Praise The LORD! Praise The LORD, O My Soul
Devotional
Companion to the Psalter
A Devotional Guide to the Psalms
Object:
I will praise the LORD as long as I live;
I will sing praises to my God all my life long.
Do not put your trust in ... mortals ...
Happy are those whose help is the God of Jacob,
whose hope is in the LORD their God ...
The LORD lifts up those who are bowed down ...
The LORD will reign forever.
-- Psalm 146:2-3a, 5, 8b, 10a
Theme: Praise the true helper -- the Lord
Outline
1-2 -- Pledge to praise God throughout life.
3-4 -- Warning not to trust mortals (prince today and dust tomorrow).
5-6 -- Happy are those whose help and hope in life is the Lord.
7-9 -- He is the one who saves the needy.
Notes
• Praise -- Creation/History
• One of the Hallelujah Psalms (146-150).
• This is the first of the five Hallelujah Psalms (Psalms 146-150). They begin and end with the Hebrew "Hallelujah" ("praise Yahweh"). They are also called the Laudate Psalms (from Latin).
• Liturgical -- this was used each morning in the synagogue.
• The Daily Lectionary suggests this is to be used with the Psalm of the Day each Tuesday.
For Reflection
• We can't help seeing the emphasis on the Lord's social concern. List those mentioned of society for whom God is concerned. Then read Matthew 11:2-5 for Jesus' own appraisal of his messianic credentials and his concern.
• "Prison" can stand for various kinds of suffering, for the weak, and for those who do not yet know the gospel. "Blind" can include the spiritually ignorant, the helpless, or the insensitive. "Orphans" can be the unloved of all ages, the lonely or the most vulnerable.
• Notice the wicked are brought to ruin -- another example of the character of the Lord. (What if God didn't care?)
• "We must ever keep in mind the two thoughts -- God the Creator of the universe, which came into being at His word; God the Redeemer staggering beneath a load that crushes Him as He goes from Jerusalem to Calvary; so far harder is it to redeem men from selfishness to love than to create the wheeling systems of the stars."1
Prayer
Lord God, your concern for people whom we are quick to ignore shames us. Forgive us for our small hearts, and make them into great hearts, with a larger capacity for compassion, your kind of love, that our praises might resound more faithfully with all the company of heaven, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
____________
1. William Temple, Readings In St. John's Gospel (London: MacMillan, 1950), p. 365.
I will sing praises to my God all my life long.
Do not put your trust in ... mortals ...
Happy are those whose help is the God of Jacob,
whose hope is in the LORD their God ...
The LORD lifts up those who are bowed down ...
The LORD will reign forever.
-- Psalm 146:2-3a, 5, 8b, 10a
Theme: Praise the true helper -- the Lord
Outline
1-2 -- Pledge to praise God throughout life.
3-4 -- Warning not to trust mortals (prince today and dust tomorrow).
5-6 -- Happy are those whose help and hope in life is the Lord.
7-9 -- He is the one who saves the needy.
Notes
• Praise -- Creation/History
• One of the Hallelujah Psalms (146-150).
• This is the first of the five Hallelujah Psalms (Psalms 146-150). They begin and end with the Hebrew "Hallelujah" ("praise Yahweh"). They are also called the Laudate Psalms (from Latin).
• Liturgical -- this was used each morning in the synagogue.
• The Daily Lectionary suggests this is to be used with the Psalm of the Day each Tuesday.
For Reflection
• We can't help seeing the emphasis on the Lord's social concern. List those mentioned of society for whom God is concerned. Then read Matthew 11:2-5 for Jesus' own appraisal of his messianic credentials and his concern.
• "Prison" can stand for various kinds of suffering, for the weak, and for those who do not yet know the gospel. "Blind" can include the spiritually ignorant, the helpless, or the insensitive. "Orphans" can be the unloved of all ages, the lonely or the most vulnerable.
• Notice the wicked are brought to ruin -- another example of the character of the Lord. (What if God didn't care?)
• "We must ever keep in mind the two thoughts -- God the Creator of the universe, which came into being at His word; God the Redeemer staggering beneath a load that crushes Him as He goes from Jerusalem to Calvary; so far harder is it to redeem men from selfishness to love than to create the wheeling systems of the stars."1
Prayer
Lord God, your concern for people whom we are quick to ignore shames us. Forgive us for our small hearts, and make them into great hearts, with a larger capacity for compassion, your kind of love, that our praises might resound more faithfully with all the company of heaven, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
____________
1. William Temple, Readings In St. John's Gospel (London: MacMillan, 1950), p. 365.

