David’s storm hymn summons heaven and earth to ascribe glory as the Lord’s voice thunders and the temple cries “Glory.” The same King who sits over the flood gives his people strength and blesses them with peace.
Bible Themes and Doctrines
David’s storm hymn summons heaven and earth to ascribe glory as the Lord’s voice thunders and the temple cries “Glory.” The same King who sits over the flood gives his people strength and blesses them with peace.
Psalm 28 moves from silence and danger to strength and song, teaching us to cry for mercy, trust the Rock, and praise before outcomes are visible. It ends with a corporate plea for God to save, bless, shepherd, and carry his people forever.
Psalm 27 opens with fearless trust and moves to a single request to dwell near God, sing, and walk straight paths. Learn how desire for God, honest lament, and patient waiting form courage for daily life.
Psalm 26 models an examined life that welcomes God’s testing, loves his dwelling place, and refuses corrupt company. See how integrity, mercy, and public praise belong together under the Lord’s steadfast love.
Psalm 25 is a school of hope where trust, guidance, confession, and integrity shape a humble walk with God. Learn how David’s prayer ties personal rescue to God’s covenant mercy and the wider good of his people.
Psalm 24 moves from God’s ownership of the world to the holy hill, where clean hands and pure hearts welcome the King of glory. The procession becomes a pattern for worship that seeks God’s face now and longs for His public reign.
Psalm 23 teaches trust in the Shepherd-King who guides, protects, and honors His people. From green pastures to dark valleys, He is near now and will bring us home.
Psalm 22 gives words for seasons of silence and scorn, then turns to vows of praise and a horizon of global worship. In Jesus the righteous sufferer is vindicated, and the church joins His song to the ends of the earth.
Psalm 21 is a royal thanksgiving that teaches the church to celebrate deliverance without pride. It anchors joy in God’s presence, trusts unfailing love, and pledges fresh praise to the King who saves.
Psalm 20 trains the church to pray before the unknown: help from Zion, desires shaped by God, and trust in His name rather than in chariots. It points to the Anointed King whose victory and intercession steady His people.
The heavens preach God’s glory, the Scriptures give clear light, and the soul learns to pray for cleansing and pleasing words. Psalm 19 unites world, word, and worshiper in one song.
Psalm 18 turns a lifetime of danger and rescue into worship, tracing God’s thunderous descent to save and His unfailing love to David’s line. The result is strength for today and a vow to praise the Lord among the nations.
Psalm 17 moves from courtroom appeal to sanctuary refuge and ends in the promise of seeing God’s face. It trains integrity, reshapes desire, and steadies hope under pressure.
Psalm 16 teaches exclusive trust, contentment in the Lord as portion, and a hope stronger than death. It traces counsel by night to joy at God’s right hand.
Psalm 15 answers who may dwell with God by painting a life of truthful speech, faithful promises, and just care for the weak. In Christ, access is opened and integrity is formed by the Spirit.