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Last week in response to M from Harrisburg, Pa., who is a member of the Good Shepherd Lutheran Church’s Bible Study Group, I began a study guide for the 23rd Psalm.
The point of the 23rd Psalm is that God is with us to provide our needs. No matter how poor we are, we can still love God and believe that the God we love has already given us everything we need ...
The words of Psalm 23 were authored by a battle-tested warrior named David, who went from being an unseen, unknown shepherd body to an all-powerful king.
The point of the 23rd Psalm is that God is with us to provide our needs. No matter how poor we are, we can love God and believe that the God we love has already given us everything we need to live ...
Someone has observed that Psalm 23 is one of the passages of the Bible that is first learned by children but perhaps one of the last in which the meaning is truly comprehended as adults. The ...
"The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want " Before the first verse of the 23rd Psalm has rolled off my tongue, my mind has wandered off in search of the green pastures and still waters like a ...
The Lord is my shepherd; Christ is the Good Shepherd who feeds and guards his sheep. Just as his contemporary, St. Ambrose, St. Gregory of Nyssa recognizes the Psalm as part of the liturgy: “By ...
The “Psalms” is the longest book in the Bible, with the most numerous “chapters” – 150, in fact. There are many well-known phrases from the Psalter that church-going people recognize ...
Next week, I promise to finish our visit to the 23rd Psalm. Send ALL QUESTIONS AND COMMENTS to The God Squad via email at [email protected]. Rabbi Gellman is the author of several books, ...
Today, I am hopeful to get through at least the next two words, "I shall not want," Rabbi Marc Gellman writes of his study guide for the 23rd Psalm.