911 episodios
- Psalm 119: The Long Love Letter
This is the longest chapter in the Bible — 176 verses, every one of them about the word of God — and the temptation is to find it tedious. We should resist. What looks like repetition is actually obsession, the way a lover circles back again and again to the beloved's name, finding new angles of light on the same face. "O how love I thy law! it is my meditation all the day." "Thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path." "How sweet are thy words unto my taste! yea, sweeter than honey to my mouth!" The psalmist is not compiling a theology of Scripture; he is confessing an addiction to it. And woven through the ecstasy are the darker threads — affliction, persecution, proud men who forge lies, wicked hands that lay snares. This is not ivory-tower devotion. It is the testimony of someone who found that when everything else was stripped away — reputation, safety, comfort — the word of God was the one thing that could not be taken. "I have gone astray like a lost sheep," he admits at the very end. Even after 175 verses of devotion, he knows himself. Seek thy servant, he asks. For I do not forget thy commandments.
00:00 Blessed Are the Undefiled
01:00 Thy Word Have I Hid in My Heart
02:00 My Soul Cleaveth unto the Dust
03:00 Incline My Heart
04:00 I Will Speak Before Kings
05:00 I Made Haste to Keep Thy Commandments
06:00 It Is Good That I Was Afflicted
07:00 My Soul Fainteth for Thy Salvation
08:00 Forever Settled in Heaven
09:00 Sweeter Than Honey
10:00 My Hiding Place and Shield
11:00 Give Me Understanding
12:00 Rivers of Waters Run Down Mine Eyes
13:00 I Hoped in Thy Word
14:00 Great Peace Have They Which Love Thy Law
15:00 Seek Thy Servant - Psalms 117 and 118: The Shortest Song and the Cornerstone
The Psalter hides its most audacious claim inside its shortest song. Psalm 117 — just two verses, barely a breath — calls every nation on earth to praise. Not Israel alone, but all peoples, because God's merciful kindness is great "toward us." It is an invitation so vast it ought to take volumes, and instead it takes seconds. Then Psalm 118 arrives like the morning after a long siege, all gratitude and defiance — "I shall not die, but live, and declare the works of the Lord." This is the psalm Jesus quoted on the road to the cross: the stone which the builders refused has become the head of the corner. What every architect rejected, God made foundational. And tucked between the battle cries and the building metaphors is the line we have carved into so many ordinary mornings without quite hearing it: "This is the day which the Lord hath made; we will rejoice and be glad in it." Not a special day. Not a day when everything went right. This day — whichever one you happen to be standing in.
00:00 O Praise the Lord, All Nations
00:15 His Mercy Endureth Forever
00:30 I Called Upon the Lord in Distress
01:00 Better to Trust in the Lord
01:30 I Shall Not Die, But Live
02:00 The Stone the Builders Refused
02:20 This Is the Day the Lord Hath Made
02:40 Blessed Be He That Cometh - Psalm 116: The Love That Begins with a Reason
"I love the Lord, because he hath heard my voice and my supplications." There is something almost scandalously honest about this opening — the psalmist does not love God in the abstract, as a philosophical proposition, but because God did something specific: He listened. The sorrows of death had wrapped around him, the pains of hell had taken hold, and in that drowning moment he called out, and God inclined His ear. That word — inclined — suggests God leaning in, turning His head, the way you bend toward someone who is speaking very quietly. And the response is not a theology lecture but a love song. "Return unto thy rest, O my soul; for the Lord hath dealt bountifully with thee." Then comes the line that has echoed through centuries of funerals and martyrdoms: "Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his saints." Not precious as in valuable, but precious as in costly — it matters to God, it is not cheap to Him, when one of His own passes through that door. And so the psalmist asks the only question worth asking after such a rescue: "What shall I render unto the Lord for all his benefits toward me?" The answer: take the cup of salvation and call upon His name. The response to grace is not payment but more receiving.
00:00 I Love the Lord
00:15 The Sorrows of Death
00:25 Return Unto Thy Rest
00:40 Delivered from Death and Tears
00:50 I Believed, Therefore I Spoke
01:00 What Shall I Render?
01:15 Precious Death of His Saints
01:30 The Sacrifice of Thanksgiving
01:50 In the Courts of the Lord - Psalm 115: The Gods That Cannot Breathe
The psalm begins with a prayer so startling in its selflessness that it stops you short: "Not unto us, O Lord, not unto us, but unto thy name give glory." Not our reputation, not our success — Your name. And then, as if to explain why this matters, the psalmist turns to the idols of the nations and delivers one of the most devastating critiques in all of Scripture — not through anger but through observation. They have mouths but cannot speak. Eyes but cannot see. Hands but cannot handle. "Neither speak they through their throat." That last detail is almost tender in its specificity, as though the psalmist has leaned close to one of these silver gods and listened for breath and found nothing. And here is the terrible punchline: "They that make them are like unto them." You become what you worship. Bow to something that cannot see, and your own vision narrows. Serve something that cannot speak, and you will find you have less and less to say. But the living God — our God — is in the heavens, and He has done whatsoever He pleased. The dead praise not the Lord. But we will. From this time forth and forevermore.
00:00 Not Unto Us, O Lord
00:15 Our God Is in the Heavens
00:25 Idols of Silver and Gold
00:40 They That Make Them Are Like Them
00:50 Trust in the Lord
01:00 He Will Bless Us
01:15 The Earth Given to Men
01:25 We Will Bless the Lord - Psalm 114: The Day the Mountains Danced
This may be the most purely delightful psalm in the entire Psalter — eight verses of sheer, grinning wonder at what happened when God showed up. The sea saw Him and fled. The Jordan reversed course. The mountains — the mountains! — skipped like rams, and the little hills like lambs. And then comes the question, asked with what can only be described as holy mischief: "What ailed thee, O thou sea, that thou fleddest?" As if the psalmist is interviewing creation itself, teasing it for its panic. But beneath the playfulness is something enormous: the God of Jacob is so overwhelmingly present that the furniture of the earth cannot hold still. Rock becomes water. The unchangeable changes. It is the Exodus retold not as history but as comedy — the best kind, in which the punchline is that the Creator of the universe walked into the room and everything that thought it was solid discovered it was not. Tremble, thou earth, at the presence of the Lord. Even the ground beneath your feet knows when He is near.
00:00 Israel Goes Out of Egypt
00:10 The Sea Fled, Jordan Turned Back
00:20 Mountains Skipping Like Rams
00:30 What Ailed Thee, O Sea?
00:40 Tremble at His Presence
00:48 Rock Turned to Water
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Acerca de Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day
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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Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day
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