Psalm 70 teaches urgent prayer and steady praise: “Hasten to help” meets “The Lord is great.” The short song trains hearts to trust God’s timing and cling to his name.
Bible Themes and Doctrines
Psalm 70 teaches urgent prayer and steady praise: “Hasten to help” meets “The Lord is great.” The short song trains hearts to trust God’s timing and cling to his name.
Psalm 44 pairs remembered victories with present humiliation and a protest of innocence, then anchors its bold plea in the Lord’s unfailing love. It trains the church to lament loyally and to hope until praise returns.
Psalm 43 moves from “Vindicate me” to “I will yet praise him,” asking for God’s light and faithful care to lead back to the holy mountain. It keeps worship as the goal of guidance and the proof of hope.
Psalm 37 quiets envy and anger with a wiser path: trust and do good, commit your way to the Lord, and wait for him. The meek will inherit the land, and salvation comes from the Lord who upholds and delivers.
Psalm 31 weaves refuge, lament, and praise around the confession that our times are in God’s hands. Learn how entrustment, honest prayer, and corporate courage shape a steady life.
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 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 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.
Psalm 13 moves from raw lament to steady trust in six verses. This study follows that curve—honesty, petition, and praise—and shows how to pray it today.
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.
Job 40 confronts the instinct to justify self by accusing God. The Lord exposes the futility of self-salvation and points to Behemoth as a living argument for humble trust in his righteous rule.
Job 39 turns from stars to living scenes—mountains, deserts, birds, and horses—to show a world God governs without human control. The portraits humble pride and steady trust by displaying daily mercies that continue even in the storm.
When the Lord speaks from the storm, he reframes Job’s suffering by unveiling his wise rule over sea, sky, and creatures. The questions restore humility, kindle worship, and call sufferers to trust the Maker who waters deserts and feeds ravens.
At the city gate Absalom manufactures legitimacy; in the night David entrusts the throne to God and walks out of Jerusalem. Second Samuel 15 pairs prayer and prudence as the Lord preserves His promise through the storm.