is the third psalm in Book III of the Psalter. In Book III's introduction, Psalm 73, Asaph takes comfort from remembering the Lord's justice, saying he will "tell of all [God's] works" (Psalm 73:28). Psalm 75 returns to the theme of justice and judgment on the wicked, and so Psalm 75:9 echoes Psalm 73:28 when Asaph says "I will declare [the Lord's judgment] forever."Matthew W. Kingsbury has been a minister of Word and sacrament in the Orthodox Presbyterian Church since 1999. At present, he teaches 4th & 5th-grade English Language Arts at a charter school in Cincinnati, Ohio. He longs for the recovery of confessional and liturgical presbyterianism, the reunification of the Protestant Church, the restoration of the American Republic, and the salvation of the English language from the barbarian hordes.
Wednesday, May 28, 2014
Psalm 75
is the third psalm in Book III of the Psalter. In Book III's introduction, Psalm 73, Asaph takes comfort from remembering the Lord's justice, saying he will "tell of all [God's] works" (Psalm 73:28). Psalm 75 returns to the theme of justice and judgment on the wicked, and so Psalm 75:9 echoes Psalm 73:28 when Asaph says "I will declare [the Lord's judgment] forever."
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