Faithful God (1 of 8)
Series: Psalms that Sing
Brad Whitt
Psalm 89
Now, would you take your Bibles now this morning and turn with me, on this Memorial day weekend, Sunday morning, to the very center of your Bible, what somebody has referred to as the hymn book in the middle of His Book, and this morning we're kicking off a brand new study for the summer of 2019 that I'm entitling ''Psalms that Sing.'' Over the next couple of months on Sunday mornings here at Abilene, we're going to be digging into and really dealing with some of the subjects and the situations, some of the issues and the interests, some of the truths and troubles that affect and impact our lives and families. Now, you know as much as I do that there's no way that we can cover all or even a majority of the Psalms over the next couple of Sunday mornings, the next month or two, and we're really not even going to try and take them in any particular order.
I'm going to pray, and we're going to pick out a Psalm to study each Sunday morning, and then we're going to trust the Holy Spirit to take it and apply it to our hearts and our lives. The reason why I have picked this subject and given it the title that I have is because there is something; would you agree with this? There's something undeniably powerful about music and songs. It really is amazing. I told the early service that it really is amazing what song and music can do. Music can bring people together. Brother John and I were talking in between services. I mentioned it in the earlier service that some time during World War One, right around Christmas, the enemies stopped fighting, on the front there in Europe and started singing songs together. Music has the potential and the power to bring people together.
It can perform wonders in our physical body, take care of depression and all other sorts of things. Music - we know this - can sooth the savage beast. We've heard that all of our lives. Music can teach truths that stick strong a ...
Series: Psalms that Sing
Brad Whitt
Psalm 89
Now, would you take your Bibles now this morning and turn with me, on this Memorial day weekend, Sunday morning, to the very center of your Bible, what somebody has referred to as the hymn book in the middle of His Book, and this morning we're kicking off a brand new study for the summer of 2019 that I'm entitling ''Psalms that Sing.'' Over the next couple of months on Sunday mornings here at Abilene, we're going to be digging into and really dealing with some of the subjects and the situations, some of the issues and the interests, some of the truths and troubles that affect and impact our lives and families. Now, you know as much as I do that there's no way that we can cover all or even a majority of the Psalms over the next couple of Sunday mornings, the next month or two, and we're really not even going to try and take them in any particular order.
I'm going to pray, and we're going to pick out a Psalm to study each Sunday morning, and then we're going to trust the Holy Spirit to take it and apply it to our hearts and our lives. The reason why I have picked this subject and given it the title that I have is because there is something; would you agree with this? There's something undeniably powerful about music and songs. It really is amazing. I told the early service that it really is amazing what song and music can do. Music can bring people together. Brother John and I were talking in between services. I mentioned it in the earlier service that some time during World War One, right around Christmas, the enemies stopped fighting, on the front there in Europe and started singing songs together. Music has the potential and the power to bring people together.
It can perform wonders in our physical body, take care of depression and all other sorts of things. Music - we know this - can sooth the savage beast. We've heard that all of our lives. Music can teach truths that stick strong a ...
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