PodcastsCristianismoDaily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

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Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day
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883 episodios

  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 90 - A Prayer of Moses the man of God

    16/06/2026 | 2 min
    Psalm 90: The Prayer That Counts Our Days
    This is the oldest psalm in the collection — attributed to Moses himself — and it has the feel of a man who has stood at the edge of eternity and looked back at human life with clear, unblinking eyes. "A thousand years in thy sight are but as yesterday when it is past, and as a watch in the night." The metaphors come quickly: we are carried away as with a flood, we are like grass that flourishes in the morning and by evening is cut down. It would be unbearable if it were merely observation. But Moses is not lecturing; he is praying. And the prayer pivots on one of the most quietly revolutionary lines in all of Scripture: "So teach us to number our days, that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom." The numbering is the point. Not to make us gloomy but to make us serious — to give weight to each ordinary Tuesday, each unremarkable afternoon. And then, as if brevity of life has cleared the air rather than clouded it, Moses asks for something breathtaking: "Let the beauty of the Lord our God be upon us." The shortest lives, it seems, can still bear the mark of the Eternal.
    00:00 From Everlasting to Everlasting
    01:00 Our Days in His Wrath
    02:00 Teach Us to Number Our Days
  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 89 - Maschil of Ethan the Ezrahite

    15/06/2026 | 6 min
    Psalm 89: The Covenant That Seemed to Break
    Ethan the Ezrahite begins with singing and ends with weeping, and the distance between the two is the whole terrain of faith in a world that does not behave as promised. The first half of this great psalm is magnificent — a soaring rehearsal of God's covenant with David, His faithfulness set firm as the moon, His throne established forever. But then comes the turn, sudden and devastating: "But thou hast cast off and abhorred, thou hast been wroth with thine anointed." The crown is profaned. The walls are broken down. The enemies rejoice. What makes the psalm so searingly honest is that Ethan does not pretend these two realities — the promise and the ruin — can be easily reconciled. He holds them both before God and asks, in essence, "Where is Your former lovingkindness?" It is the prayer of anyone who has ever believed a promise and then watched it apparently shatter. And yet the psalm ends not with despair but with "Blessed be the Lord for evermore. Amen, and Amen." The praise is not an answer to the question. It is a decision to keep singing while the question remains unanswered.
    00:00 The Mercies of the Lord Forever
    01:00 The Covenant with David
    02:00 Faithfulness Established in Heaven
    03:00 The Turn — Cast Off and Abhorred
    04:00 How Long, O Lord
    05:00 Blessed Be the Lord Forevermore
  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 88 - A Song or Psalm for the sons of Korah

    14/06/2026 | 2 min
    Psalm 88: The Psalm That Does Not Look Up
    Every other psalm of lament, however dark it becomes, eventually turns a corner. A shaft of light breaks through, a memory of deliverance surfaces, a stubborn "yet" appears. Not this one. Psalm 88 is the one psalm that ends exactly where it begins — in the dark. Heman the Ezrahite cries out from a place so deep that even his friends have been taken from him, and the final word of the psalm is, simply, "darkness." It is tempting to rush past this, to supply the hope the psalmist does not. But the Bible will not let us. It places this psalm here, unsoftened, unresolved, as if to say: this too is prayer. To cry out to the God of your salvation even when salvation seems to have forgotten your address — this is not the failure of faith. It is faith at its most stripped and stubborn. The psalm asks God a series of questions He does not answer. And yet the asking itself is addressed to "O Lord God of my salvation." Even in the pit, Heman knows Whose name to call.
    00:00 A Cry from the Depths
    01:00 Wrath and Waves
    02:00 Darkness as a Companion
  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 87 - A Psalm or Song for the sons of Korah

    13/06/2026 | 1 min
    Psalm 87: The City Where Everyone Was Born
    Here is one of the most astonishing claims in all the Psalter, tucked inside a psalm so short it is easily overlooked. God loves the gates of Zion — that much we might expect. But then the psalm does something extraordinary: it enrolls the nations. Rahab, Babylon, Philistia, Tyre, Ethiopia — the great enemies and strangers — are each named and counted as born in Zion. It is as if the city of God has a birth register far more generous than anyone imagined, and names are being written in it that would have scandalized every gatekeeper. The psalmist sees something the prophets would later spell out: that the holy city was never meant to be a fortress against the world but a homeland for it. And the final image is pure joy — singers and musicians declaring, "All my springs are in thee." The deepest sources of life, it turns out, are not in our own soil. They are in a city we are still learning to call home.
    00:00 His Foundation in the Holy Mountains
    01:00 The Nations Enrolled in Zion
  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 86 - A Prayer of David

    12/06/2026 | 2 min
    Psalm 86: The Undivided Heart
    David asks for many things in this prayer — mercy, preservation, joy, a listening ear — but buried in the middle is the request that gives the whole psalm its center of gravity: "Unite my heart to fear thy name." It is a staggeringly honest admission. The heart, David knows, is not a single thing but a committee, a parliament of competing desires that pulls in six directions at once. We want God and we want everything else, and the wanting tears us apart. What David asks for is not more willpower but integration — that all the scattered pieces of his affection might be gathered into one. And the confidence behind the prayer is not David's own consistency but God's character: "thou, O Lord, art a God full of compassion, and gracious, long suffering, and plenteous in mercy and truth." David stacks up adjectives the way a man might pile stones to build an altar, each one a reason to keep praying. The psalm ends not with victory but with something better — a request to be shown "a token for good," some small sign that God is still at work. Sometimes faith does not need a miracle. It needs a hint.
    00:00 A Cry from the Poor and Needy
    01:00 Among the Gods None Like Thee
    02:00 Unite My Heart
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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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