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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 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
  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 73

    30/05/2026 | 3 min
    Psalm 73: The Turning in the Sanctuary
    Asaph nearly lost his footing, and he tells us so with disarming honesty. "My feet were almost gone; my steps had well nigh slipped." The cause was not tragedy but something more insidious: he looked at the wicked and saw that they were doing splendidly. No pain in their death, no trouble like other men, riches increasing while his own hands, washed in innocence, seemed to earn nothing but plague. It is the oldest and most corrosive temptation — the suspicion that goodness does not pay. And Asaph could find no answer to it until, he says, "I went into the sanctuary of God; then understood I their end." He does not tell us what happened there. No argument is reported, no theorem proved. He simply entered the presence and saw things differently, as a man who steps outside a house sees the landscape he could not see from within. And from that vantage point comes one of the most beautiful confessions in all Scripture: "Whom have I in heaven but thee? and there is none upon earth that I desire beside thee." The envious heart has become, in a single turn, the satisfied one.
    00:00 My Feet Were Almost Gone
    01:00 The Prosperity of the Wicked
    02:00 Then Understood I Their End
    03:00 Whom Have I but Thee
  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 72

    29/05/2026 | 2 min
    Psalm 72: Rain Upon the Mown Grass
    Of all the images Scripture gives us of the good king, this one is perhaps the most startling: "He shall come down like rain upon the mown grass." Not rain upon a garden in its glory, but upon grass that has been cut — shorn, diminished, lying flat and spent. This is where the true king arrives: not at the feast but at the aftermath. The psalm builds an empire of justice outward from this single tenderness — sea to sea, river to the ends of the earth — but it never loses its center. The king who rules all nations is the same king who delivers the needy when he cries and spares the poor who has no helper. "Precious shall their blood be in his sight." One suspects the psalmist could see, even if only in outline, that the throne of heaven would one day look less like a palace and more like a cross. The final line — "the prayers of David the son of Jesse are ended" — closes like a great door. But the kingdom it described has no such ending.
    00:00 Give the King Thy Judgments
    01:00 Dominion from Sea to Sea
    02:00 His Name Shall Endure Forever
  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 71

    28/05/2026 | 3 min
    Psalm 71: The Lifelong Refuge
    Here is a prayer written, as it were, in the handwriting of an old man — and what a thing it is to watch. The psalmist has known God since the womb, has been held up by Him from birth, and now, with grey hairs and failing strength, makes one request above all others: do not cast me off in old age. It is not the plea of a man who has forgotten God but of one who has known Him so long that the thought of being without Him is simply unbearable. His enemies whisper that God has abandoned him, and the cruelty of the accusation is that it strikes at the one thing he cannot prove to them — that God is still there. But notice what he does with his fear. He does not collapse into it; he turns it into a vocation. "Until I have shewed thy strength unto this generation, and thy power to every one that is to come." The old man wants more time not for comfort but for testimony. He has, it seems, one more song to sing — and he intends to sing it on the psaltery, the harp, and with whatever breath he has left.
    00:00 In Thee Do I Put My Trust
    01:00 Cast Me Not Off in Old Age
    02:00 Declaring His Wondrous Works
    03:00 A Song That Will Not Stop
  • Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day

    Psalm Chapter 70

    27/05/2026 | 1 min
    Psalm 70: Make Haste
    This psalm is barely five verses long, and every one of them is running. "Make haste, O God, to deliver me; make haste to help me, O Lord." There is no preamble, no scene-setting, no theological reflection before the cry. David does not explain his situation or build a case. He simply needs God, and he needs Him now. The repetition — "make haste," "make haste," "make no tarrying" — is not literary flourish; it is the language of genuine emergency, the way one calls for help when the building is on fire. And yet, pressed between the cries for deliverance, there is a single, luminous line: "Let all those that seek thee rejoice and be glad in thee: and let such as love thy salvation say continually, Let God be magnified." Even in his desperation, David can see past himself to the community of seekers, the larger company of those who love what God does. It is a remarkable act of spiritual peripheral vision. He ends where he began — poor, needy, urgent — but now with this confession on his lips: "Thou art my help and my deliverer." The one who makes haste to ask has already found what he is looking for.
    00:00 Haste, O God, to Deliver Me
    01:00 Thou Art My Help and My Deliverer
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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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