Skip to content
Category

Psalms

page 3
penitential psalm
psalm expressive of sorrow for sin
Psalm 134
psalm
Psalm 58
psalm
Psalm 113
Book of the Bible
Psalm 59
psalm
Psalm 36
Book of Psalms, chapter 36 (total:12)
Psalm 143
psalm
Psalm 75
psalm
Psalm 63
psalm
Psalm 79
psalm
Psalm 49
psalm
Psalm 66
psalm
Psalm 57
psalm
Psalm 132
psalm
Psalm 61
psalm
Psalm 70
psalm
Psalm 78
piece in the biblical Book of Psalms
Psalm 139
piece in the biblical Book of Psalms
Psalm 88
psalm
Psalm 93
piece in the biblical Book of Psalms
Psalm 124
psalm
Psalm 73
Book of Psalms, chapter 73
Psalm 125
psalm
Psalm 94
psalm
Psalm 123
psalm
Psalm 77
psalm
Psalm 65
psalm
Psalm 138
psalm
Psalm 144
Book of Psalms chapter 144
Psalm 81
psalm
Psalm 101
psalm warning the wicked, numbered the 101st in the Masoretic Text but 100th in the Septuagint and the Vulgate
Psalm 140
psalm
Psalm 106
piece in the biblical Book of Psalms
Psalm 64
psalm
Psalm 135
psalm
Psalm 99
psalm
Psalm 74
part of the Biblical Book of Psalms
Psalm 71
psalm
Psalm 107
piece in the biblical Book of Psalms
Psalm 85
psalm
Psalm 108
psalm
Psalm 115
psalm
Psalm 116
psalm
Psalm 86
psalm
Invitatory
thumb|right|500px|Invitatory of the 4th tone (transcribed from Worcester antiphonary, 13th century) The invitatory (Latin: invitatorium; also invitatory psalm) is the psalm used to start certain daily prayer offices in Catholic and Anglican traditions. Most often it is Psalm 94(95), also known as the Venite. The term derives from Medieval Latin invītātōrium, derived from invītāre, "to invite."
The Great Psalms Scroll
Dead Sea Scrolls manuscript of the Psalms
Shedim
thumb|The sheyd Asmodeus|Ashmodai () in birdlike form, with typical rooster feet, as depicted in Compendium rarissimum totius Artis Magicae, 1775 thumb|Child sacrifice to the sheyd Molekh (), showing the typical depiction of the Ammonite deity Moloch of the [[Old Testament in medieval and modern sources (illustration by Charles Foster for Bible Pictures and What They Teach Us, 1897)]]
Nephesh
Nephesh (), also spelled nefesh, is a term in the Hebrew Bible used to refer to the aspects of sentience, and human beings and other animals are both described as being nephesh. Not all living organisms are referred to as "nefesh": arthropods ("bugs") and plants, for example, are not described in the Hebrew Bible as nephesh. The English corresponding term to nephesh is the Christian term "soul," which has very similar connotations, and is customarily used to translate it.
40
original song written, composed, and performed by U2
Midrash Tehillim
haggadic midrash; the extant edition covers Psalms 1–118
Psalms of Asaph
12 psalms (Psalms 50, 73–83 in the Masoretic) attributed to ‘Asaph’; speculated to be a collection from the Asaphites (temple singers) or in the style or tradition of a guild named after Asaph
royal psalm
Biblical psalm that deals with the spiritual role of kings in the worship of Yahweh
A solis ortu usque ad occasum
Latin motto meaning from sunrise to sunset.
Papyrus Vindobonensis Greek 39777
fragment of a Greek manuscript
Tikkun HaKlali
Selection of chapters of Psalms selected by Rebbi Nachman of Bratslav
exclusive psalmody
practice of singing only the biblical Psalms in congregational singing as worship
Like sheep to the slaughter
a proverb regarding the jewish holocaust