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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. I may offer study guides for ...
Psalm 23 in conversation (Acts 4:5-12; Psalm 23; 1 John 3:16-24; John 10:11-18) This familiar text takes on new dimensions when read in tandem with this week’s epistle and gospel texts.
"The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want." — King James Version (KJV) Q: I agree with you about changing "want" to "lack" in the 23rd Psalm. I have a large Bible, which is too heavy to hold ...
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 ...
As we continue to read and study the 23rd Psalm, we begin where we left off last week. The Psalmist David writes, “Even when I walk through the darkest valley, I fear no danger because you are ...
"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 ...
In From the Pulpit last week, I examined the first few lines of the 23rd Psalm in which the story is told from the perspective of the sheep. However, we ...
Reading of the 23rd Psalm in Pennsylvania German a highlight of Sunday’s Community Worship Service at the Kutztown Folk Festival Centenarian June DeTurk, who recited the Psalm in the dialect ...
Last week in response to M from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, who is a member of the Good Shepherd Lutheran Church’s Bible Study Group, I began a study guide for the 23rd Psalm. I may offer study ...
God Squad: Psalm 23 ... the next two words 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.
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