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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 36

    23/04/2026 | 2 min
    Psalm 36: The Fountain of Life
    The psalm begins in a place we might not expect — inside the mind of the wicked. "The transgression of the wicked saith within my heart, that there is no fear of God before his eyes." David has, for a moment, listened to wickedness as though it were a voice, and heard its essential message: there is nothing above me to answer to. It flatters itself. It has ceased even to abhor evil. And then, without transition or apology, the psalm lifts its eyes from this cramped interior and opens onto the vastest landscape in the Psalter: mercy reaching to the heavens, faithfulness to the clouds, righteousness like great mountains, judgments like the ocean deep. The contrast is breathtaking — as though David stepped out of a windowless room into the whole sky. And at the center of that sky, a single image that has haunted the saints ever since: "With thee is the fountain of life: in thy light shall we see light." Not merely that God gives light, but that only in His light do we see anything at all. We do not bring our own candle to examine God; we see by the light He already is.
    00:00 The Voice of Transgression
    01:00 Mercy in the Heavens, the Fountain of Life
  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 35

    22/04/2026 | 4 min
    Psalm 35: The Wound of Betrayal
    There is a particular anguish that belongs to the one who loved first and was repaid with cruelty. David does not merely report that his enemies attacked him; he tells us what he did when they were suffering. "When they were sick, my clothing was sackcloth: I humbled my soul with fasting." He mourned for them as a man mourns for his own brother, bowed down as one grieving his mother. And these same people — the ones he had wept for, prayed for, fasted for — gathered against him in his hour of weakness and tore at him with the glee of hypocrites at a feast. It is this betrayal, not the violence, that gives the psalm its searing heat. David does not pretend to stoic calm. He asks God to fight, to take up shield and buckler, to say to his soul, "I am thy salvation." The psalm ends not in vengeance but in a longing for vindication — that those who favour his righteous cause might yet say, "Let the Lord be magnified." Even wounded, he wants God glorified more than enemies punished.
    00:00 Plead My Cause, O Lord
    01:00 The Net They Set for Themselves
    02:00 Mourning for Those Who Betrayed
    03:00 Lord, How Long?
    04:00 Let the Lord Be Magnified
  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 34

    21/04/2026 | 2 min
    Psalm 34: Taste and See
    The heading of this psalm tells us something easily missed: David wrote it after pretending to be mad before a foreign king in order to save his own life. He drooled on his beard. He scratched at the gate like an animal. It was, by any account, a humiliation. And yet out of that indignity came one of the most luminous invitations in all of Scripture: "O taste and see that the Lord is good." Not "think and conclude." Not "study and agree." Taste. The appeal is to something deeper than the intellect — to that part of us that knows goodness the way the tongue knows sweetness, immediately and without argument. David had tasted the bitterness of fear and the sourness of desperation, and he found that even there the Lord was near — nigh unto them that are of a broken heart. The psalm does not pretend that the righteous are spared affliction. "Many are the afflictions of the righteous." But it makes a staggering promise: the Lord delivers out of them all.
    00:00 I Will Bless the Lord at All Times
    01:00 Taste and See His Goodness
    02:00 Near to the Brokenhearted
  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 33

    20/04/2026 | 2 min
    Psalm 33: The Word That Made the World
    Here is a psalm that asks us to do something very difficult: to hold together, in a single thought, the God who made the stars by speaking and the God who watches over the hungry. "He spake, and it was done; he commanded, and it stood fast." There is a terrifying simplicity in that — the entire cosmos summoned into existence by a sentence. And yet this same God, whose counsel stands forever and whose thoughts outlast all generations, is not a distant engineer admiring his machinery from afar. He looks. He beholds. He fashions every heart and considers every work. The psalm insists that no king is saved by the size of his army and no warrior by the strength of his arm — which must have sounded as absurd in the ancient world as it sounds in ours. But the psalmist is not naive; he is seeing clearly. The eye of the Lord is on those who fear him, and that single gaze is worth more than every horse and chariot ever mustered.
    00:00 Rejoice, Ye Righteous
    01:00 He Spake and It Was Done
    02:00 The Eye of the Lord
  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 32

    19/04/2026 | 2 min
    Psalm 32: The Weight That Lifted
    There is a particular misery that belongs only to the person who knows he is guilty and will not say so. David describes it in terms so physical they are almost medical: bones waxing old, moisture turned to the drought of summer, a roaring that went on all day long. The body, it seems, keeps the score that the lips refuse to speak. And then — confession. "I acknowledged my sin unto thee, and mine iniquity have I not hid." The sentence is almost anticlimactic in its simplicity, but what follows is not: "And thou forgavest the iniquity of my sin." Just like that. No elaborate penance, no probationary period, no fine print. The God who had been experienced as a heavy hand in the silence became, in the speaking, a hiding place. It is one of the great ironies of the spiritual life that the thing we most dread doing — telling the truth about ourselves — is the very door through which relief comes rushing in.
    00:00 The Blessedness of Forgiveness
    01:00 Silence Broken, Guilt Released
    01:40 Songs of Deliverance

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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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