Reflections on the Psalms
“We delight to praise what we enjoy because the praise not merely expresses but completes the enjoyment; it is its appointed consummation.” The Psalms were written as songs; we should read them as poetry, in the spirit of lyric, not as sermons or instructions. But they are also shrouded in...
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“We delight to praise what we enjoy because the praise not merely expresses but completes the enjoyment; it is its appointed consummation.” The Psalms were written as songs; we should read them as poetry, in the spirit of lyric, not as sermons or instructions. But they are also shrouded in mystery, and in this careful reading from one of our most trusted fellow travelers, C.S. Lewis helps us begin to reveal their meaning in our daily lives and in the world. Reflecting again and anew on these beloved passages, we can find both joy and difficulty, but also, always, real enlightenment and moments of transcendent grace. "This book may not tell the reader all he would like to know about the Psalms, but it will tell him a good deal he will not like to know about himself." —Times Literary Supplement "[Lewis] . . . displays in this volume the same keen insight and gifted tongue that have made him one of the most highly respected essayists using the English language." —Chicago Sunday Tribune "Full of illuminating observations." —New York Times
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Format: paperback
ISBN:
9780156762489 (015676248X)
Publish date: October 7th 1964
Publisher: Harvest/HBJ Books
Pages no: 138
Edition language: English
Category:
Non Fiction,
Writing,
Essays,
Religion,
Philosophy,
Christian,
Faith,
Christianity,
Poetry,
Spirituality,
Theology
I would have to say that the thing that I appreciated the most about this book was that Lewis opened it by saying that he was not writing this book as a theologian, since by his own admission he is not a theologian, but rather that he is writing this book as a normal person, and even in saying that ...
Although, I'm a huge fan of C.S. Lewis, I didn't really like this book so well. In this book, Lewis reveals his low view of Biblical inerrancy. Although he had some good points throughout, I found the book fairly unhelpful because his views of the Old Testament pervaded the entire book. I can't re...
This book was one I read very slowly, initially as part of my Lenten reading and then well into the Easter season. Lewis never ceases to amaze me with his ability to so lucidly present a difficulty, many of which I have struggled with, and then go on to so superbly untangle it and as he comes to gra...