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Saturday Psalm Series

For the entire history of the church until, quite recently, the Psalter was the songbook of the Christian church. It was something shared across denominational boundaries. The Apostolic church sang the psalms and the post-apostolic church continued, in different ways, in the following centuries. Sometimes it was monastic choirs singing the Psalms but they were sung in worship. In the Reformation, the Reformed churches in particular were known for their Psalm singing. When the French authorities went looking for Reformed folk to arrest and kill, they could find them by listening for the sound of Psalm singing. The Huguenot martyrs obliged by singing the Psalms on the way to their deaths, until the authorities cut out their tongues to stop them. The Reformed translated the Psalms into the language of the people, set them to meter, and made songbooks out of them for use in public worship by the church. Where the medieval church saw monks chanting the Psalms, the Reformation saw whole congregations singing the Psalms. In the Modern period, through the 18th and 19th centuries the place of the Psalms in worship was gradually lost to non-canonical hymns so that, in our day, there are not a few younger Christians who have never once sung a Psalm in public worship, not even Psalm 23 or Psalm 100. We live now in the most psalm-less age in the history of the Christian church. Now we do not even have monastic choirs to chant the Psalms for us but instead we praise bands and worship leaders (the new monastic choirs) to sing non-canonical songs in place of the people.

The goal of this series is to help re-acquaint the late-modern church with the only song book inspired by the Holy Spirit in the hope that God might use it to help restore his Word to the place it once had in public worship in the Presbyterian and Reformed world and beyond.

Psalm 42: Desiring God (Part 2)

by
  • Sean Morris
on October 19, 2024

Last time, in part 1 of our study on Psalm 42, we began to consider how love for God’s house is the essence of true piety. Continue reading →

Categorized Biblical Exposition, Biblical theology, Psalms, Saturday Psalm Series | Tagged Psalm 42

Psalm 42: Desiring God (Part 1)

by
  • Sean Morris
on October 12, 2024

One reason to love the Psalms is that they serve as a fierce rejoinder to the trendy spirituality of our age. If we are honest, sometimes (whether through the influence of our wider culture or through the influence of other Christians), we . . . Continue reading →

Categorized Biblical Exposition, Biblical theology, Psalms, Saturday Psalm Series | Tagged Psalm 42

Christ’s Cursing Song—Abortion And Rebirth In Psalm 58 (Part 2)

by
  • Aaron De Boer
on October 5, 2024

During the height of Nazi ascendency in early twentieth-century Germany, when the Confessing Lutheran Church was becoming more and more oppressed by the regime, a young preacher gave a sermon on the 58th Psalm. Continue reading →

Categorized Psalms, Saturday Psalm Series | Tagged Psalm 58

Christ’s Cursing Song—Abortion And Rebirth In Psalm 58 (Part 1)

by
  • Aaron De Boer
on September 28, 2024

It is the practice of the congregation that I serve to gather together on Wednesday evenings for a fellowship meal, and what we do after supper truly thrills my soul. We sing consecutively through the Psalter—every word, every verse—and I have the . . . Continue reading →

Categorized Psalms, Saturday Psalm Series | Tagged Psalm 58

Psalm 10—Where Is The Lord? (Part 3): Looking For Christ

by
  • Harrison Perkins
on September 21, 2024

This series has looked at Psalm 10 to draw out its teaching that God is near to his people even when we do not feel like he is. That point comes out through David’s twofold prayer. He first laments how the wicked . . . Continue reading →

Categorized Psalms, Saturday Psalm Series | Tagged Harrison Perkins, Psalm 10

Psalm 10—Where Is The Lord? (Part 2): Lessons For Prayer

by
  • Harrison Perkins
on September 14, 2024

As we saw in part one of this series, Psalm 10 is a lament about how God seems to be standing far off from his people even as the wicked succeed in their evil. While the psalm recounts how the wicked conduct . . . Continue reading →

Categorized Psalms, Saturday Psalm Series | Tagged Harrison Perkins, Psalm 10

Psalm 10—Where Is The Lord? (Part 1): A Lament Over Evil

by
  • Harrison Perkins
on September 7, 2024 | 1 Comment

When I was young and I asked to do something I really wanted to do, my dad had a line that drove me up the wall: “We’ll see.” It seemed like a “no,” but without outright saying it. It felt like the . . . Continue reading →

Categorized Psalms, Saturday Psalm Series | Tagged Harrison Perkins, Psalm 10 | 1 Comment

Psalms 14 And 53: When In Rome (Part 2)

by
  • Charles Vaughn
on August 31, 2024

Last time in Psalms 14 and 53, we looked at the psalmist David in his struggle with the workers of evil and with corrupt and perverse people everywhere in his midst. The Lord of great fortune was with him and with the . . . Continue reading →

Categorized Psalms, Saturday Psalm Series | Tagged Series on Psalms 14 and 53

Psalms 14 And 53: No, It’s Not All Good (Part 1)

by
  • Charles Vaughn
on August 17, 2024

“I’m good enough, I’m smart enough, and doggone it, people like me.”1 Does this sound familiar? Perhaps you have found yourself guilty of saying something like this. This was the programmatic catchphrase of Stuart Smalley, a fictional character played by Al Franken on . . . Continue reading →

Categorized Psalms, Saturday Psalm Series | Tagged Series on Psalms 14 and 53

Psalm 9: The Past For The Sake Of The Present (Part 3)—Applications

by
  • Harrison Perkins
on August 10, 2024

Psalm 9 is a lesson about why history matters. We can easily question why we need to learn our history. At least, the modern assumption is that only the present matters. Psalm 9 reorients God’s people to the importance the past has . . . Continue reading →

Categorized Psalms, Saturday Psalm Series | Tagged Harrison Perkins, Psalm 9

Psalm 9: The Past For The Sake Of The Present (Part 2)—Exegetical Considerations

by
  • Harrison Perkins
on August 3, 2024

Looking to the past ought to have an encouraging place in the Christian life, especially if we apply that practice to how we pray. Psalm 9 models how we can find great hope for the present by recalling what God has previously . . . Continue reading →

Categorized Psalms, Saturday Psalm Series | Tagged Harrison Perkins, Psalm 9

Psalm 9: The Past For The Sake Of The Present (Part 1)—Context

by
  • Harrison Perkins
on July 27, 2024

Most history teachers at some point in their tenure face that deflating student question: Why does this matter? In other words, what use is it to study the past? Is it not the present that is the most important thing? Why should . . . Continue reading →

Categorized Psalms, Saturday Psalm Series | Tagged Harrison Perkins, Psalm 9

Troubled Bones And The God Who Turns: Psalm 6 (Part 3)

by
  • Sean Morris
on July 20, 2024

Having given this wonderful text of Psalm 6 an expositional and pastoral survey in our previous two articles, we return one last time for a third installment wherein we consider further implications and applications from this marvelous psalm. Inspired by the example . . . Continue reading →

Categorized Biblical Exposition, Biblical theology, Psalms, Saturday Psalm Series | Tagged Psalm 6

Troubled Bones And The God Who Turns: Psalm 6 (Part 2)

by
  • Sean Morris
on July 13, 2024

Last time in part one of our Psalm 6 devotional, we asked whether or not the reality of sin really troubles us—not necessarily the sin we see in society, but sin in and of itself: the interruption, perversion, and warping of the . . . Continue reading →

Categorized Biblical Exposition, Biblical theology, Psalms, Saturday Psalm Series | Tagged Psalm 6

Troubled Bones And The God Who Turns: Psalm 6 (Part 1)

by
  • Sean Morris
on July 6, 2024 | 2 Comments

How much does sin trouble us? I do not mean necessarily the sin we see in society. We are not thinking here specifically about the sexual revolution or the moral decay of our nation, though these are devastating. But rather, consider sin . . . Continue reading →

Categorized Biblical Exposition, Biblical theology, Psalms, Saturday Psalm Series | Tagged Psalm 6 | 2 Comments

Psalm 7: The Best Line of Defense

by
  • Harrison Perkins
on June 29, 2024 | 1 Comment

“Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me.” It is one of those lines we tell our children to help them deal with aspects of life that can hit hard. It is also one of those lies . . . Continue reading →

Categorized Psalms, Saturday Psalm Series | Tagged Harrison Perkins, Psalm 7 | 1 Comment

Psalm 146: He Who Keeps Faith Forever

by
  • Antonio Coppola
on June 15, 2024

During the course of this year, some 64 countries across the world will be going to the polls to elect new governments. In South Africa, where I live, we have just had a momentous election wherein the African National Congress (ANC) lost . . . Continue reading →

Categorized Biblical Exposition, Biblical theology, Psalms, Saturday Psalm Series | Tagged Psalm 146

Singing The Eightieth, Pleading For Reform

by
  • Aaron De Boer
on June 8, 2024 | 1 Comment

For more than a decade I have owned a blueberry field and nursery as the tentmaking part of bi-vocational ministry. Beginning with tender youngstock, meticulously kept and established, the planting has spread into a thriving fruit forest. The plants started with a . . . Continue reading →

Categorized Biblical Exposition, Biblical theology, Psalms, Saturday Psalm Series | Tagged Psalm 80 | 1 Comment

Psalm 115: The Cure For Idolatry In The Postmodern World (Part 3)

by
  • Luke Gossett
on June 1, 2024

My wife and I have moved quite a lot in our adult lives. We have done local and cross-country moves. We have met a lot of wonderful people along the way. Continue reading →

Categorized Biblical Exposition, Biblical theology, Psalms, Saturday Psalm Series | Tagged Psalm 115

Psalm 115: The Cure For Idolatry In The Postmodern World (Part 2)

by
  • Luke Gossett
on May 25, 2024

The gravers of images, all of them are desolate Their delights never profit. Their witnesses do not see They do not know so that they are shamed. . . . He grazes on ash, a heart is deceived, it leads him away. He cannot . . . Continue reading →

Categorized Biblical Exposition, Biblical theology, Psalms, Saturday Psalm Series | Tagged Psalm 115

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