Use "psalmist" in a sentence

1. As the Psalmist declared:

2. What conviction strengthened the psalmist?

3. What did the psalmist Asaph come to understand?

4. Consider the penetrating questions posed by the Psalmist:

5. “Before him pour out your heart,” urges the psalmist.

6. 17, 18. (a) To what does the psalmist liken the wicked?

7. The psalmist declared: “Know [recognize, acknowledge] that Jehovah is God.

8. (Psalm 119:97) Why did the psalmist feel so strongly?

9. Says the psalmist: “We are the people of his pasturage.”

10. The psalmist also wanted a new, upright spirit, or mental inclination.

11. With what does the psalmist equate a thousand years of human existence?

12. “O you lovers of Jehovah,” exhorts the psalmist, “hate what is bad.”

13. The psalmist sang: “How will a young man cleanse his path?

14. “JEHOVAH is finding pleasure in those fearing him,” wrote the psalmist.

15. 15. (a) What does the psalmist pray that Jehovah will do?

16. The psalmist says: “Jehovah is gracious and merciful, slow to anger.”

17. Why did the psalmist say that Jehovah is clothed in dignity?

18. “The high mountains are for the mountain goats,” sang the psalmist.

19. “THE drawing near to God is good for me,” declared the psalmist Asaph.

20. 4, 5. (a) How did the psalmist feel about God’s way of ruling?

21. But in these verses, the psalmist wrote: “Jehovah himself will guard you.”

22. What do the words addressed to him by the psalmist tell him to do?

23. Hence, the psalmist urged people to come into God’s presence “with a joyful cry.”

24. (Genesis 24:63-67) The psalmist David ‘meditated on God during the night watches.’

25. 17 The psalmist speaks of trampling down “the maned young lion and the big snake.”

26. (Psalm 102:13, 16) Then the psalmist returns to the subject of his personal suffering.

27. 19 The psalmist sang: “O love Jehovah, all you loyal ones of his.

28. 4 The psalmist names ten nations that were conspiring to destroy God’s people.

29. Instead, we echo the words of the psalmist: “God is a refuge for us. . . .

30. Addressing himself to the divine Author of that prophetic Word, the psalmist said:

31. In what sense was the psalmist “like a skin bottle in the smoke”?

32. When the psalmist uses the word Beseech, it is certainly used in the context of petitioning God’s help in one of the strongest manners possible as we read in Psalm 116:4 where the psalmist is

33. The psalmist observed: “If errors were what you watch, O Jah, O Jehovah, who could stand?”

34. The psalmist asked: “If errors were what you watch, O Jah, O Jehovah, who could stand?”

35. An unnamed psalmist addressed faithful worshipers with these inspired words: “Ascribe to Jehovah glory and strength.

36. The psalmist adds: “They [earth and heavens] themselves will perish, but you yourself will keep standing.”

37. The psalmist so well expressed our feelings: “Look! Sons are an inheritance from Jehovah.”

38. “There is no dread of God in front of his eyes,” the psalmist continues.

39. “The orders from Jehovah are upright, causing the heart to rejoice,” wrote the psalmist.

40. The psalmist refers to “a time of goodwill,” using the expression “an acceptable time.”

41. The tree that is described by the psalmist does not spring up by accident.

42. For example, the psalmist David asked: “Why, O Jehovah, do you keep standing afar off?

43. Indeed, the psalmist David declared: “You kept me screened off in my mother’s womb.

44. The psalmist declared: “Happy are those observing justice, doing righteousness all the time.” —Psalm 106:3.

45. 15 The psalmist wrote: “Your people will offer themselves willingly on the day of your military force.”

46. The psalmist, for example, prayed to Jehovah: “Incline my heart to your reminders, and not to profits.

47. The psalmist sang: “Let us come into his grand tabernacle; let us bow down at his footstool.”

48. The psalmist was perhaps referring to a battlefield, where those slain become food for jackals.

49. (Psalm 121:1, 2) The psalmist did not raise his eyes to just any mountain.

50. What view of service privileges does the psalmist express as recorded at Psalm 84:1-3?

51. Indeed, the psalmist acknowledged: “If errors were what you watch, O Jah, O Jehovah, who could stand?

52. Thus, the psalmist sang to Jehovah: “Your reminders are what I am fond of.” —Psalm 119:24.

53. The psalmist David wrote: “Roll upon Jehovah your way, and rely upon him, and he himself will act.”

54. The psalmist says: “Rejoice in Jehovah, O you righteous ones, and give thanks to his holy memorial.”

55. The psalmist could write: “Jehovah has become high above all the nations; his glory is above the heavens.

56. 15 The psalmist wrote: “Your word is a lamp to my foot, and a light to my roadway.”

57. Like the psalmist David, I feel that I have walked in a “valley of deep shadow.”

58. The psalmist also presents to us, a bit ironically, the absolutely ephemeral character of these idols.

59. The psalmist wrote: “If errors were what you watch, O Jah, O Jehovah, who could stand?”

60. The psalmist states that they “will not be afraid even of bad news.” —Psalm 112:1, 7.

61. 12 “From the dread of you [Jehovah] my flesh has had a creepy feeling,” said the psalmist.

62. The psalmist also sings: “Jehovah is executing acts of righteousness and judicial decisions for all those being defrauded.

63. The psalmist David wrote: “When I kept silent my bones wore out through my groaning all day long.

64. As the psalmist wrote: “Your word is a lamp to my foot, and a light to my roadway.”

65. I truly feel like the psalmist who sang: “Blessed be Jehovah, who daily carries the load for us.”

66. 4:32) The psalmist David sang: “Jehovah is merciful and gracious, slow to anger and abundant in loving-kindness. . . .

67. I thought “He Anoints my head with oil” was figurative language for God keeping the Psalmist healthy

68. (Eze 13:10-16) The psalmist assures that unless Jehovah builds the house, the builders labor in vain.

69. In Psalm 16, the psalmist credits the Lord with assigning his "portion and Cup" in life

70. A psalmist wrote: “He is telling his word to Jacob, his regulations and his judicial decisions to Israel.

71. The ancient psalmist wrote: “Your word is a lamp to my foot, and a light to my roadway.”

72. 9 The psalmist did not ‘wander from God’s orders,’ but that can happen to a person dedicated to Jehovah.

73. The psalmist realized this and wrote: “If errors were what you watch, O Jah, O Jehovah, who could stand?”

74. Properly the psalmist had no fault to find with the Law of that covenant, for it was God-given.

75. The psalmist, who at the time was under extreme mental pressure, wrote: “The way of faithfulness I have chosen. . . .

76. The psalmist sang: “Happy are the ones faultless in their way, the ones walking in the law of Jehovah.

77. The psalmist asked: “If errors were what you watch, O Jah, O Jehovah, who could stand?” —Psalm 130:3.

78. The psalmist said: “Many are the calamities of the righteous one, but out of them all Jehovah delivers him.”

79. The psalmist appropriately pleaded: “Examine me, O Jehovah, and put me to the test; refine my kidneys and my heart.”

80. (Psalm 119:81-88) Because presumptuous ones were persecuting him, the psalmist felt “like a skin bottle in the smoke.”