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Readings

April 2021

* Holy Day with different Psalms readings
** Movable Holy Day on which Psalms reading are replaced

APRMORNINGEVENING
** Maundy Thursday 1Psalm 41Psalm 142, 143
** Good Friday 2Psalm 40Psalm 102
** Holy Saturday 3Psalm 88Psalm 91
** Easter Sunday 4Psalm 118Psalm 111, 113, 114
5Psalm 84Psalm 85
6Psalm 86, 87Psalm 88
7Psalm 89:1-18Psalm 89:19-51
8Psalm 90Psalm 91
9Psalm 92, 93Psalm 94
10Psalm 95, 96Psalm 97, 98
11Psalm 99, 100, 101Psalm 102
12Psalm 103Psalm 104
13Psalm 105:1-22Psalm 105:23-44
14Psalm 106:1-18Psalm 106:19-46
15Psalm 107:1-22Psalm 107:23-43
16Psalm 108, 110Psalm 109
17Psalm 111, 112Psalm 113, 114
18Psalm 115Psalm 116, 117
19Psalm 119:1-24Psalm 119:25-48
20Psalm 119:49-72Psalm 119:73-88
21Psalm 119:89-104Psalm 119:105-128
22Psalm 119:129-152Psalm 119:153-176
23Psalm 118Psalm 120, 121
24Psalm 122, 123Psalm 124, 125, 126
Mark 25Psalm 127, 128Psalm 129, 130, 131
26Psalm 132, 133Psalm 134, 135
27Psalm 136Psalm 137, 138
28Psalm 139Psalm 141, 142
29Psalm 140Psalm 143
30Psalm 144Psalm 145
Categories
Psalms Group

Psalm 38: The Misery of Sin and the Pull of God

Prepared for Psalms Group, March 21, 2021

Psalm 38 is an individual lament included as one of the 7 penitential psalms (6, 32, 51,102, 130 and 143). Its superscription states in Hebrew:  “A David of psalm, to bring to mind.” This Hebrew infinitive lehazkir , “to bring to mind,” also appears in the superscription to Psalm 70, a psalm that is replicated in Psalm 40:14-18. (Alter, Psalms, 134) 

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Psalms Group

Psalm 25: The ABC’s of Facing My Brokenness

Prepared for Psalms Group for Sunday, March 14, 2021 

Psalm 25 is an alphabetic acrostic psalm that is notable for its brokenness.  It is missing one Hebrew letter, repeats another Hebrew letter twice, and includes a final verse that doesn’t fit the acrostic pattern at all. “This brokenness reflects the way troubles break the pattern of life itself,” one commentator observes about Psalm 25.  (Motyer, New Bible Commentary, 501) 

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Psalms Group

Preview: Psalm 25 – Facing Brokenness in Candor and Hope

Email to Psalms Group preparing for Sunday, 3/14/21

Though not one of the traditional penitential psalms, Psalm 25 shares in their candor about sin and suffering and their gratitude for forgiveness and hope. 

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Psalms Group

Penitential Psalms 143 and 6: Cries for Justice and Mercy

Prepared for Psalms Group, March 7, 2021

One benefit of praying the psalms is how they keep reminding us of our own and every other person’s limited humanity.  Seeing and/or experiencing human limitation can open our hearts to God’s ways of living:  

He has told you, O man, what is good; and what does the LORD require of you but to do justice, and to love mercy (hesed), and to walk humbly with your God.

Micah 6:8
Categories
Psalms Group

Preview: God’s justice and mercy in Psalms 143 & 6

Preview email to Psalms Group for 3/7/21

Dear Psalms friends,

Doug and I ate dinner with my daughter Anne on the patio of Whiskey Cake last night, our first meal in a restaurant since last May, just before the Covid surge.  It was a huge blessing in many ways,  but especially having Anne all to ourselves with the rest of her family  either skiing or “beaching.”  It reminded me of the mystery of the Divine capacity of God to love each of us as if there were only one of us.  May God continue to grace each of us with “glory sightings” (a la James Vaughan) as we continue our Lenten journey.

Sunday will be the third Sunday of Lent.  Here’s our petition from the Collect for the third Sunday in Lent (BCP, 606):  “Look with compassion upon the heartfelt desires of your servants, and purify our disordered affections that we may behold your eternal glory in the face of Christ Jesus.” Yes, we ask God to clear out all He finds undesirable in our “disordered affections.” We surrender ourselves again in ongoing repentance, abandoning our cherished dreams and resentments to God’s assessment.

Along with this Collect, we’ll include part of The Great Litany (BCP, 91) and and all of the Kyrie Pantokrator: A Song of Penitence (BCP, 81-82) in our opening liturgy.  The Kyrie Pantokrator is a classic of penitential devotion. It is a prayer of repentance taken from The Prayer of Manasseh, found in The Apocrypha which we Anglicans read “for example of life and instruction of manners; but yet doth it not apply them to establish any doctrine…” (BCP, 774) 

King Mannasseh is presented in 2 Kings 21:1-18 as the worst possible sinner and the basic cause of the downfall of Judah.  In 2 Chronicles 33:10-17, while his wicked deeds are not in any way denied, Manasseh is pictured as praying earnestly and humbly to God during his year-long (?) imprisonment.  Can someone as despicable as Manasseh (who probably had Isaiah sawed in half) be redeemed?  “If he was irredeemable there might be doubt about who could repent and be heard, in other words, doubt about God’s measure of mercy being as great as God’s measure of justice. God is not only Creator and Sustainer, but also Redeemer—compassionate, long suffering and very merciful (v.7).  God, therefore, appointed repentance not for the righteous, but ordained it for sinners, even for Manasseh (v.8).”  (The New Oxford Annotated Bible, AP, 281)

Following our lectionary readings and our Lenten theme, our focus psalms this week will be two more of the penitential psalms, Psalm 143 and Psalm 6, both Davidic psalms.See pages 8 and 354 in The Songs of Jesus. Like last week’s Psalm 130, Psalm 6 is a cry of a person who knows that their own sin is the root of their problems; whereas Psalm 143 is a complaint of someone who clearly understands that he struggles with sin also, but who is currently being pursued and crushed by a strong and evil enemy.  He is trusting God for urgent rescue, thirsty for God, depending on God to come through for him and lead and guide him.  He wants God to teach him to do God’s will, and he wants God to silence and destroy his enemies.  These psalms teach us how to ask God for mercy and for justice, for ourselves and for others.

Look for a lesson on Psalm 143 and Psalm 6 tomorrow, and may God continue to give each of us a strong sense of His presence as we journey with him to Easter.  

In the grace and love of Christ,

Toni

Categories
Readings

March 2021

* Indicates a Holy Day with different Psalms readings

MARMORNINGEVENING
1Psalm 146Psalm 147
2Psalm 148Psalm 149, 150
3Psalm 1, 2Psalm 3, 4
4Psalm 5, 6Psalm 7
5Psalm 9Psalm 10
6Psalm 8, 11Psalm 15, 16
7Psalm 12, 13, 14Psalm 17
8Psalm 18:1-20Psalm 18:21-52
9Psalm 19Psalm 20, 21
10Psalm 22Psalm 23, 24
11Psalm 25Psalm 27
12Psalm 26, 28Psalm 31
13Psalm 29, 30Psalm 33
14Psalm 34Psalm 35
15Psalm 32, 36Psalm 38
16Psalm 37:1-17Psalm 37:18-41
17Psalm 40Psalm 39, 41
18Psalm 42, 43Psalm 44
Joseph 19Psalm 45Psalm 46
20Psalm 47, 48Psalm 49
21Psalm 50Psalm 51
22Psalm 52, 53, 54Psalm 55
23Psalm 56, 57Psalm 58, 60
24Psalm 59Psalm 63, 64
* Annunciation 25Psalm 113, 138Psalm 131, 132
26Psalm 61, 62Psalm 65, 67
27Psalm 68:1-18Psalm 68:19-36
28Psalm 69:1-18Psalm 69:19-37
29Psalm 66Psalm 70, 72
30Psalm 71Psalm 73
31Psalm 74Psalm 77
Categories
Psalms Group

Psalm 130: Out of the Depths of Self-Inflicted Chaos

Prepared for Psalms Group, February 28, 2021

Psalm 130 focuses specifically on the chaos churned up in our lives by our own sins.  The 7 penitential Psalms (6, 32, 38, 51,102,130, 143) offer an honest portrayal of the damage done to humans by their own sins and by the sins of others. These psalms combine that truth about sinful human people and systems with the amazing truth of YHWH’s character. I sometimes think of YHWH as the “ideal parent” we humans long for:  all-powerful yet unfailingly loving and merciful, all-knowing and wise yet overflowing with grace and forgiveness, consistently just and fair in discipline, and 100% committed to what is best for each one of us.     

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Psalms Group

Our Lenten Psalms Journey: Next Stop Psalm 130

Email preparing for Psalms Group on February 28, 2021

As several of of us are still dealing with the aftermath of last week’s winter storm, others of us are receiving our second vaccinations.  Life in this strange chronos time continues, but, thankfully, so does liturgical time— kairos time, with each of our lives “hidden in Christ with God.” (Col. 3:3)  Last week many of us chose an 8 line stanza from Psalm 119 for daily reflection during Lent.  How has your stanza impacted your life in Christ this week? Reflect and pray about what God might want you to share about that with the rest of us.

Continuing in Book 5, the last book of Psalms, we prayed through the Songs of Ascent this week, Psalms 120-134, those  triads of psalms showing people in trouble (120, 123, 126, 129), turning to YHWH in faith/trust/dependence (121,124, 127, 130) and experiencing security in their covenant God (122, 125, 128 131). The last 3 Songs of  Ascent are psalms of arrival, celebrating the Davidic Covenant and Zion/Jerusalem (132), rejoicing in the unity and community of YHWH’s covenant people (133), and beginning or ending their worship together in the “house of the LORD” (134).  Which of these Songs of Ascent especially awakened your mind and heart as you read, meditated, and prayed them in the first full week of Lent 2021? Also, ask God to show you what He wants you to share with the rest of us about what He showed you.  

Our focus psalm this Sunday will be Psalm 130, an individual lament that is one of the seven penitential psalms, as well as one of the Songs of Ascent.  Psalm 130 confronts directly the depths of chaos our own sins create in our lives; also Psalm 130 displays the mercy and unfailing love of YHWH who forgives our confessed iniquities.

Following the lectionary, you will also read Psalm 143 on Saturday night, another penitential psalm showing our dependence on God’s merciful and loving character to face our own sin.  But in addition, Psalm 143 shows how other people’s sins against us (think abuse, injustice) also create chaos in our lives. In Lent, we ask God to show us all of the brokenness, the sins and the wounds.

In his book The Great Lent, Alexander Schmemann describes Lent as “a school of repentance” to which we go to deepen our faith, re-evaluate, and change our lives.  Lenten practices are effective when they lead us to increased awareness of “God with us” and increased trust in God’s power and love.  They are effective when they help us recover the vision and the taste of new life in Christ, and when they show us how the old life challenges the new life and makes it seem impossible.

I look forward to being with each of you and sharing our Lenten Psalms journey!

In Christ,

Toni  

Categories
Psalms Group

A Lenten Look at the “Great Psalm,” Psalm 119

Prepared for Psalms Group, February 21, 2021

Psalm 119 is called the “Great Psalm” because of its length; it takes up a big part of Book V of the Psalms. Some scholars think it is was an original conclusion of an earlier anthology, finishing off the theme started in Psalm 1, another wisdom/Torah psalm, as is Psalm 19:7-11.