In the first book of Psalms ( Pss 1–41 ), have you ever noticed the change in tone within the laments and songs of confidence, between the two halves of the book? In this article, I’d like to propose ...
We don't know what the psalms sounded like when King David played them on his lyre. But what if he had tried setting a psalm to Bluegrass? Adam Wright, musician and worship leader at Cahaba Park ...
In the center of the room, under glass, a Hebrew Bible lies open to the Book of Psalms. Gold leaf glimmers on the borders; red dragons grasp a blue shield while green and blue birds perch on curling ...
It is fascinating to consider that King David was raised as a shepherd, was the great-grandson of Ruth, and became the greatest king of the Old Testament and an ancestor to the greatest king of the ...
Renaissance and Reformation / Renaissance et Réforme, New Series / Nouvelle Série, Vol. 20, No. 3 (SUMMER / ÉTÉ 1996), pp. 23-40 (18 pages) John Donne as preacher invokes the "Protestant paradigm of ...
We should read it not as an assortment of poems and songs but as a single rhapsody on God’s covenant promises. Late in the fourth century, a man named Palladius of Galatia left his home (somewhere in ...
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