1,315 studies · 62 books of the Bible · 120 topics · 23 series.

The Psalms are not merely songs about God—they are God’s Word given to be sung. When Scripture calls the church to sing psalms, it is calling God’s people to lift inspired words back to their Author. The Psalms occupy a unique place in biblical worship because they are both divine revelation and human response. They […]

God did not design worship songs merely to express belief—He designed them to form it. From the earliest pages of Scripture to the worship of the New Testament church, singing is consistently presented as a means of instruction. Songs teach doctrine, shape worldview, and transmit faith from one generation to the next. In God’s design, […]

God does not merely invite His people to sing—He commands it. Throughout Scripture, singing is not presented as a personality preference, a cultural expression, or an optional part of worship. It is repeatedly issued as a divine command. This raises an important question: Why would God command something as personal and expressive as song? The […]

The Bible reveals that worship did not begin on earth—and it will not end here. Before human voices were lifted in praise, heaven already resounded with song. Scripture consistently portrays worship as the native language of eternity, and earthly worship as an echo of a greater, ongoing chorus. When the church sings, it is not […]

Worship begins with breath—and ends in praise. The final psalm of Scripture does not conclude with instruction, lament, or petition. It ends with a sweeping command that gathers every living creature into a single, Godward act: “Let everything that has breath praise the LORD! Praise the LORD!” Psalm 150:6 (ESV) Before there was a song […]