Psalm 52 Prayer Guide

Descriptor: 
Paul Dugan shares a three-part guide to praying Psalm 52 in personal or small group worship, with a brief meditation/prayer, suggestions for reading the text, and a prompt for reflective prayer. Includes one musical adaptation video.
Paid Resource: 
N
Source: 
My Psalm Journey
Related to Children or Youth: 
N
Audio/Video: 
Y
Full Text: 
Try entering into lament with this three-part rhythm: Part 1 Become present to the presence of God: “Be still, and know that I am God; I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth. The Lord Almighty is with us; the God of Jacob is our fortress.” (Psalm 46:10-11) Pause in silence before God. Practice breathing slowly and deeply. As you inhale, invite the Holy Spirit to fill every part of your being- your body, mind, imagination, affections and emotions. As you exhale, release any burdens you are carrying into this time of prayer. Repeat this breathing prayer until you have brought your whole self -‘as is’ -before the presence of God. Optional prayer of approach: “Lord, this world is sick with wayward love: faithfulness mocked; sin celebrated. All the while, you knock, your grace undiminished. Many call beauty ugliness; ugliness, beauty, sprinting after every lust if eye and flesh; engorged with the pride of life. Lord, you who desire all to come to salvation, tell me: How long will evil have its way?….” (Sheltering Mercy, by Ryan Whitaker Smith and Dan Wilt: Psalm 52). Part 2 Slowly read from Psalm 52 (The Message) out loud: (for an audio version click here) 1-4 Why do you brag of evil, “Big Man”? God’s mercy carries the day. You scheme catastrophe; your tongue cuts razor-sharp, artisan in lies. You love evil more than good, you call black white. You love malicious gossip, you foul-mouth. 5 God will tear you limb from limb, sweep you up and throw you out, Pull you up by the roots from the land of life. 6-7 Good people will watch and worship. They’ll laugh in relief: “Big Man bet on the wrong horse, trusted in big money, made his living from catastrophe.” 8 And I’m an olive tree, growing green in God’s house. I trusted in the generous mercy of God then and now. 9 I thank you always that you went into action. And I’ll stay right here, your good name my hope, in company with your faithful friends. Part 3 Pray your own lament psalm- for yourself, or on behalf of someone who is suffering in your world. Describe the trouble in detail to God. Express your honest emotions: "Lord, I am feeling sad about…; "… angry…; “… afraid… Bring him your honest questions: "Lord, why….?; "How long, Lord, before you…?; "Where are you in…? Make your plea to God: "Please, Lord…; "Remember back when you…; Do it again, Lord!” The psalms were originally written as lyrics, as prayers set to music. Throughout the history of Israel and the church, the people of God have sung the psalms. Song invites us to internalize the Word of God with the whole self- body, mind, imagination, emotions and affections. Take time to listen to a version of Psalm 52 set to music. Try taking the psalm song with you into your day. from the album ‘Come to Me’ (2018) by Wendell Kimbrough. wendellk.com
Author: 
role: 
Primary Author
Author: 
Paul Dugan
Content Type: 
Key Scriptures: 
Psalm 52
Mentioned Scriptures: 
Psalm 46:10-11
This sermon-related resource is based on a topic. I have selected the correct topic from the topic tags.: 
Non English Resource: 
Local Page: 
Local Image: