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179 results found for "psalm 51"
- Psalm 51 - Ingrained Sin
God's re-creating power sets you free from bone crushing sin. bibleversestogo.com Psalm 51 For the director Summary Commentator Mark Futato writes , Psalm 51 grips our hearts as it exposes our need that results Our need is twofold: We need reconciliation (51:1–9), and we need transformation (51:10–19). 51. His prayer of confession here in Psalm 51 serves as one of the foundational supporting texts for this
- Psalm 51 - The Invitation Still Stands
Bible of what it means to confess and repent from sin as David, inspired by the Holy Spirit, wrote the 51st Psalm. This psalm is a model of the attitude that you must have as you prepare for participation in the Lord's So make David's prayer of repentance in Psalm 51 your own and accept His gracious invitation to remember
- Psalm 51:10-12 - Demolition & Construction
Earlier in Psalm 51, David asks for his sins to be washed away (v3), and his iniquity to be blotted out David wrote Psalm 51 roughly 1,000 years before Jesus lived, so David had no way of understanding the
- Psalm 51:3-6 - Guilty As Charged
But David here in Psalm 51 reminds you once again that guilt, as painful as it can be, is actually a
- Psalm 51:7-9 - Cathartic Confession
But then we behold the overwhelming beauty of his confession here in Psalm 51, and our perception of
- Psalm 51:13-19 - The Force of Forgiveness
The force of forgiveness is designed to break and reform you. Read / Listen Listen to passage & devotional: Heidelberg Catechism Q&A 126 Q. What does the fifth request mean? A. “Forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors” means, Because of Christ’s blood, do not hold against us, poor sinners that we are, any of the sins we do or the evil that constantly clings to us. Forgive us just as we are fully determined, as evidence of your grace in us, to forgive our neighbors Summary Newton's third law of motion states that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. A ball that's dropped to the floor will likely bounce right back into your hand. David shows us here in this final passage of his confession of sin that this law of physics applies to theology as well. The force of God's forgiveness rebounds in David's life as he "opens his mouth to declare God's praise" so that "his tongue will sing of God's righteousness." As is often the case when heavy physical force is applied, damage occurs. This is the case spirtually as well. When a person confess his sins, and God echoes back with overwhelming grace, it results in a "broken spirit; a broken and contrite heart." But the spiritual 'damage' forgiveness results in does slightly differ from what might be expected in the physical world. A ball will continue to bounce in the same direction until it finally runs out of energy. But God wants more than just a formulaic, mechanical response to the force His forgiveness brings. David realizes this as he writes that God "does not delight in sacrifice, or I would bring it." In other words, God's not interested in a perpetual pattern of sin which leads to sacrifice/confession leading to forgiveness leading to diminishing thanksgiving which brings you right back to sin again... Instead, God wants Zion - His people/Church - to be built up and strong. So He applies the force of His forgiveness to change the direction of the lives of His people. Dig Deeper After experiencing the force of God's forgiveness in his own life, it drives David in a new direction. He writes, "Then I will teach transgessors your ways, so that sinners will turn back to you (v13)." Teaching sinners God's ways certainly includes teaching them His law so they no longer transgress it, but primarily it means helping them understand God's ways of grace and forgiveness. This can be demonstrated on a much smaller scale when you show them forgiveness for the ways they've hurt you. This is exactly why Jesus teaches you to couch your requests for forgiveness with evidence of your ability to forgive others. It's not at all that God's grace is conditioned upon your actions, rather your actions in forgiving others evidence that you're being shaped by God's forgiveness rather than just mechanically expecting it. AAA Prayer (About) ACKNOWLEDGE WHO GOD IS: "O God, you who are God my Savior; my tongue will sing of your righteousness." ALIGN YOUR LIFE WITH GOD'S WILL: Confess your sins, and pray that the force of God's resulting forgiveness will break your sinful spirit and then build you back up; ASK GOD FOR WHAT YOU NEED: Read the New Testament in a year, a chapter a day - Revelation 17
- Psalm 51:1-12 - Bone Crushing Love
Psalm 51:1–12 (NIV) 51 For the director of music. A psalm of David. But Psalm 51 shows us that God's covenant love involves both. The whole point of Psalm 51 is that although at times, due completely to our own stubbornness, God must
- Psalm 51:1-2 - Not Good Cop/Bad Cop
But a closer look at Psalm 51 and these other passages encourages us to tighten up our language.
- Psalm 5 - The Morning Psalm
HeartLight.org Psalm 5 (NIV) For the director of music. For pipes. A psalm of David. 1 Listen to my words, Lord, consider my lament. 2 Hear my cry for help, my King and Rom 10:14-17 - The Power of Preaching 1 Cor 1.23-24 - God's Foolishness Psalm 93 - Mightier Than Chaos Psalm 5 is often referred to as the Morning Psalm due to how David notes that he begins each day by laying Dig Deeper David actually stuffs two separate prayers into this short Psalm.
- Psalm 40 - Already, Not Yet
FaithLife.com Psalm 40 For the director of music. Of David. A psalm. 1 I waited patiently for the LORD; he turned to me and heard my cry. 2 He lifted me out Summary David begins today's psalm in a dark place, mired in a muddy, slimy pit. David confessed this sin, and beautifully repented of it ( Psalm 51 ). Dig Deeper Psalm 40 doesn't conform to our pattern and expectations.