My Heart Overflows With A Goodly Theme
Devotional
Companion to the Psalter
A Devotional Guide to the Psalms
Object:
I address my verses to the king ...
In your majesty ride on victoriously
for the cause of truth and to defend the right ...
You love righteousness and hate wickedness.
Therefore God, your God, has anointed you
with the oil of gladness beyond your companions ...
I will cause your name to be celebrated
in all generations;
therefore the peoples will praise you forever and ever.
-- Psalm 45:1b, 4, 6a, 17
Theme: A royal wedding song
Outline
1-9: Addressing the king.
2-5 -- You are handsome, of gracious speech, a great warrior.
6-7a -- Your reign is stable, marked by equity and righteousness.
7b-9 -- God has blessed you richly.
10-13a -- Addressing the queen: devote yourself wholly to the king.
13b-15 -- Procession to the palace.
16-17 -- All future generations will celebrate the king!
Notes
• Royal Messianic
• A poem originally written for the king on the occasion of his marriage to a foreign princess.
• Its Messianic significance has been recognized by Jews and Christians. Jewish interpreters regarded it an allegory of the Messiah and Israel, his bride. Christians interpret the king as a type of Christ and the church as his bride. Bonhoeffer says the psalm is "The song and prayer of the love between Jesus, the king, and his church, which belongs to him."1
• Verses 6-7 are cited in Hebrews 1:8-9 as a prophecy of Christ's superiority to angels.
• Luther has 104 pages of exposition on this one psalm! "We want to teach and hear something joyful. Therefore I have taken up Psalm 45 in which we shall see how fluent a speaker the Holy Spirit is, who is able to express and picture one and the self-same thing in various ways."2
Prayer
Lord God, you have given us your Son to be our king and made us a part of the church, his bride. Bless your whole church on earth with the love and faith to show the world the glory of the king who is the Lamb, Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
____________
1. Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Psalms: The Prayerbook of the Bible (Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1970), p. 39.
2. Martin Luther, Luther's Works, Vol. 12 (St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1973), p. 197.
In your majesty ride on victoriously
for the cause of truth and to defend the right ...
You love righteousness and hate wickedness.
Therefore God, your God, has anointed you
with the oil of gladness beyond your companions ...
I will cause your name to be celebrated
in all generations;
therefore the peoples will praise you forever and ever.
-- Psalm 45:1b, 4, 6a, 17
Theme: A royal wedding song
Outline
1-9: Addressing the king.
2-5 -- You are handsome, of gracious speech, a great warrior.
6-7a -- Your reign is stable, marked by equity and righteousness.
7b-9 -- God has blessed you richly.
10-13a -- Addressing the queen: devote yourself wholly to the king.
13b-15 -- Procession to the palace.
16-17 -- All future generations will celebrate the king!
Notes
• Royal Messianic
• A poem originally written for the king on the occasion of his marriage to a foreign princess.
• Its Messianic significance has been recognized by Jews and Christians. Jewish interpreters regarded it an allegory of the Messiah and Israel, his bride. Christians interpret the king as a type of Christ and the church as his bride. Bonhoeffer says the psalm is "The song and prayer of the love between Jesus, the king, and his church, which belongs to him."1
• Verses 6-7 are cited in Hebrews 1:8-9 as a prophecy of Christ's superiority to angels.
• Luther has 104 pages of exposition on this one psalm! "We want to teach and hear something joyful. Therefore I have taken up Psalm 45 in which we shall see how fluent a speaker the Holy Spirit is, who is able to express and picture one and the self-same thing in various ways."2
Prayer
Lord God, you have given us your Son to be our king and made us a part of the church, his bride. Bless your whole church on earth with the love and faith to show the world the glory of the king who is the Lamb, Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
____________
1. Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Psalms: The Prayerbook of the Bible (Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1970), p. 39.
2. Martin Luther, Luther's Works, Vol. 12 (St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1973), p. 197.

