Psalm 70 & 71 – Preparation for Old Age

Have you ever stopped and wondered what old age is going to look like for you?

Some people are closer to it than others, of course. But even if you feel decades away, Psalm 70 and Psalm 71 press the same question into every generation: Are you preparing to live faithfully when your strength fades?

These psalms are not vague religious poetry meant for “later.” They are the prayers of a man facing real danger, real enemies, real weakness, and still trying to worship with integrity. And that makes them surprisingly practical. They teach how to respond when life gets harder, not just how to feel spiritual when life is comfortable.

Psalm 70 and 71: Preparation for Old Age Through Prayer, Worship, and Purpose

Have you ever stopped and wondered what old age is going to look like for you?

Some people are closer to it than others, of course. But even if you feel decades away, Psalm 70 and Psalm 71 press the same question into every generation: Are you preparing to live faithfully when your strength fades?

These psalms are not vague religious poetry meant for “later.” They are the prayers of a man facing real danger, real enemies, real weakness, and still trying to worship with integrity. And that makes them surprisingly practical. They teach how to respond when life gets harder, not just how to feel spiritual when life is comfortable.

Psalm 69:1-36 – Lessons From Suffering

Psalm 69 is kept in Scripture not as antiquarian reading but as practical instruction for how God’s people are to live through seasons of pain, rejection, and trial. Read two ways, it teaches two things at once: how suffering shapes a faithful soul (think David) and how suffering saves the world (think Jesus). Both perspectives are meant to form us—our prayers, our patience, our zeal, and our posture before God and our neighbors

Psalms 69 – Lessons from Suffering

Psalm 69 is kept in Scripture not as antiquarian reading but as practical instruction for how God’s people are to live through seasons of pain, rejection, and trial. Read two ways, it teaches two things at once: how suffering shapes a faithful soul (think David) and how suffering saves the world (think Jesus). Both perspectives are meant to form us—our prayers, our patience, our zeal, and our posture before God and our neighbors.

Psalm 68 — The Victory of the Ascended King

Introduction: Why this psalm still matters Psalm 68 is not a gentle hymn about personal comfort. It is a battle song and a coronation hymn. It celebrates a God who scatters his enemies, gathers his people, and installs his king in triumph. Read as prophecy, it points beyond the ark and the tabernacle to the…