Praise The LORD! Praise The LORD From The Heavens
Devotional
Companion to the Psalter
A Devotional Guide to the Psalms
Object:
Praise him, all his angels;
praise him all his host! ...
Let them praise the name of the LORD,
for he commanded and they were created ...
Praise the LORD from the earth ...
Mountains and all hills ...
Wild animals and all cattle,
creeping things and flying birds!
Kings of the earth and all peoples ...
his glory is above earth and heaven.
-- Psalm 148:2, 5, 7a, 9a, 10-11a, 13c
Theme: Let all nature praise the Lord
Outline
1-6 -- Call to heavenly beings and heavenly bodies to praise their Creator.
7-13 -- Let earth and sea and all their inhabitants (animate and inanimate) praise him.
14 -- Let Israel -- the closest to God -- praise him.
Notes
• Praise -- Creation/History
• One of the Hallelujah Psalms (146-150).
• "Horn" = a symbol of strength (v. 14).
• Saint Francis based his "Canticle To The Sun" on this psalm. See also a similar canticle, "Song For The Three Children" (inserted after Daniel 3:23 in Roman Catholic Bibles).
• The hymn, "All Creatures Of Our God And King" and other similar hymns take their theme from this psalm.
• The Daily Lectionary suggests this is to be used with the Psalm of the Day each Friday.
For Reflection
• The ancient world looked upon nature as something divine -- the gods lurked everywhere. The creation story abolished that idea for the faithful. Our civilization has looked upon nature in terms of conquest and exploitation. The result is becoming a threat to everyone. The psalmist regards nature as a fellow-dependent. We all exist together by God's command.
• A kind of mutual fraternity between man and nature is possible under God. Native Americans sense this, also. We who have degraded nature with our materialist consumerism need urgently to recover a wholesome respect for it.
Prayer
Lord God, what a marvelous universe you have created! What a unique planet you have made. What great artistry you show in it all. Lead us to become good stewards of the earth. May your loving purpose in creation come to glorious fulfillment. May we, together with nature, redeemed from sin and futility, rejoice before you on the great day coming, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
praise him all his host! ...
Let them praise the name of the LORD,
for he commanded and they were created ...
Praise the LORD from the earth ...
Mountains and all hills ...
Wild animals and all cattle,
creeping things and flying birds!
Kings of the earth and all peoples ...
his glory is above earth and heaven.
-- Psalm 148:2, 5, 7a, 9a, 10-11a, 13c
Theme: Let all nature praise the Lord
Outline
1-6 -- Call to heavenly beings and heavenly bodies to praise their Creator.
7-13 -- Let earth and sea and all their inhabitants (animate and inanimate) praise him.
14 -- Let Israel -- the closest to God -- praise him.
Notes
• Praise -- Creation/History
• One of the Hallelujah Psalms (146-150).
• "Horn" = a symbol of strength (v. 14).
• Saint Francis based his "Canticle To The Sun" on this psalm. See also a similar canticle, "Song For The Three Children" (inserted after Daniel 3:23 in Roman Catholic Bibles).
• The hymn, "All Creatures Of Our God And King" and other similar hymns take their theme from this psalm.
• The Daily Lectionary suggests this is to be used with the Psalm of the Day each Friday.
For Reflection
• The ancient world looked upon nature as something divine -- the gods lurked everywhere. The creation story abolished that idea for the faithful. Our civilization has looked upon nature in terms of conquest and exploitation. The result is becoming a threat to everyone. The psalmist regards nature as a fellow-dependent. We all exist together by God's command.
• A kind of mutual fraternity between man and nature is possible under God. Native Americans sense this, also. We who have degraded nature with our materialist consumerism need urgently to recover a wholesome respect for it.
Prayer
Lord God, what a marvelous universe you have created! What a unique planet you have made. What great artistry you show in it all. Lead us to become good stewards of the earth. May your loving purpose in creation come to glorious fulfillment. May we, together with nature, redeemed from sin and futility, rejoice before you on the great day coming, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

