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Psalms Group

Jesus and the Psalms

Prepared for Monday Psalms, August 30, 2021

Video for Session 8 of Truthful Speech for Common Prayer: Jesus and the Psalms.

Our Savior the Lord Jesus Christ was the perfect worshiper of God and lover of people, the most authentic and genuine human who has ever lived. He knew and prayed the Psalms, even with his dying breath. He models the Psalms’ transformative power and use in an open, submitted human heart. He died for our sins and our wounds so that his heart and all of our hearts, his brothers and sisters (That’s us!), can be one in him. 

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Psalms Group

Praising God for the Sake of Others

Prepared for Psalms Group meeting on Monday, 8/16/21

Session 7: Public and Evangelistic Praise

Video for Session 7: Public and Evangelistic Praise

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Psalms Group

Session 6: The Most Natural Thing in the World

Prepared for Psalms Group, August 8, 2021

Based on Session 6 of the Truthful Speech as Common Prayer series.

Lesson summary

“The world rings with praise,” C.S. Lewis once wrote, and it’s true.  Praise isn’t just a religious phenomenon; it’s a regular and common feature of our lives.  Whenever we encounter beauty or goodness or blessing in our lives, our natural and fitting response is to celebrate it and sing its praise to others.  For that reason, it comes as no surprise that the activity of praise is so central in the psalms.  The God we encounter in the Psalms, and all of Scripture, is an unending source of beauty and goodness and grace.  The question is:  what does genuine, authentic praise look like?  And how can we continue to praise amidst the sorrows and disappointments of life?  Father Jonathan explored praise by focusing on what the psalms teach us about both the context of praise and the content of praise.

1.  Review Psalms 146-150, focusing especially on 146 and 150. How would you compare the attitude expressed in these psalms to your attitude in your life with God? 

Why do you think the book of Psalms as a whole concludes with these 5 psalms of praise?  

What was one point from this week’s video teaching that stood out to you?

2.  Describe one particularly memorable experience of praise from your own life.  What stands out to you about this experience of praise?  How would you relate it to the description of praise that we find in the psalms?

3.  In Romans 1:21, Paul describes sin in human history by saying that “although humans knew God, they did not honor him as God or give thanks to him, but they became futile in their thinking and their foolish hearts were darkened.”  

Why would Paul connect sin with the failure to praise?  How might a lack of praise lead to futile and foolish thinking?  Why do you think praise and thanksgiving to God don’t come more naturally to us in August 2021?

4.  Why do you think the writers of the Psalms found themselves drawn to praise even during times of great distress and sorrow?  How can we continue to praise when life goes badly?  What has helped you do that?

5.  What do you think is the greatest challenge for you in applying the lessons of praise and thanksgiving to God found in the Psalter’s concluding psalms of praise?  What is one practical step you can take in the coming week to overcome this challenge? 

(Read Psalms 95, 96, 97, 98, 99 and 100 in preparation for the next lesson.)

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Readings

August 2021

* Holy Day with different Psalms readings

AUGMORNINGEVENING
1Psalm 78:41-73Psalm 80
2Psalm 81Psalm 83
3Psalm 84Psalm 85
4Psalm 86, 87Psalm 88
5Psalm 89:1-18Psalm 89:19-51
* Transfiguration 6Psalm 27Psalm 80
7Psalm 90Psalm 91
8Psalm 92, 93Psalm 94
9Psalm 95, 96Psalm 97, 98
10Psalm 99, 100, 101Psalm 102
11Psalm 103Psalm 104
12Psalm 105:1-22Psalm 105:23-44
13Psalm 106:1-18Psalm 106:19-46
14Psalm 107:1-22Psalm 107:23-43
Virgin Mary 15Psalm 108, 110Psalm 109
16Psalm 111, 112Psalm 113, 114
17Psalm 115Psalm 116, 117
18Psalm 119:1-24Psalm 119:25-48
19Psalm 119:49-72Psalm 119:73-88
20Psalm 119:89-104Psalm 119:105-128
21Psalm 119:129-152Psalm 119:153-176
22Psalm 118Psalm 120, 121
23Psalm 122, 123Psalm 124, 125, 126
Bartholomew 24Psalm 127, 128Psalm 129, 130, 131
25Psalm 132, 133Psalm 134, 135
26Psalm 136Psalm 137, 138
27Psalm 139Psalm 141, 142
28Psalm 140Psalm 143
29Psalm 144Psalm 145
30Psalm 146Psalm 147
31Psalm 148Psalm 149, 150
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Psalms Group

Shedding Christian Tears

Session 4 of Truthful Speech as Common Prayer: A Study of the Psalms

Prepared for Psalms Group meeting on 7/25/21

Lesson Summary:  “While pain is something none of us would invite into our lives, it’s not something we can avoid either, living in a broken world as we do.  Betrayal, loss, and injustice—to name a few—enter our lives as unexpected and unwelcome guests, just as they did for King David and the other psalmists.  Learning to pray the psalms of lament can teach us, however, to offer these negative experiences to God in faith, just as we do our praise, and remind us that healing for our grief and sorrow always happens in God’s presence.” (Fr. Michael Funderburk)

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Psalms Group

Psalm 37–A Second Look at This Song of Wisdom and Trust

Prepared for Psalms Group held on 7/18/21

The Psalms teach us about honest dialogue between us and our Creator.  Honest dialogue means we express and explore our trust and our doubt; “I believe; help my unbelief.”  

Psalm 37 is a collection of sayings that might easily be found in the book of Proverbs.  Appearing random at first glance, these sayings are a carefully constructed alphabetic acrostic Hebrew poem, crafted with creativity and artistry. It teaches how to live well, how to live the “good life” of flourishing and blessedness in the reality of the inequities of life.

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Psalms Group

Truthful Speech as Common Prayer, Session 3

Prepared for Psalms Group meeting on 7/18/21

Psalm 37: Wisdom for Grown Ups

This is the summary of Fr. Michael’s video teaching plus some questions for our Psalms Group.

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Psalms Group

Truthful Speech as Common Prayer, Sessions 1 and 2

Prepared for Psalms Group, 7/11/21

This lesson is based on the first two sessions of the current Psalms study at Christ Church Plano, Truthful Speech as Common Prayer.

Session One: Getting a Handle on the Psalms

As Anglicans, the Psalms are at the core of our common prayer life, but it can be difficult to enter them fully as prayer when the world they emerged from is so different from our own. In order to bridge this gap, we often select psalms that are more immediately accessible and pleasant (e.g. Psalm 23) but avoid those that present difficulties to our modern sensibilities. For example, the more shocking psalms (e.g. Psalms 88 and 137) confound us with their raw emotion and curses wished upon enemies. But it is by learning to engage the entire Psalter as prayer that we will grow not only in our prayer lives but also as “fully alive” human beings, formed more and more into Christ’s likeness. 

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Readings

July 2021

* Holy Day with different Psalms readings

JULMORNINGEVENING
1Psalm 148Psalm 149, 150
2Psalm 1, 2Psalm 3, 4
3Psalm 5, 6Psalm 7
4Psalm 9Psalm 10
5Psalm 8, 11Psalm 15, 16
6Psalm 12, 13, 14Psalm 17
7Psalm 18:1-20Psalm 18:21-52
8Psalm 19Psalm 20, 21
9Psalm 22Psalm 23, 24
10Psalm 25Psalm 27
11Psalm 26, 28Psalm 31
12Psalm 29, 30Psalm 33
13Psalm 34Psalm 35
14Psalm 32, 36Psalm 38
15Psalm 37:1-17Psalm 37:18-41
16Psalm 40Psalm 39, 41
17Psalm 42, 43Psalm 44
18Psalm 45Psalm 46
19Psalm 47, 48Psalm 49
20Psalm 50Psalm 51
21Psalm 52, 53, 54Psalm 55
Mary of Magdala 22Psalm 56, 57Psalm 58, 60
23Psalm 59Psalm 63, 64
24Psalm 61, 62Psalm 65, 67
James the Great 25Psalm 68:1-18Psalm 68:19-36
26Psalm 69:1-18Psalm 69:19-37
27Psalm 66Psalm 70, 72
28Psalm 71Psalm 73
29Psalm 74Psalm 77
30Psalm 75, 76Psalm 79, 82
31Psalm 78:1-18Psalm 78:19-40
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Psalms Group

Psalm 106: The Ugly Twin

Prepared for Psalms Group, 6/20/2021