The book of Psalms could rightly be called God's Songbook.
Speaker ADo you realize that God's Songbook was actually meant to be sung?
Speaker AWell, let's dive into today's episode.
Speaker AThank you for taking this time to stop and think about it.
Speaker AHello?
Speaker AHello?
Speaker AAnybody home?
Speaker AThink, McFly.
Speaker AThink.
Speaker BI'm thinking.
Speaker BI'm thinking.
Speaker AWhat were you thinking?
Speaker BI'm trying to think, but nothing happens.
Speaker ADon't say anything now.
Speaker BJust think about it.
Speaker BYou're listening to Stock and Think About It, a podcast for the Christian Thinker.
Speaker BIn a day when sound biblical preaching has been replaced by man centered entertainment and the church is becoming increasingly anti intellectual, this podcast will encourage believers to think biblically and theologically.
Speaker BSo please join me as we get ready to stop and think about it.
Speaker AGreeting friends and foes, saints and sinners.
Speaker AWe're here at the G3 conference in Atlanta, Georgia, and we're here with our good friend that we just met, Shane.
Speaker AI met him just a little while ago.
Speaker AI saw he had a unique ministry where he actually sings the psalms.
Speaker AAnd so I just wanted to ask him some questions about his love for the book of Psalms.
Speaker AWhy is he singing them?
Speaker AWhy he made an album of all 150 you made.
Speaker BWe're through 46 right now.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BAs far as what we've released, we've released the first 46 Psalms put to music in their entirety.
Speaker BSo every verse of each psalm.
Speaker AAmen.
Speaker ASo tell us your name and the name of your ministry.
Speaker BSure.
Speaker BSo I'm Shane Heilman and we are the Psalms Project.
Speaker BAnd so we're a community of musicians putting all 150 Psalms to music in their entirety.
Speaker BSo we put the Psalms to modern, fully produced music, fully produced arrangements that we hope would be really pleasant to listen to for Christians.
Speaker BBut also we sing the entire Psalm from verse one to the end of that chapter in each song.
Speaker BSo we try to use music to enhance the experience of listening to the psalms and help people understand them, internalize them, learn them, put the scripture in their heart.
Speaker BBut also, music is a great teaching tool to be able to help people comprehend the text, understand the text and what's going on emotionally, theologically in the psalm.
Speaker BSo I want to tell the entire story of the entire Psalm with music without censoring them, without editing them.
Speaker BLet's just sing the pure scripture and let it sit.
Speaker BLet people wrestle with it, let people deal with it, let it bless them.
Speaker BSo that was kind of the vision of the project, and that's what we do.
Speaker AThat's awesome.
Speaker ASo I'M a public school teacher in New York City by trade, I guess you would say.
Speaker AAnd so just going to school for my master's in education.
Speaker AWhat you're doing is right within as far as it being a teaching tool for your own soul.
Speaker ASinging leads to memorizing.
Speaker ASo if you ask somebody to memorize a verse, Colt, which I do, it's one thing.
Speaker ABut if you put it to music, if I ask you to sing a song, verse, quote a verse, many times, the song comes to mind quicker than the verse.
Speaker ABut if you marry those two things together, like you're doing, I mean, that's a beautiful husband, wife, relationship, so to speak.
Speaker ATwo sides of the same coin.
Speaker ASo that people are memorizing God's word by singing it, singing along with you.
Speaker AAnd I like.
Speaker ABecause sometimes some Christian music can be kind of hokey, and it just doesn't catch in the heart and the soul.
Speaker AAnd psalms is meant to be emotive and theological at the same time.
Speaker AYou raised that.
Speaker AWhat led you to do this?
Speaker BYeah, so what led me to do was really my experience as a worship leader.
Speaker BSo I started leading worship, gosh, like 20 years ago.
Speaker BAnd, you know, led worship in a lot of contexts.
Speaker BYou know, led worship at a Lutheran church for a while.
Speaker BLed worship actually in some Pentecostal churches back in the day.
Speaker BAnd that experience led me to long for something different than what I was singing.
Speaker BBecause, you know, in a lot of.
Speaker BOf course, we all know a lot of modern worship songs.
Speaker BNot very theologically rich.
Speaker AThat's true.
Speaker BNot.
Speaker BNot well grounded in the scriptures a lot of times.
Speaker BAnd so different in content than what you see in God's songbook.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker BSo you start thinking about, why is this.
Speaker BWhy is what we're singing in modern worship so different than what the inspired songs that we have in the Bible, like that.
Speaker BSomething about that is not right.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo I got to tell you.
Speaker ASo we used to.
Speaker AI came from Pentecostal background.
Speaker AMany of the songs we sang, we called them 711 songs.
Speaker AHave you ever heard that?
Speaker BI haven't heard that term.
Speaker BNo.
Speaker ASeven words sung 11 times.
Speaker AY.
Speaker ASo there was no.
Speaker AThere's no depth to it.
Speaker ABut you were saying.
Speaker BYeah, so at the time, I.
Speaker BI had this idea I was leading worship at a church that was very young, very passionate, you know, Pentecostal in slant, but it was a RCA church, Reformed Church of America.
Speaker BSo it's kind of a more like Reformed Church of America plant with kind of those.
Speaker BKind of a young crowd that was very passionate about the Lord, but not Very well grounded in the Scriptures.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BAnd I was a little bit older than most of the population there.
Speaker BI was in my 30s.
Speaker BMost of them were in their 20s.
Speaker BSo I kind of saw it as my role to help disciple them in the scriptures somewhat.
Speaker BSo I taught a spiritual disciplines class at the church.
Speaker BBut also when I was leading worship, I would incorporate more and more scripture into the worship service and just saw how impactful that was.
Speaker BPeople would just say to me, like, wow, I loved it when you just read from the Bible or read from the psalms.
Speaker BAnd I would recite psalms from the stage while I'm playing.
Speaker BJust recite entire psalms to people just to.
Speaker BJust to minister.
Speaker BKind of like a liturgy.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BTo minister to them, like, oh, we want more of that.
Speaker BAnd I think it led to this idea.
Speaker BI was on a mission trip and just came out of nowhere.
Speaker BLike, what if I just sang entire psalms to, like, a modern worship style somewhat?
Speaker BSo, like, still using the modern instruments, the modern arrangements, you know, these beautiful instruments and this powerful music.
Speaker BBut let's put scripture to it instead of, you know, kind of semi shallow, repetitive stuff.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker BSo let's sing the rich scripture and see what that happens.
Speaker BSo wrote the first few songs, and they came out a little weird.
Speaker BSo I'm like, maybe we wouldn't sing this in a corporate worship setting, at least these songs.
Speaker BBut I still liked the idea and the challenge of writing songs that help people comprehend the psalms and help them to internalize them, memorize them, experience them.
Speaker BAnd again, telling the entire story of the entire psalm with music.
Speaker BI just found that to be a really interesting songwriting challenge.
Speaker BLike, if I was going to sing this, what would it sound like?
Speaker BWhat would the melody be like in this section?
Speaker BWhat would the instrumentation be like in this section?
Speaker BHow can we kind of produce this in a way that helps people get it, you know, And.
Speaker BAnd of course, as you.
Speaker BThe psalms were meant to be sung.
Speaker BThat's how they're supposed to be experienced.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd so started doing it and pretty quickly just got hooked.
Speaker BLike, I just couldn't do anything else.
Speaker AHow did you figure all this stuff out?
Speaker ALike, how should it sound?
Speaker AAnd all the stuff that you just mentioned?
Speaker BYeah, my process kind of went like this.
Speaker BFirst of all, I memorized the psalm to try to get it into me.
Speaker BAnd then I would study the psalm and several commentaries so that, you know, if there's an obscure phrase, I'm making sure I'm understanding it all that.
Speaker BSo really kind of getting the lay of the land before I start writing.
Speaker BIt so like, for example, Psalm 1, you know, it's obviously, you know, a meditation on the righteous and the wicked.
Speaker BIt's kind of a didactic psalm, it's a wisdom psalm, it's a teaching psalm.
Speaker BSo, okay, it's not gonna be a rock song probably, right.
Speaker BYou know, it's probably gonna be a little more of like a meditative.
Speaker BI mean it references meditation.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BMeditate on the word day and night.
Speaker BSo it's probably gonna have a more subdued, meditative kind of arrangement, kind of a feel slower song.
Speaker BSo again, internalizing the song, myself, memorizing, studying, you kind of get a feel for, okay, what's the emotion here?
Speaker BWhat's the purpose?
Speaker BHow would this sound?
Speaker BAnd of course that can be kind of subjective, right?
Speaker BBut something like Psalm 2 just sounds a little more aggressive.
Speaker BIt's a little more in your face.
Speaker BIt's like, you know, Jesus is king.
Speaker BAll these political entities planning against him.
Speaker BHe's just going to wipe them away.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BBasically the end is like worship Jesus or else it's kind of like the, you know, the context, the message.
Speaker BA very like aggressive message in your face message.
Speaker BSo that turned into a really high tempo rock song.
Speaker BJust like nations repent, Jesus is king, he's the Lord, worship him.
Speaker BAnd it's a very exuberant worship song, you know, so.
Speaker BSo again, each psalm is so different when you read them on a surface level.
Speaker BA lot of times they can all sound the same sometimes if you don't read them deeply.
Speaker BBut when you really study them through, you see how unique the situation and the message and the, and the progression is the journey is in each psalm.
Speaker BAnd so you get a feel for, okay, how would this sound, you know, emotionally.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBecause a lot of the psalms are very emotional.
Speaker AThey are, sure.
Speaker BAnd like psalms, you, some are political.
Speaker BSo, you know, how are most, most political songs, you know, like, kind of sound a little more like, you know, punk rock, aggressive, you know, like that kind of thing.
Speaker BPsalm 2 doesn't sound punk, but you know, you know what I mean?
Speaker BSo a lot of those political protest songs tend to be rock songs.
Speaker BSo that's kind of my process for figuring out, getting a feel for, okay, how is this going to sound?
Speaker BHow's this going to come out musically in every respect?
Speaker AYeah, actually I preached on Psalm 1 and I preached on Psalm 2.
Speaker AThe whole Bible, I guess, is sort of like Psalm 1.
Speaker AIt's all about the righteous and the unrighteous, that God is calling or leaving.
Speaker AAnd then one of my incredible things that I learned studying for Psalm 2, when it says kiss the sun lest he be angry.
Speaker AMany people think about that as kissing the face, but it's actually kissing the feet.
Speaker BThat's right.
Speaker AAnd if you don't kiss the feet, because apart from Christ, there was no peace, he'll use that foot to crush you with it.
Speaker ASo either you're going to kiss the feet or those same feet will crush you.
Speaker AAnd it was like, wow.
Speaker AIt was just very intense.
Speaker ABut that's what raging nations deserve.
Speaker ABut they need to know who the real kings are, who the real king of kings is, and it's not them.
Speaker AAnd so, yeah, I see that.
Speaker AI think Martin Luther called the, the Book of Psalms a little Bible is a guy has all the theology and all the doctrines and all the emotions.
Speaker AI tell people anything you, you will ever go through in your entire life is you dress in the Book of Psalms.
Speaker AI think it's the.
Speaker AI think it's the longest.
Speaker AIt's the longest book in the Bible.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AAnd yet many people just kind of skip by it.
Speaker AWe're starting to use that as our call to worship.
Speaker AWe read a psalm every week.
Speaker AAnd then throughout the week, I have a couple of brothers and we'll take that psalm and we'll read a couple of verses every day and we'll pray.
Speaker AI'll read some commentary and discuss and then we'll just pray concerning that in respect in light of the things we're going through and things like that.
Speaker ASo it is just absolutely so rich.
Speaker AWhen did you kind of like fall in love with the Book of Psalms, so to speak?
Speaker BYeah, I'd say I fell in love with it pretty early on when I was a believer.
Speaker BSo I was raised Catholic in kind of a nominal Catholic home.
Speaker BAnd so obviously not deep into the Bible.
Speaker BYou know, that's really not, you know, that's not really not most Catholics thing, you know.
Speaker BAnd so I got saved at a retreat.
Speaker BI attended a retreat in my teens called Teens Encounter Christ.
Speaker BHeard the Gospel, just got rocked.
Speaker BFilled with the Holy Spirit, believed in the gospel and life was.
Speaker BWas different after that.
Speaker AThis was a non Catholic thing you went to?
Speaker BYeah, it was a non Catholic retreat.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BSo it was, it was kind of more of like an ecumenical Christian retreat, but obviously very Protestant in its theology.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BI think the Reformed Church started it.
Speaker BI think so Reformed America started, I think.
Speaker BBut anyway, heard the gospel there, things were different.
Speaker BStarted to read the Bible, get into it.
Speaker AImagine that.
Speaker BAnd very early on in my journey as a believer, just really felt an affinity for the book of psalms because of the.
Speaker BThe way it depicted the relationship with God as very close, very honest, you know, So I really was drawn to that and just felt close to God reading them because it just felt very authentic, very real.
Speaker BIt was very.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BIt doesn't feel, you know, like sometimes, you know, worship music or whatever you want to call it, you know, it can feel a little bit fake, but this didn't feel fake.
Speaker BIt felt like very, very honest, very raw.
Speaker BLike, this is what real life feels like.
Speaker BDoes that make sense?
Speaker BPretty earthy, you know what I mean?
Speaker BI don't know if I described that well, but.
Speaker BAnd so I felt the affinity right away to it and always put it in my Bible reading plan because it's a great way to start Bible reading for me because it starts with worship.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BThe approach to God, Enter his gates with thanksgiving, enter his courts with praise.
Speaker BThe approach to God as worship.
Speaker BI really like that.
Speaker BReading the psalms first and then getting into the rest of the.
Speaker BMy Bible reading.
Speaker BSo that's when I got really into it.
Speaker BAnd then again as a worship leader, just getting more and more into worship.
Speaker BLeading psalms just fit naturally into that because, you know, it's the songbook.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BYou're trying to see how does this square with what we're doing now, you know?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo, you know, in the intro, it talked about how, like, Paul wrote to the Romans, you know, you know, who the audience is to the Romans, to the Ephesians, but then the book of Psalms.
Speaker AWho's the book of psalms written to?
Speaker BRight, right.
Speaker AIt's written to God.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd that, like, learning that just blew me away.
Speaker AI just never considered that.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AYou know, the simplicity of that.
Speaker AYet it was profound.
Speaker ASay this wrong.
Speaker AThis.
Speaker AThis book is written to God to worship and glorify him.
Speaker AAnd we're supposed to use it for that purpose, not, you know, how do I have my best life now?
Speaker ALet me find a psalm that, you know, tells me how to do that.
Speaker ANo, it's about the worship of God in the entirety of our lives.
Speaker ABecause sometimes I think in Christianity and our churches, we think of worship and we compartmentalize it to only be music.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker ABut even though it's meant to be sung, it's singing about our lives and what we go through.
Speaker AEvery emotion is in there.
Speaker AEverything you ever go through, you're feeling down, you're feeling worried, you're feeling anxious, feeling fearful.
Speaker AIt's.
Speaker AIt's all in there.
Speaker BIt is.
Speaker AHas there been any particular psalm that really, like, just anchored you and times you were going through or.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, man, jeez.
Speaker BPsalm 32 has been a big one because the doctrine of justification is right there, of course, like blessed is the man whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is coming, covered, to whom the Lord does not impute any iniquity.
Speaker BYou know, Paul uses that in Romans 4 as like a bedrock for the doctrine of justification.
Speaker BSo that idea of, you know, just complete, perfect forgiveness, all that, I mean, that's huge comfort.
Speaker BObviously when I'm going, I've gone through some really stressful times as a public education administrator, you know, those kind of things.
Speaker BYou know, Psalm 38, another one where most of the psalm is very, very deep lament.
Speaker BI mean, most of the psalm just describes the depths of his pain.
Speaker BMost of it in all kinds of ways, physical, mental anxiety, emotional, relationship wise.
Speaker BHe's been abandoned.
Speaker BLike, it's almost like a job kind of psalm.
Speaker BBut there's this little ray of hope in that psalm that.
Speaker BBut you, oh God, you will hear me, you will answer.
Speaker BThat's like the only positive verse in the psalm.
Speaker BAnd just clinging to that, like, God, I know this is what's going on, but I know that you're gonna hear me and answer, like, I know that's going to happen.
Speaker BAnd I think more so than one particular psalm that just rocked me because again, like I could talk about, I could go through each single one.
Speaker BSure.
Speaker BMore than that, it's like the overall pattern I saw, which was psalms starting with David often.
Speaker BAnd this isn't every one of them.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BBut a lot of them start with David describing a really difficult situation.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker BUsually his life is being hunted, like he's literally being pursued by murderers.
Speaker BRight, right, yes.
Speaker BBad situation, he's in a bad scrape or he's living in a cave, hiding out from these people, something like that.
Speaker BAnd then he describes the situation to God.
Speaker BWell, first of all, he approaches God.
Speaker BVery important.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBecause when we're going through a difficult time, it's easy to reach for other things, you know, like to medicate through, like entertainment or substances or food or whatever it is, addictions to kind of numb the pain.
Speaker BDavid always goes to God.
Speaker BThat's his go to.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBut then he describes the situation to God, which you would think, like, well, God knows what's going on, he doesn't need to do that.
Speaker BBut very helpful for us to articulate what's happening, process it.
Speaker BAnd then he starts to basically tell himself what he knows is true about God.
Speaker BBut I know that you're God over this.
Speaker BI know that you do This, I know you're faithful in.
Speaker AThis speaks to his soul.
Speaker BHe speaks.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BHe preaches to himself almost.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BAnd that gives him reassurance.
Speaker BLike, oh, yeah, this is true.
Speaker BThis is true.
Speaker BThis is true.
Speaker BGod, you've promised this, you promised that.
Speaker BAnd then he shifts into some intercess.
Speaker BHe shifts into some intercessory prayer and supplication.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BGod, considering all that, please do this.
Speaker BPlease deliver me.
Speaker BPlease, you know, wipe out my enemies.
Speaker BTake them out so they don't take me out.
Speaker BYou know, and he starts getting into that.
Speaker BAnd then by the time he's done praying, he's got this supreme confidence.
Speaker BIt's almost like he's no longer even in that place he was at the beginning of the psalm.
Speaker BThe psalm just ends with worshiping.
Speaker BHe's just worshiping.
Speaker BHe's worshiping God for the deliverance that in his mind has already come.
Speaker BLike, it hasn't come yet.
Speaker BBut he's so confident it's coming.
Speaker BHe's worshiping God for the deliverance that's coming, which is so powerful to me.
Speaker BSo really, that pattern you see over and over again has been.
Speaker BThat has affected me more so than any one individual psalm.
Speaker BJust seeing David go from despair and seeming hopelessness to being full of joy and hope within a few verses, that has been so impactful.
Speaker AThat's powerful.
Speaker AI'm thinking of David and Job, and we know that in Job, we kind of see the, you know, the backdrop of, you know, God is having conversation with Satan and you consider my servant Job, and then he allows him to go after Job, and then Job goes to God.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker ASo I'm thinking in that context, can you imagine Satan, every time he goes after David, it drives him to God.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AI mean, that should be our lives.
Speaker BAbsolutely.
Speaker AThat whatever we face, we may talk about the problem, and we're not ignoring.
Speaker AWe're not pretending like it doesn't exist.
Speaker AGlory to God.
Speaker ANot cancer right now, you know, or whatever it is.
Speaker ABut we talk about the problem.
Speaker AWe get our emotions out there.
Speaker BYes, we.
Speaker ABut then we preach to our own soul and we go to him, and then by the end of it, we're in praise because we realize this is a light and momentary affliction that doesn't compare to the eternal weight of glory which awaits us.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker ALike, if you had an opportunity to preach to people, like right now that were kind of downtrodden, like, step us through it.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI would tell him exactly that.
Speaker BI would say, first of all, just cry out to God with what is Your central request, what do you need from him?
Speaker BWhat do you desire from him?
Speaker BDavid would often start with the central prayer.
Speaker BPsalm 54 would be a great example.
Speaker BDavid starts out with, oh, God, save me by your name, vindicate me by your might.
Speaker BThat was his central request.
Speaker BGod, deliver me from this situation.
Speaker BThis was the immediate threat.
Speaker BGod, deliver me from it.
Speaker BBut then he goes into describing his situation to God.
Speaker BSo once you, like, kind of state your central request, your central need to God, tell him what's going on and just.
Speaker BAnd just lay that out for him.
Speaker BBecause again, it gives us perspective, helps us process.
Speaker BAnd then declare what you know is true.
Speaker BThink of those biblical promises that you've been given, and then state those to God.
Speaker BGod, I know you've promised this.
Speaker BI know that you're the God who does this.
Speaker BI know that you have.
Speaker BYou've said, you do this.
Speaker BAnd then again, maybe get more specific in your prayers, like, ask them, you know, if there's more specificity to your prayer.
Speaker BWhat would you like?
Speaker BWhat do you want to see happen?
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BI think sometimes we're afraid to ask that of God because we feel like that's way too demanding or that's way too.
Speaker BBut your father.
Speaker BYeah, exactly.
Speaker BI mean, I love the story of the blind man, Bartimaeus, in Mark 10.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker BJust real brief summary.
Speaker BJesus is walking along the road, and there's this blind man on the side of the road crying out, son of David, have mercy on me.
Speaker BHave mercy on me.
Speaker BAnd Jesus stops.
Speaker BSomething about it makes him stop.
Speaker BHe goes off the road, comes to Bartimaeus, and he looks at him and he says, what do you want?
Speaker BWhat is it you want me to do for you?
Speaker BSo it's almost like he's giving this kind of like.
Speaker BKind of vague cry for mercy, which is kind of like what the beginning of the psalm sounds like sometimes, right?
Speaker BBut then Jesus walks up to him and says, no, what do you want?
Speaker BWhat do you want me to do for you?
Speaker BWhich, of course, Jesus knows what he wants.
Speaker BAnd he's blind, for crying out loud.
Speaker BLike, you know, you kind of guess what he wants, right?
Speaker BBut he says, what do you want me to do for you?
Speaker BI mean, imagine that Jesus comes up to you and says, philip, what do you want me to do for you?
Speaker BPowerful, right?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BWhat does Bartimaeus say?
Speaker BI want to see.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BJesus says, okay, done.
Speaker BJesus made him verbalize it.
Speaker BExactly what his request was, exactly what he was wanting, desiring.
Speaker BWe shouldn't be afraid to do that.
Speaker BGod, this is what my heart desires you know, delight yourself in the Lord.
Speaker BHe'll give you the desires of your heart.
Speaker BSo he asked him what he desires.
Speaker BAnd again, that's not like a prosperity gospel thing.
Speaker BThat's not like that.
Speaker BIt's just, what is your immediate need?
Speaker BWhat is your desire from the Lord?
Speaker BHe can say, no, but we ask him what we desire from him, what we need from him.
Speaker BAnd then Jesus heals him and on he goes.
Speaker BSo David does the same thing.
Speaker BHe gets very specific after that beginning of the psalm.
Speaker BHe'll say, like, God, I want this to happen to my enemies, yes.
Speaker BOr I want this kind of deliverance.
Speaker BAnd by the way, it'd be great if this would happen, too.
Speaker BAnd then it's almost like David gets this prophetic assurance that his prayer is answered, right?
Speaker BYou see that in several psalms, like Psalm 6 is a good example, David lays out this prayer, and then at the end he says, depart you enemies, for the Lord has heard my weeping.
Speaker BHe will receive my prayer.
Speaker BSo it's like David gets this, like, divine assurance, like, yep, this is answered.
Speaker BLike the.
Speaker BThe fruition of the answer in.
Speaker BIn time has not come yet, but it's answered.
Speaker BAnd David just like, excited about it, anticipating the answer before it even comes, right?
Speaker BThat confidence David has that God's going to come through with his promises is probably been the most profound thing I've seen in the Psalms, that David expected his prayers to be answered, like, in his lifetime, like in the here and now, like soon, soon.
Speaker ANot later, but now.
Speaker AI think sometimes, and I came out of a Pentecostal background, sometimes we run so far away from.
Speaker APeople used to ask God for everything, you know, name it and claim it, right?
Speaker AAnd then we don't want to fall in that ditch, so we go to the other ditch and we don't.
Speaker AWe say, I don't want to ask God for anything, right?
Speaker AAnd that's the wrong ditch, too.
Speaker ASo we have to stay.
Speaker AWe have to stay on the narrow road, and we're safe there.
Speaker BYou're safe with what God asked in the Psalms.
Speaker BAnd there's some powerful prayers in the psalms, like, search me, O God, and know my heart.
Speaker BTry me and know my anxious thoughts.
Speaker BSee if there be any wicked way in me, lead me in the way of everlasting.
Speaker BThat's not a health and wealth prayer, you know what I mean?
Speaker BAt all.
Speaker BSo there's lots of prayers like that that we can pray and know that God wants that to happen.
Speaker BWe know that God will answer that because we know that's his will.
Speaker BWe know that's what he wants for us, right?
Speaker APraise God.
Speaker BYou don't see David praying for health and wealth kind of stuff.
Speaker BYou see him praying for righteousness.
Speaker BYou see him praying for God's glory, like Psalm 57.
Speaker BI love Psalm 57 because the context is David's in the cave, right?
Speaker BThat's when he's in the cave hiding from Saul.
Speaker BAnd what's his core prayer that he repeats throughout that psalm?
Speaker BShoot, it's going to come to me.
Speaker BBe exalted, O God, above the heavens.
Speaker BLet your glory be over all the earth.
Speaker BSo when David's in this really difficult personal situation, what's his heart?
Speaker BWhat's his desire?
Speaker BWhat's he crying out for?
Speaker BHe's crying out for God to be glorified in all the earth.
Speaker BThat's what David wanted more than anything, to see that.
Speaker BAnd so when he's asking for deliverance, it's not just for himself.
Speaker BHe's asking for deliverance because deliverance will vindicate God's name.
Speaker BIt will vindicate God's glory because he promised to deliver his people.
Speaker AThere's a depth to what he's saying.
Speaker BAnd David's such an evangelist, too.
Speaker BYou see this all the time where he says, God, deliver me so that I can testify about it to other people, so I can tell other people what you've done.
Speaker BIn Psalm 34, he says he starts preaching in the middle of it.
Speaker BHe's so thankful for what God's done, he starts telling people, now listen to me.
Speaker BLike, follow the Lord, follow his ways so you can experience what I'm experiencing.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BYou see that all the time.
Speaker BYou see it in Psalm 32.
Speaker BHe says, now listen to me.
Speaker BStay close to your master.
Speaker BDon't be like the stubborn horse.
Speaker BStay close to your master.
Speaker BThen you will experience the deliverance that I have.
Speaker AAmen.
Speaker BAmen.
Speaker AWell, I appreciate your time today, Shane.
Speaker AWhat's your website?
Speaker AWhere can they go to find your material?
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BThanks for that, man.
Speaker BSo we are the Psalms Project.
Speaker BThat's the name of.
Speaker BThat's the artist's name for our music.
Speaker BThe psalms project.
Speaker BThe psalmsproject.com is our website, so there you can join our email list, listen to the music, and really interact with us in any way that works for you.
Speaker AAmen.
Speaker AI started listening to music.
Speaker AI got your whole.
Speaker AAll six volumes.
Speaker AIt's six volumes?
Speaker AYes.
Speaker BWe've got, well, five volumes.
Speaker BPlus we have another collection of just quiet, meditative psalm arrangements called Psalms for Sleep.
Speaker BI made Psalms for Sleep specifically for people who struggle with anxiety and depression because it's those kind of psalms that address that.
Speaker BLike Psalm 42, Psalm 23, Psalm 91.
Speaker BYeah, but we have five volumes of Psalms released that go from Psalms 1 through 46.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker APraise God.
Speaker AYeah, well thank you for taking this time to stop and think about it.
Speaker AAlso wrote a book, Behold the Wondrous Psalms of How to Pray the Psalms.
Speaker ASo we sing the Psalms, we pray the Psalms, we meditate on the Psalms, we believe them and we preach the Psalms to our own soul for the glory of God.
Speaker AThank you for taking this time to stop and think about it.
Speaker BIf you would like to contact us please email us@stopandthinkcrewmail.com.
Speaker Byou could also visit our website at www.stopandthinkpodcast.com.
Speaker Bthis podcast is listener supported by generous people like you.
Speaker BYou can give a tax deductible donation at our affiliate ministry@www.soulfishingministries.org and click on our donate link to give securely through PayPal.
Speaker BThank you for listening to Stop and Think About It.