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.
Bible Themes and Doctrines
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 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.
This study follows Psalm 14’s arc from heart-level folly to hope rooted in God’s presence and Zion’s salvation. It applies the psalm’s realism and promise to church and world today.
Psalm 9 remembers specific deliverance and confesses God’s permanent reign. It pairs throne and stronghold—public justice and personal refuge—and sends worshipers to proclaim his deeds among the nations.
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.
With the ark set in David’s tent, offerings rise, a psalm is appointed, and bread and sweets are placed in every hand. Chronicles shows how law and song, mission and creation’s praise, and public worship and home blessing belong together under the God whose love endures forever.
At Hebron the elders covenant with David, and at Zion the fortress falls. 1 Chronicles 11 ties promise to place and courage to worship, showing how God’s presence made David grow strong and how a roster of brave men turned fields and walls into a foretaste of peace.