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09/11/2025 - Jody Destry
The Psalms are the prayer book of God’s people — songs and prayers that give voice to every human emotion: joy, grief, hope, fear, longing, courage, anger, and love.
They teach us how to bring all of life before God — not just the polished parts.
They become both a mirror for the soul and a map for the heart, guiding us toward honesty, healing, and hope.
Psalm 42:7–8
Deep calls to deep in the roar of your waterfalls;
all your waves and breakers have swept over me.
By day the Lord directs his love,
at night his song is with me.
Before the rush of Christmas, the Psalms invite us to slow down, pay attention to what’s stirring beneath the surface, and let God meet us there.
Psalms of Celebration:
Key Passage – Psalm 100
Sometimes our spiritual lives feel “locked.” We try to log in with the wrong passwords —
performance, perfection, panic, or impatience — but the true password into God’s presence is gratitude.
Psalm 100:4–5
*Enter his gates with thanksgiving and his courts with praise;
give thanks to him and praise his name.
For the Lord is good and his love endures forever;
his faithfulness continues through all generations.
Gratitude is not a feeling; it’s a choice.
We don’t wait to *feel* thankful — we *enter* with thanksgiving, even in hardship.
Celebration doesn’t deny pain; it declares God’s goodness in the middle of it.
When we forget what God has done, gratitude fades.
But when we remember, joy rises.
Psalm 103:1–5
Sometimes we have to talk to our own souls – remind ourselves of what’s true until faith awakens again.
“Gratitude is not always spontaneous — sometimes we must command our souls to remember.” — Walter Brueggemann
Praise shifts the atmosphere — it renews hearts and transforms spaces.
Psalm 40:1–3
Psalm 30:11–12
Before renewal is seen in the world, it is sung in the hearts of God’s people.
Our gratitude becomes a testimony — our praise invites others into hope.
Reflection Questions
By Discovery Church09/11/2025 - Jody Destry
The Psalms are the prayer book of God’s people — songs and prayers that give voice to every human emotion: joy, grief, hope, fear, longing, courage, anger, and love.
They teach us how to bring all of life before God — not just the polished parts.
They become both a mirror for the soul and a map for the heart, guiding us toward honesty, healing, and hope.
Psalm 42:7–8
Deep calls to deep in the roar of your waterfalls;
all your waves and breakers have swept over me.
By day the Lord directs his love,
at night his song is with me.
Before the rush of Christmas, the Psalms invite us to slow down, pay attention to what’s stirring beneath the surface, and let God meet us there.
Psalms of Celebration:
Key Passage – Psalm 100
Sometimes our spiritual lives feel “locked.” We try to log in with the wrong passwords —
performance, perfection, panic, or impatience — but the true password into God’s presence is gratitude.
Psalm 100:4–5
*Enter his gates with thanksgiving and his courts with praise;
give thanks to him and praise his name.
For the Lord is good and his love endures forever;
his faithfulness continues through all generations.
Gratitude is not a feeling; it’s a choice.
We don’t wait to *feel* thankful — we *enter* with thanksgiving, even in hardship.
Celebration doesn’t deny pain; it declares God’s goodness in the middle of it.
When we forget what God has done, gratitude fades.
But when we remember, joy rises.
Psalm 103:1–5
Sometimes we have to talk to our own souls – remind ourselves of what’s true until faith awakens again.
“Gratitude is not always spontaneous — sometimes we must command our souls to remember.” — Walter Brueggemann
Praise shifts the atmosphere — it renews hearts and transforms spaces.
Psalm 40:1–3
Psalm 30:11–12
Before renewal is seen in the world, it is sung in the hearts of God’s people.
Our gratitude becomes a testimony — our praise invites others into hope.
Reflection Questions

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