting. . . .

But if you make it through Exodus, you have to wade through Leviticus, where you hit a brick wall: Chapter after chapter of what to sacrifice and when, plus some very strange topics (like how to get rid of mildew).

Succumbing to temptation, you skip over to the Psalms. . . . But you don’t make it out of the teens before the Psalms all start looking the same.

By this time, it’s probably close to spring, so it makes perfect sense to just skip over to the Gospels and forget the rest of the Old Testament. It’s almost Easter anyway.”

Telling God’s Story, pp. 10-11

Page 3: Psalms overview

So as we go through the Bible together in a year(in a “context of grace”),

our next task is to keep the psalmsfrom all looking the same.

The psalms in the Bible are of three main types,

corresponding to three key moments

in the life of faith.

Page 4: Psalms overview

1. PSALM OF PRAISE

“God’s on the throneand all’s right with the world”

(or all will become right as God’s reign is extended)

BASIC FORM:

• Call to Worship

• Reason to Worship

• Call to Worship

Page 5: Psalms overview

Psalm 117 as an example ofa Psalm of Praise

Call to Worship Praise the LORD, all you nations;extol him, all you

peoples.

Reason to Worship For great is his love toward us,and the faithfulness of

the LORD endures forever.

Call to Worship Praise the LORD.

Page 6: Psalms overview

Psalm 100 as an example of a Psalm of Praise(elements repeated)

Call to Worship Shout for joy to the Lord, all the earth.Worship the Lord with

gladness; come before him with joyful songs.

Reason to Worship Know that the Lord is God. It is he who made us, and we are his;

we are his people, the sheep of his pasture.

Call to Worship Enter his gates with thanksgiving and his courts with praise; give thanks to him and praise his name.

Reason to Worship For the Lord is good and his love endures forever; his faithfulness continues through all generations.

Page 7: Psalms overview

Psalm 150 as an example of a Psalm of Praise(one element expands; the other nearly disappears)

Call to Worship Praise the Lord.Praise God in his sanctuary;

praise him in his mighty heavens.Praise him for his acts of power;

praise him for his surpassing greatness.Praise him with the sounding of the trumpet,

praise him with the harp and lyre,praise him with timbrel and dancing, praise him with the strings and pipe,praise him with the clash of cymbals, praise him with resounding cymbals.

Let everything that has breath praise the Lord.

Praise the Lord.

Page 8: Psalms overview

PSALM OF PRAISE

God’s on the throneAll’s right with the world

PSALM OF SUPPLICATION

God’s power and goodnesscalled into question

Page 9: Psalms overview

2. PSALM OF SUPPLICATION

Elements like these will be presentin various combinations and orders

• Cry for Help

• Complaint

• Statement of Trust

• Petition

• Vow of Praise

The first 10-15 psalms “all start looking the same”because most of them are psalms of supplication.

Page 10: Psalms overview

Psalm 54 as an example ofa Psalm of Supplication

Cry for Help Save me, O God, by your name; vindicate me by your might.

Hear my prayer, O God; listen to the words of my

mouth.

Complaint Arrogant foes are attacking me; ruthless people are trying to

kill me— people without regard for God.

Statement Surely God is my help; of Trust the Lord is the one who sustains me.

Petition Let evil recoil on those who slander me; in your faithfulness destroy

them.

Vow of Praise I will sacrifice a freewill offering to you; I will praise your name, LORD,

for it is good.

You have delivered me from all my troubles,

and my eyes have looked in triumph on my foes.

Page 11: Psalms overview

Psalm 131 as an example of a Psalm of Supplication(one element expands and displaces the others)

Statement My heart is not proud, Lord,of trust my eyes are not haughty;I do not concern myself with great matters

or things too wonderful for me.But I have calmed and quieted myself,

I am like a weaned child with its mother; like a weaned child I am content.

Israel, put your hope in the Lord both now and forevermore.

In other cases another element, such as the complaint, may expand and displace all the others, as in Psalm 88.

Page 12: Psalms overview

PSALM OF PRAISE

God’s on the throneAll’s right with the world

PSALM OF SUPPLICATION

God’s power and goodnesscalled into question

PSALM OF THANKSGIVING

God’s power and goodnessvindicated

Page 13: Psalms overview

3. PSALM OF THANKSGIVING

Elements like these will be presentin various combinations and orders

• Opening Summary

• Call to Worship

• Description of Troubles(recollection of cry for help)

• Song of Victory

• Praise and Thanks

Page 14: Psalms overview

Psalm 30 as an example ofa Psalm of Thanksgiving

Summary I will exalt you, LORD,Statement for you lifted me out of the depths

and did not let my enemies gloat over me.

LORD my God, I called to you for help,and you healed me.You, LORD, brought me up from the

realm of the dead;you spared me from going down to the

pit.

Call to Sing the praises of the LORD, Worship you his faithful people;

praise his holy name.

For his anger lasts only a moment,but his favor lasts a lifetime;weeping may stay for the night,but rejoicing comes in the morning.

Page 15: Psalms overview

Psalm 30 as an example ofa Psalm of Thanksgiving (continued)

Description When I felt secure, I said,of Troubles “I will never be shaken.”

LORD, when you favored me,you made my royal

mountain stand firm;but when you hid your face,I was dismayed.

(recollection of To you, LORD, I called;cry for help) to the Lord I cried for mercy:

“What is gained if I am silenced,

if I go down to the pit?Will the dust praise you?Will it proclaim your

faithfulness?Hear, LORD, and be merciful

to me;LORD, be my help.”

Page 16: Psalms overview

Psalm 30 as an example ofa Psalm of Thanksgiving (continued)

Song of Victory You turned my wailing into dancing;you removed my sackcloth and

clothed me with joy,that my heart may sing your

praises and not be silent.

Praise and Thanks LORD my God, I will praise you forever.

Page 17: Psalms overview

A more elaborate statement of praise & thanksfrom near the end of Psalm 66

Praise and Thanks I will come to your temple with burnt offeringsand fulfill my vows to you—vows my lips promised and my

mouth spokewhen I was in trouble.

I will sacrifice fat animals to you

and an offering of rams;I will offer bulls and goats.

Come and hear, all you who fear God;

let me tell you what he has done for me . . .

Believers today have the same opportunityto vindicate God’s power and goodness

by sharing publicly what God has done for them in answer to their cries for help.

Page 18: Psalms overview

PSALM OF PRAISE

Orientation

PSALM OF SUPPLICATION

Disorientation

PSALM OF THANKSGIVING

Reorientation

While the biblical psalms also include some specialized types, in general we will meet the psalmist at some point within this movement.