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Psalm 19: Two Books, One Author
Lewis called this the greatest poem in the Psalter and one of the greatest lyrics in the world, and one can see why. It opens with the heavens — not arguing for God, not proving anything, but simply declaring, the way a sunrise declares itself without apology. There is no speech nor language, and yet their voice is heard everywhere. It is the loudest silence in the universe. And then, without warning, the psalm pivots from the sky to the scroll — from the wordless testimony of creation to the worded testimony of the law. And here is the astonishing thing: David does not find the law burdensome. He finds it sweeter than honey, more desirable than gold. The same God who flung the sun across the sky stooped to write instructions for human hearts, and both gestures come from the same love. The psalm ends where all honest self-examination must end: cleanse thou me from secret faults. Because the man who has truly looked at the heavens and truly read the law knows that the gap between what is declared and what he is remains vast — and only grace can close it.
00:00 The Heavens Declare His Glory
00:25 No Speech, Yet Their Voice Is Heard
00:40 A Tabernacle for the Sun
01:00 The Law of the Lord Is Perfect
01:20 Sweeter Than Honey
01:40 Cleanse Me from Secret Faults
02:00 Let the Words of My Mouth Be Acceptable
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Daily Psalms - Classical Psalms Every Day