
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


📖 Psalm 118:22–27
As we begin He Who Promised is Faithful, our Holy Week devotional series, we start with Psalm 118—a psalm of thanksgiving and salvation, declaring God's covenant love and surprising, sovereign work. This passage, sung at Passover, anticipated the rejected becoming the foundation of God’s new work.
In this episode, we explore:✔️ How “the stone the builders rejected” became a cornerstone through Jesus
✔️ The meaning behind the crowd’s cry, “Hosanna! Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord!”
✔️ Jesus as both the King who enters and the sacrifice who saves
Jesus wasn’t merely leading a sacrifice to the altar—He was the sacrifice. And because the cornerstone has been set, we can stand firm and cry out with confidence, “Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord!”
🕊 “He is the stone that the builders rejected, who has become the cornerstone.” —Psalm 118:22
---
You can find the written version, complete with cross-references and links, here.
By Keith Harris5
22 ratings
📖 Psalm 118:22–27
As we begin He Who Promised is Faithful, our Holy Week devotional series, we start with Psalm 118—a psalm of thanksgiving and salvation, declaring God's covenant love and surprising, sovereign work. This passage, sung at Passover, anticipated the rejected becoming the foundation of God’s new work.
In this episode, we explore:✔️ How “the stone the builders rejected” became a cornerstone through Jesus
✔️ The meaning behind the crowd’s cry, “Hosanna! Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord!”
✔️ Jesus as both the King who enters and the sacrifice who saves
Jesus wasn’t merely leading a sacrifice to the altar—He was the sacrifice. And because the cornerstone has been set, we can stand firm and cry out with confidence, “Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord!”
🕊 “He is the stone that the builders rejected, who has become the cornerstone.” —Psalm 118:22
---
You can find the written version, complete with cross-references and links, here.