Sunday, July 12, 2026

The Poetry of Psalm 23

             Of the 150 psalms in the Bible, Psalm 23 is surely the most well-known. My guess is that most of our church members can recite it by heart and name several songs based on these famous words. This psalm also happens to be the theme of this week’s VBS program at our church. Sometimes we can become so familiar with something that we are in danger of not letting it amaze us as it should. My prayer for this week, as well as for this blog post, is that we would feel the beauty of the truth of this psalm in a fresh way.

Psalm 23, like all of the psalms, is actually a poem, or a song. The beauty of poetry is in its unique way of communicating a message. Well-known British poet of the 19th century, Percy Bysshe Shelley, wrote the following about poetry: “It awakens and enlarges the mind itself by rendering it the receptacle of a thousand unapprehended combinations of thought. Poetry lifts the veil from the hidden beauty of the world, and makes familiar objects be as if they were not familiar.” Did you catch that? Poetry makes that which seems familiar sound unfamiliar so that we can see it in a new light.

If we took the poetry out of this psalm, we could say something like this: God cares for us and provides for our needs. He brings refreshment to our souls and leads us according to His law. Even when we go through difficult times in our lives, we do not need to be afraid because He is with us, guiding and comforting us. God brings great blessings to our lives; his goodness and mercy will always be with us. One day we’ll be in heaven with Him forever.

Aren’t those incredible truths? Praise God for doing all these things for us! David could have listed those truths out in prose like that, but instead He chose the metaphor of shepherd and sheep and included the image of a banquet table to paint a beautiful picture of these truths about God. Familiar concepts are shared in unfamiliar ways, and we see things in a new light and often with greater understanding.

I hope you take some time to read through this well-known psalm again this week. Think deeply about the word choices David made (inspired by the Holy Spirit) and what they mean for your spiritual journey. And pray for the VBS kids and workers that we, too, would grow to love and trust our Shepherd more as a result of this week.

-- Amy O'Rear

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