Ecclesiastes 3 names life’s seasons and anchors them in God’s enduring work. It calls us to receive daily joys as gifts, pursue justice with hope, and live wisely within time.
Bible Themes and Doctrines
Ecclesiastes 3 names life’s seasons and anchors them in God’s enduring work. It calls us to receive daily joys as gifts, pursue justice with hope, and live wisely within time.
Ecclesiastes 1 names the ache of life “under the sun” and exposes the limits of gain, wisdom, and novelty. It then points us beyond the cycle to the God who brings true newness in Christ.
Psalm 121 lifts our eyes past the mountains to the Lord, the Maker who keeps our steps. This chapter study traces creation, care, and forever hope in the Keeper of Israel.
Psalm 67 asks for God’s shining face “so that” His ways and salvation are known among nations. Joy in His fair rule and generous provision becomes a public witness until all peoples praise Him.
Psalm 64 maps how malice works and how God answers it. The Lord turns tongues against the plotters, teaches the city to fear, and gives the upright a safe refuge.
Psalm 63 teaches worship in a desert: desire God first, remember the sanctuary, sing under His wings, and rejoice as the King is upheld. Thirst becomes endurance, and night turns to praise.
Psalm 62 moves from confession to creed: rest in God alone, pour out your heart, and resist the false refuge of status and wealth. God’s power and love hold you fast and His just reward steadies obedience.
Psalm 61 moves from a faraway cry to a settled vow. The prayer asks for the higher rock, the sheltering wings, and a king guarded by God’s love and faithfulness.
In Psalm 60, David names national fractures and asks for restoration, then hears God’s claim over Israel’s land and enemies. The psalm ends in a settled confession that with God victory comes, even when the ground has seemed to move.
Psalm 59 moves from a watched doorway to morning worship, teaching trust in God as fortress and righteous judge. Learn the context, structure, and hope that steadies faith in the night.
Psalm 38 gives voice to conviction, confession, and hope as David pleads for mercy under God’s fatherly hand. This study traces that path from guilt to grace with frequent Scripture ties and a pastoral tone.
David flees Absalom and prays Psalm 3, moving from alarm to confidence in God’s shielding care. The psalm teaches believers to rest, speak truth, and seek deliverance that belongs to the Lord.
Psalm 2 sets human revolt against God’s unshakable decree and reveals the Son’s universal rule. It ends with a gracious invitation: serve with reverent joy and take refuge in him.
Psalm 1 contrasts the rooted life with the weightless life and shows how delighting in God’s word yields fruit in season. This chapter study traces its links to Joshua 1, Jeremiah 17, and Jesus’ call to hear and do, with clear steps for a Scripture-soaked life.
Job 25 magnifies God’s holiness and human frailty while exposing the limits of a reductionist counsel. The chapter’s hard question—how can a mortal be righteous?—finds its hope in God’s gracious provision across Scripture.