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Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

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Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day
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871 episodios

  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 78

    04/06/2026 | 8 min
    Psalm 78: The Long Memory of Grace
    Psalm 78 is the longest classroom in the Psalter — a vast, sprawling history lesson that Asaph opens with a curious word: "I will open my mouth in a parable." But this is no fable. It is the true story of a people who were given everything and forgot everything, and of a God who, against all reasonable expectation, kept giving. The fathers saw the sea split and the rock pour water and the sky rain bread, and they responded by asking, with breathtaking insolence, "Can God furnish a table in the wilderness?" They had just eaten at that table. The pattern repeats with the relentless rhythm of waves against a cliff: God delivers, the people forget, God judges, the people repent, God relents. And yet the psalm does not end in judgment but in a sheepfold, where a young shepherd named David is plucked from following the ewes to feed an entire nation. The God of this psalm is not the God of tidy lessons but of stubborn, inexplicable, almost reckless mercy — the kind that remembers we are but flesh, a wind that passes away and does not return.
    00:00 A Parable of Old
    01:00 The Testimony Passed Down
    02:00 Wonders in Egypt
    03:00 Manna and Rebellion
    04:00 Compassion Despite Faithlessness
    05:00 The Plagues Remembered
    06:00 Led Like a Flock
    07:00 The Tabernacle Forsaken
    08:00 David Chosen from the Sheepfolds
  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 77

    03/06/2026 | 2 min
    Psalm 77: The Night That Remembered
    This is the psalm for the sleepless, for those who have lain awake with a grief too large for words. Asaph tells us plainly: "I am so troubled that I cannot speak." His soul refused comfort — note that, refused it, as if comfort were a visitor turned away at the door. And then come the questions, five of them in rapid succession, each one more devastating than the last: Will the Lord cast off forever? Is his mercy clean gone? Hath God forgotten to be gracious? They are not the questions of an atheist but of a lover who fears he has been abandoned. And yet — and this is the turn on which everything hinges — Asaph does not wait for answers. Instead, he remembers. "I will remember the works of the Lord: surely I will remember thy wonders of old." The waters saw God and were afraid; the depths trembled; the thunder rolled and the earth shook; and his footsteps were not known. That final phrase is perhaps the most honest thing ever written about the life of faith. God led his people through the sea, but his footprints vanished in the waves. We are asked to follow a God whose path we cannot trace.
    00:00 The Cry in the Night
    01:00 The Desperate Questions
    02:00 Remembering the Wonders
  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 76

    02/06/2026 | 1 min
    Psalm 76: The Stillness After Battle
    There is a kind of silence that follows victory — not the hush of exhaustion, but the quiet of something settled beyond all dispute. Asaph gives us that silence here. God is known in Judah, he tells us, and what does that knowing look like? Broken arrows, shattered shields, stouthearted warriors who have "slept their sleep" and cannot find their hands. The image is almost eerie: mighty men reaching for weapons that are no longer there, undone not by a greater army but by a single rebuke. And then the line that turns the whole psalm into something far stranger than a war song: "Surely the wrath of man shall praise thee." Even human fury, that most chaotic and self-important of forces, is gathered up into the purposes of God like a river diverted to turn a mill. The earth feared, and was still. One suspects that stillness is not dread but recognition — the moment when all things, willing or not, fall quiet before the only power that was never in question.
    00:00 God Known in Judah
    01:00 Judgment from Heaven
  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 75

    01/06/2026 | 1 min
    Psalm 75: The Cup in His Hand
    There is a moment in this psalm that ought to make every reader sit up straight. "For in the hand of the Lord there is a cup, and the wine is red; it is full of mixture; and he poureth out of the same." The image is not decorative. It is the cup of judgment — mixed, potent, inevitable — and the wicked will drink it to the dregs. What makes the psalm remarkable, though, is not the warning but the calm. Asaph is not panicking about the state of the world; he is resting in the architecture of it. "Promotion cometh neither from the east, nor from the west, nor from the south. But God is the judge: he putteth down one, and setteth up another." The compass has been surveyed in three directions, and the fourth — the direction of God — is the only one that matters. When the earth dissolves and its inhabitants tremble, it is God who bears up the pillars. The fools who lift their horns in arrogance are performing for an audience that is not impressed. The righteous need only wait, and sing.
    00:00 Unto Thee Do We Give Thanks
    01:00 The Cup of the Lord
  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 74

    31/05/2026 | 3 min
    Psalm 74: The Silence Where the Prophets Were
    There are psalms of praise and psalms of trust and psalms of quiet confidence, and then there is Psalm 74, which smells of smoke. The sanctuary has been violated — axes and hammers have done their work on the carved wood, fire has gutted the holy place, and the ensigns of the enemy stand where the signs of God once were. But the most devastating line is not about the destruction itself. It is this: "We see not our signs: there is no more any prophet: neither is there among us any that knoweth how long." To lose the temple is terrible; to lose the voice of God in the midst of losing the temple is something worse. Yet Asaph does an extraordinary thing with his silence. He fills it with memory. "Thou didst divide the sea. Thou brakest the heads of leviathan. The day is thine, the night also is thine." He cannot hear God speaking in the present, so he rehearses what God has said in the past — and discovers that the past is not past at all. It is the very ground he is standing on, even in the ruins.
    00:00 Why Hast Thou Cast Us Off
    01:00 Axes in the Sanctuary
    02:00 Thou Didst Divide the Sea
    03:00 Arise, O God, Plead Thine Own Cause
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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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