Psalm 91, which tells of God making us a refuge and fortress, and His prayers for our protection.
Psalms, also translated as "Psalms". A volume of the Hebrew Bible. The largest collection of hymns in the Bible. It contains 150 psalms, all written in Hebrew.
Or it may be divided into 5 volumes in order to correspond to the "Pentateuch of Moses" (in order, Chapters 1 to 41, 42 to 72, 73 to 89, 90 to 106, and 107 to 150 ). According to the titles of some chapters, about 100 of them are from famous figures such as David and Solomon. Some scholars believe that most of the chapters were actually written after David and Solomon, and were first compiled into several small collections of poems.
The entire volume was finalized in the 2nd century BC, and became the Jewish canon around that time. It can be divided into instructional poems, hymns, prayer poems, epic poems, curse poems, prayer poems, pilgrim poems, legal poems, confessional poems, messianic poems, etc. The basic theme is to praise God and express the poet's various encounters. Invoking, praying, hoping, repenting and praising God.
Most of the chapters were originally used in temple worship ceremonies and could be sung with music. The titles of some poems indicate the tunes or instruments used.
Psalms, a book of the Old Testament. Catholic Bible translation of the Psalms. Its Hebrew title means "songs of praise". "Septuagint" was changed to "Collection of Poems". The title of both the Latin translation and the English translation comes from the Greek word psalmi. "Psalms" is the name of the Chinese translation.