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Interestingly and ironically, the word meditation has come to connote specific bodily postures, soft music, and mental blankness. This connotation is the opposite of the word’s denotation, which is not the absence of mental activity, but its presence. This sermon is a meditation on the meditations that the Lord invites us to in this great Psalm. It rises to a meditation on the Lord being our rock and redeemer.
By Jonathan Bourman4.8
1818 ratings
Interestingly and ironically, the word meditation has come to connote specific bodily postures, soft music, and mental blankness. This connotation is the opposite of the word’s denotation, which is not the absence of mental activity, but its presence. This sermon is a meditation on the meditations that the Lord invites us to in this great Psalm. It rises to a meditation on the Lord being our rock and redeemer.