Psalms - how it finally makes sense to me
Up until now, the book of Psalms was always the hardest one for me to read, because I found it difficult to see how each sentence made sense.
Co-incidentally, I happened to be participating in an Advent Bible study at the same time as I was reading Psalms in my daily readings.
In the Advent study, there was a lot of focus on waiting (for the Messiah, in previous times; for His return, in current times). This shed a lot of light onto Psalms. Once I started reading Psalms in a future-tense way instead of a current-tense way, it made a lot more sense.
The writers of Psalms were expressing their thankfulness for past promises and also for their trust in the Lord for the future. They were not (quite as much as I thought) expressing their immediate, present-day situation.
Psalms suddenly became a lot more readable and made a lot more sense once I realized that these writings were about yearnings and not about current states.
If you found this post interesting, you may also like these related posts on this blog:
Co-incidentally, I happened to be participating in an Advent Bible study at the same time as I was reading Psalms in my daily readings.
In the Advent study, there was a lot of focus on waiting (for the Messiah, in previous times; for His return, in current times). This shed a lot of light onto Psalms. Once I started reading Psalms in a future-tense way instead of a current-tense way, it made a lot more sense.
The writers of Psalms were expressing their thankfulness for past promises and also for their trust in the Lord for the future. They were not (quite as much as I thought) expressing their immediate, present-day situation.
Psalms suddenly became a lot more readable and made a lot more sense once I realized that these writings were about yearnings and not about current states.
If you found this post interesting, you may also like these related posts on this blog:
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