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Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

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Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day
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  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 96

    22/06/2026 | 1 min
    Psalm 96: The New Song All Creation Learns
    "O sing unto the Lord a new song" — but why new? The old songs were magnificent. The Psalter is already full of them. What could possibly require a fresh composition? The answer, it seems, is that God's glory is too large for the existing repertoire. "Declare his glory among the heathen, his wonders among all people." This is not a private hymn for the initiated; it is a song meant for export, for the nations, for every kindred of every people. And then the psalm does something extraordinary: it conscripts the whole of creation into the choir. The heavens rejoice, the earth is glad, the sea roars, the field is joyful, and the trees of the wood — the trees! — rejoice before the Lord. One imagines Lewis smiling at this, for he knew that the medieval picture of a singing cosmos was not mere poetry but the truest description of how things actually are. And what is the occasion for all this cosmic jubilation? "For he cometh to judge the earth." We hear "judgment" and flinch. The trees hear it and clap their hands. Perhaps they know something we have forgotten — that the coming of a righteous Judge is not a threat but the best news creation has ever received.
    00:00 Sing unto the Lord a New Song
    01:00 The Trees of the Wood Rejoice
  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 95

    21/06/2026 | 1 min
    Psalm 95: The Invitation That Becomes a Warning
    It begins as pure invitation — and what an invitation. "O come, let us sing unto the Lord: let us make a joyful noise to the rock of our salvation." The God being praised is not small: in His hand are the deep places of the earth, the strength of the hills, the sea He made and the dry land His hands formed. We are summoned to worship, to bow down, to kneel. And then, without warning, the temperature drops. God Himself begins to speak, and what He says is not comfort but caution: "Harden not your heart, as in the provocation." He is remembering the wilderness — forty years of a people who saw His works and still did not know His ways. The shift is jarring, and it is meant to be. For the psalm is making a point that the comfortable worshipper would rather not hear: that it is possible to sing the right songs and still have a hard heart. Possible to stand in the presence of the God who holds the mountains in His hand and remain, inwardly, unmoved. "To day if ye will hear his voice" — the emphasis falls on today, on the urgency of this particular moment. The door of worship stands open. But doors, the psalmist knows, can close.
    00:00 Come, Let Us Sing unto the Lord
    01:00 Today, If Ye Will Hear His Voice
  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 94

    20/06/2026 | 2 min
    Psalm 94: The God Who Planted the Ear
    There is a moment in this psalm that stops you cold — one of those arguments so simple and so devastating that you wonder why you never thought of it yourself. The wicked are oppressing the widow, murdering the fatherless, and reassuring themselves that God does not see. And the psalmist turns on them with a question that has the force of a thunderclap: "He that planted the ear, shall he not hear? he that formed the eye, shall he not see?" It is not a theological abstraction. It is common sense raised to the level of revelation. The Maker of the instrument is not deaf to its music. But the psalm does not stop at divine surveillance — it moves to something far more intimate. "In the multitude of my thoughts within me thy comforts delight my soul." Here is a man who knows the anxious churning of a mind at three in the morning, and who has discovered that even there, in the inner chaos of worry and doubt, God's comfort arrives — not as an idea but as a delight. The psalm begins with a cry for vengeance and ends with a rock of refuge. The distance between the two is the journey of every honest prayer.
    00:00 O Lord, to Whom Vengeance Belongs
    01:00 He That Planted the Ear
    02:00 Thy Comforts Delight My Soul
  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 93

    19/06/2026 | 0 min
    Psalm 93: The Throne Above the Waves
    Five verses. That is all. And yet in those five verses the psalmist manages to say something so immense that entire libraries of theology have not exhausted it. "The Lord reigneth, he is clothed with majesty." Not merely that God exists, or that God is powerful, but that God reigns — actively, presently, clothed in strength as a king is clothed in robes. And against this sovereignty the psalmist sets the most terrifying image the ancient world knew: the floods. The waters lift up their voice, the waves crash and roar, chaos threatens to swallow the ordered world whole. But here is the pivot, delivered with the calm of absolute certainty: "The Lord on high is mightier than the noise of many waters, yea, than the mighty waves of the sea." Mightier not by a slim margin but by a difference so vast that the comparison is almost absurd — like comparing a candle flame to the sun. And the psalm ends not with power but with beauty: "Holiness becometh thine house, O Lord, for ever." The throne room of the Almighty is not merely strong. It is fitting, right, lovely. The One who stills the chaos is also the One who makes all things appropriate at last.
    00:00 The Lord Reigneth in Majesty
  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 92 - A Psalm or Song for the sabbath day

    18/06/2026 | 2 min
    Psalm 92: The Song the Sabbath Sings
    Of all the psalms, this is the only one assigned to a specific day — the Sabbath — and it reads like a man who has finally stopped long enough to see clearly. "It is a good thing to give thanks unto the Lord." Not a difficult thing, not a duty, but a good thing — as natural and fitting as morning light or evening rest. The psalmist plays his ten-stringed instrument and finds himself overwhelmed not by God's simplicity but by His depth: "O Lord, how great are thy works! and thy thoughts are very deep." There is a kind of person, he notes, who cannot perceive this — the brutish, the fool — not because the evidence is hidden but because they have never been still enough to notice. And then comes the image that has comforted every aging saint who feared their usefulness was spent: "They shall still bring forth fruit in old age; they shall be fat and flourishing." The righteous are not like grass, which springs up overnight and is gone by Tuesday. They are like the palm tree, like the cedar in Lebanon — slow-growing, deep-rooted, patient. The Sabbath psalm is not about resting from work. It is about finally seeing what all the work was for.
    00:00 A Good Thing to Give Thanks
    01:00 The Lord Most High Forever
    02:00 Flourishing Like the Palm Tree
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An audio Psalm a day set to classical music. Begin or end each day meditating on the word of God and the timeless poetry of the Psalms. Each episode is set to beautiful classical and orchestral music that will help you ground your soul in the Bible. For more great podcasts or to hear different Bible translations, visit https://lumivoz.com
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