Psalms 20:1-9

1 The LORD hear thee in the day of trouble; the name of the God of Jacob defenda thee;

2 Send thee helpb from the sanctuary, and strengthen thee out of Zion;

3 Remember all thy offerings, and acceptc thy burnt sacrifice; Selah.

4 Grant thee according to thine own heart, and fulfil all thy counsel.

5 We will rejoice in thy salvation, and in the name of our God we will set up our banners: the LORD fulfil all thy petitions.

6 Now know I that the LORD saveth his anointed; he will hear him from his holyd heaven with the saving strength of his right hand.

7 Some trust in chariots, and some in horses: but we will remember the name of the LORD our God.

8 They are brought down and fallen: but we are risen, and stand upright.

9 Save, LORD: let the king hear us when we call.

Psalms 1:41

Gordon Churchyard

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War

Psalms 20

Gordon Churchyard

Jesus said, "We are going to Jerusalem. There they will kill the son of man. But 3 days later he will come to life again". (Matthew 20: 18,19) The son of man was a name that Jesus used for himself.

Psalms 20

(This is) a Psalm of David for the music leader

v1 - v3 We are praying that:
• the LORD will answer you when trouble comes
• the name of the God of Jacob will make you safe
• God will send you help from his holy place
• he will make you strong from Zion
• God will remember all your gifts
• he will like all your *burnt offerings SELAH

v4 We want God to give you all that you really want
to make all your plans work well

v5 We will shout for joy when you win the war.
We will lift up our *banners in the name of our God.
We want the LORD to answer all that you pray.

v6 Now I know that the LORD will save his king.
God will answer him from his holy heaven.
The right hand of God will save the king.

v7 Some people *rely on *chariots. Others *rely on horses.
But we will trust in the name of the LORD our God.

v8 They will *falter and fall.
But we will get up and remain strong.

v9 Lord, save the king!
Answer us when we pray.

The story of Psalms 20 and 21

In Psalms 20, the king and his army are going to war. In verses 1-5, the people pray for them. In verses 6-8, the king says that he believes that he will win as God will give him help. Then the people will say, 'LORD, save the king'. This probably happened in Jerusalem every time that there was a war. It started with David, but other kings after him did it. In Psalms 21, the king and his army come back. They have won the war, so they thanked God. Psalms 21:8-12 is what God will do to his enemies.

What Psalms 20 and 21 mean

Psalms 20:1–5: "Trouble" here means "war". "Jacob" means the "Jews". God is everywhere, in heaven and earth. The Jews prayed to him on a hill in Jerusalem. They called it Zion. Later they built their temple there. "He will make you strong from Zion", means "God will give you the help that you ask for". They also gave God their offerings on the hill Zion

Psalms 20:6–9: The right hand of God here means what God does on earth. Modern armies use guns and planes, not chariots and horses. Christians are like David: they trust in the LORD. "Move the king" (verse 7) means "make the king trust another god". Psalms 21:1–7: The king came back to Jerusalem. He had won the war. So the King and the people are happy. They can now live in peace.

Psalms 21:8–13: War is very bad for everyone. This is one picture of it. There are many more in the Bible. It says: that God will find all his enemies. He will also punish them (Punish means hurt). There is no peace for these people. People think of God as being high above them.

Something to do

You will often hear about wars. Pray about them. Ask God to give help to the people that believe in him. If both armies believe in God, ask God:

• to speak to both groups

• to make peace happen

• to save people so that he does not punish them


burnt offerings ~ animals that they killed and burned: this is how they offered them to God
banners ~ a long piece of material with words or pictures on it
rely ~ another word for trust
chariot ~ a car that soldiers used to use; horses pulled it
falter ~ walk badly and perhaps fall over
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