The Bible in a Year
Psalms
           Psalm 119 – Part One
Read this coming week:
Nov 8 Jer 42‐44, Ps 119:1‐8, 1 Cor 14, Nov 9 Jer 45‐47, Ps 119:9‐16, 1 Cor
15‐16, Nov 10 Jer 48, Ps 119:17‐24, 2 Cor 1‐2, Nov 11 Jer 49, Ps 119:25‐
32, 2 Cor 3‐4, Nov 12 Jer 50, Ps 119:33‐40, 2 Cor 5‐6, Nov 13 Jer 51‐52,
Ps 119:41‐48, 2 Cor 7‐8, Nov 14 Lam 1, Ps 119:49‐56, 2 Cor 9‐10, Nov 15
Lam 2‐3, Ps 119:57‐64, 2 Cor 11‐13
Reading Questions
For next week you’re reading Psalm 119, vs. 1-64. Be
able to answer the following:
   • Psalm 119 is an acrostic poem – each section
      begins with a letter of the Hebrew alphabet (i.e.
      “aleph” is the first word in the Hebrew alphabet).
      What are the letters of the Hebrew alphabet you
      are reading from?
   • What is the writer of the Psalm petitioning God
      for?
   • Young men would memorize Psalm 119, what
      passages of the Psalm encourage the idea of
      memorizing the Word of God?
   •   What is God’s role in the life of a young man
       according to this Psalm?
        The Bible in a Year
                            Psalms
           Psalm 119 – Part One
Read this coming week:
Nov 8 Jer 42‐44, Ps 119:1‐8, 1 Cor 14, Nov 9 Jer 45‐47, Ps 119:9‐16, 1 Cor
15‐16, Nov 10 Jer 48, Ps 119:17‐24, 2 Cor 1‐2, Nov 11 Jer 49, Ps 119:25‐
32, 2 Cor 3‐4, Nov 12 Jer 50, Ps 119:33‐40, 2 Cor 5‐6, Nov 13 Jer 51‐52,
Ps 119:41‐48, 2 Cor 7‐8, Nov 14 Lam 1, Ps 119:49‐56, 2 Cor 9‐10, Nov 15
Lam 2‐3, Ps 119:57‐64, 2 Cor 11‐13
Reading Questions
For next week you’re reading Psalm 119, vs. 1-64. Be
able to answer the following:
   • Psalm 119 is an acrostic poem – each section
      begins with a letter of the Hebrew alphabet (i.e.
      “aleph” is the first word in the Hebrew alphabet).
      What are the letters of the Hebrew alphabet you
      are reading from?
   •   What is the writer of the Psalm petitioning God
       for?
   •   Young men would memorize Psalm 119, what
       passages of the Psalm encourage the idea of
       memorizing the Word of God?
   •   What is God’s role in the life of a young man
       according to this Psalm?
About Wisdom: Wisdom as archetype
The book of Psalms is within the Biblical literature genre
of “the books of Wisdom”. It might be good to think of
wisdom literature as providing an archetype of man's
experience on the earth under the Lordship of God.
Robert McKee, a well renown scholar on the concept of
"story" and literature, describes an archetype as "a kind
of universal character that audiences can identify with,
while also possessing enough pathos and depth to avoid
cliché." Wisdom literature allows the reader to enter
into the world of God's plan for humanity in such a way
that it can be identified with, but without becoming
cliche.
About Psalms: The 5 Books
There are 5 books of the Psalms. Each subdivided book
has its own sense of character. While not all of the
Psalms in Book 1, for example, are intensely personal –
most of them are.
   1. Book 1 - Psalms 1-41 - Intensely personal Psalms
      of David
   2. Book 2 - Psalms 42-72 - Nationalistic and kingdom
      oriented Psalms, mostly of David
   3. Book 3 - Psalms 73-89 - More nationalistic and
      kingdom oriented Psalms, but rarely of David -
      more often of other authors like the Sons of
      Korah.
   4. Book 4 - Psalms 90-106 - A “grab bag” of
      anonymous psalms and miscellaneous psalms
   5. Book 5 - Psalms 107-150 - Songs of praise, mostly
      of David again
   Please don’t throw this away. If you’re not going to use it, leave it for
                           someone else to use.
About Wisdom: Wisdom as archetype
The book of Psalms is within the Biblical literature genre
of “the books of Wisdom”. It might be good to think of
wisdom literature as providing an archetype of man's
experience on the earth under the Lordship of God.
Robert McKee, a well renown scholar on the concept of
"story" and literature, describes an archetype as "a kind
of universal character that audiences can identify with,
while also possessing enough pathos and depth to avoid
cliché." Wisdom literature allows the reader to enter
into the world of God's plan for humanity in such a way
that it can be identified with, but without becoming
cliche.
About Psalms: The 5 Books
There are 5 books of the Psalms. Each subdivided book
has its own sense of character. While not all of the
Psalms in Book 1, for example, are intensely personal –
most of them are.
1. Book 1 - Psalms 1-41 - Intensely personal Psalms
   of David
2. Book 2 - Psalms 42-72 - Nationalistic and kingdom
   oriented Psalms, mostly of David
3. Book 3 - Psalms 73-89 - More nationalistic and
   kingdom oriented Psalms, but rarely of David -
   more often of other authors like the Sons of
   Korah.
4. Book 4 - Psalms 90-106 - A “grab bag” of
   anonymous psalms and miscellaneous psalms
5. Book 5 - Psalms 107-150 - Songs of praise, mostly
   of David again
Please don’t throw this away. If you’re not going to use it, leave it for
                        someone else to use.