Showing posts with label psalter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label psalter. Show all posts

Monday, October 28, 2013

Vos on the Psalter



"The Psalter is of all books of the Bible that book which gives expression to the experimental side of religion. In the law and the prophetic writings, it is God who speaks to his people; in the Psalter, we listen to the saints speaking to God. Hence the Psalter has been at all times that part of Scripture to which believers have most readily turned and upon which they have chiefly depended for the nourishment of the inner religious life of the heart. I say that part of Scripture and not merely that part of the Old Testament, for even taking the Old and the New Testament together the common experience of the people of God will bear us out in affirming that there is nothing in Holy Writ which in our most spiritual moments–when we feel ourselves nearest to God–so faithfully and naturally expresses what we think and feel in our hearts as these songs of the pious Israelites. Our Lord himself, who had a perfect religious experience and lived and walked with God in absolute adjustment of his thoughts and desires to the Father's mind and will; our Lord himself found his inner life portrayed in the Psalter and in some of the highest moments of his ministry borrowed from it the language in which his soul spoke to God, thus recognizing that a more perfect language for communion with God cannot be framed."

(Geerhardus Vos, Songs from the Soul, Grace and Glory)


Saturday, September 3, 2011

The Book of Psalms, the Book of Christ



What could be a better way of starting a Saturday than to have the beauty of the Book of Psalms extolled through a clear, gentle, and lucid explanation of the Regulative Principle of Worship (except a Saturday when Turretin's Institutes arrives and someone tells you that he's gonna give you Bavinck's 4-vol Reformed Dogmatics for free!)?

Watch and listen to Ptr. Jeff Stivason of Grace Reformed Presbyterian Church talk about the beauty of worshiping God in the manner that truly pleases him.








Monday, June 27, 2011

The Psalter in Calvin's Piety



"Calvin views the Psalms as the canonical manual of piety. In the preface to his five-volume commentary on the Psalms—his largest exposition of any Bible book—Calvin writes: 'There is no other book in which we are more perfectly taught the right manner of praising God, or in which we are more powerfully stirred up to the performance of this exercise of piety.' Calvin's preoccupation with the Psalter was motivated by his belief that the Psalms teach and inspire genuine piety in the following ways:
Related Posts with Thumbnails