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Sacred songs and poems of worship, prayer, and lament — the hymnbook of ancient Israel
8 mentions across 2 books
The 150 psalms cover the full range of human emotion before God — joy, grief, anger, gratitude, doubt, and praise. Written by David, Asaph, the Sons of Korah, and others, they were sung in Temple worship and remain the most-read prayers in history.
The book of Psalms is invoked as the frame of reference for the closing verse's weight — situating Psalm 115's final declaration among the most powerful endings in all 150 songs of this collection.
The Art of Chilling OutThe psalms are referenced here as the broader collection surrounding Psalm 131, highlighting how this quiet, three-verse piece stands out among longer and more dramatic entries.
The Final WordPsalms 150:6The book of Psalms is referenced here at its closing verse, as the author traces the full narrative arc from Psalm 1's wisdom instruction to Psalm 150's unbounded doxology — showing the collection's intentional design.
I'm Struggling — Please Look at MePsalms 25:16-21The book of Psalms is referenced here as the broader collection in which this kind of unfiltered emotional honesty before God is modeled — Psalm 25 is highlighted as one of its most raw moments.
The Closing BenedictionPsalms 41:13The book of Psalms is organized into five books; this verse serves as the closing doxology of Book One (Psalms 1–41), marking a deliberate literary and liturgical boundary.
Clout Is Lighter Than AirPsalms 62:9-10The book of Psalms is referenced here as the broader collection in which David's teaching in verses 9–10 stands out as some of the sharpest practical theology in the entire anthology.