Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Now Available: ‘Psalms I’ by Frans van Deursen
Now Available: ‘Psalms I’ by Frans van Deursen
Mar 12, 2026 10:38 PM

Christian’s Library Press has now releasedPsalms I, the fourth primer in itsOpening the Scripturesseries, and the first in a two-part release on the book of Psalms.

Written by Dutch Reformed minister Frans van Deursen, and newly translated by Nelson D. Kloosterman, the volume provides an introduction to Psalms, a book which serves as“the oldest songbook that God’s people possess,” as well as the “oldest breviary or prayer book,” the authorwrites.

Like other volumes in the series, Psalms I is neither a mentary nor a collection of sermons, but rather an accessible primer for the average churchgoer. In this case, the authorhopes we learn lessons on both theory on practice when es to the great tasks of honor and worship, prayer and praise.

The book includes a good deal of theological and historical set-up on how we are to understand the Psalms as a whole, proceeding to provide more detailed summaries and analyses on the deeper meaning and Biblical context of the individual psalms themselves.

On the former, here’s an excerpt on how we might understand these works in the context of world religions at the time, and the Biblical story as a whole. In turn, it says quite a bit abouthow we still relate to God across all spheres of worship in the here and now.

In terms of their content, there is a bottomless chasm between the psalms of Israel and those of the pagans. For all pagan religions (and, under their influence, all self-directed Christian religion as well) turn on the question, how do I obtain a good relationship with God? On the other hand, we see from every line of the psalms that we already have a covenant relationship with God, and an extraordinarily good and firm relationship. Israel not only already possessed promises of blessing from that relationship, but she also stood under the serious curse formulations… What the pagans needed to do continually, and Israel never needed to do, was to put God (or the gods) in a good frame of mind by means of their religious practices, as for example the Canaanite priests of Baal tried at Mount Carmel to get the attention of their master (the name Baal means “lord” or “master”) by means of endless screaming and by cutting themselves with knives (1 Kgs. 18). But the psalmists could appeal to God on the basis of his own self-supplied Word, namely, the Torah given to Moses.

Israel and her posers enjoyed a unique position with respect to the Almighty: they lived on the foundation of Yahweh’s system of covenants. God’s kingship and the ministry of atonement at his altars constituted the supporting pillars beneath Israelite society. All the psalms were born and raised on this foundation. They were sung under the rainbow of God’s covenants. We might say that God’s kingship over Israel and his dwelling in the midst of Israel constituted the atmosphere in which the psalmists breathed and the climate in which they lived, the bedrock upon which they were placed. In short, the psalms are covenant songs through and through.

Purchase the bookhereand add it on Goodreadshere.Also, see the other titles intheOpening the Scripturesseries.

For updates on new titles and promotions from Christian’s Library Press, follow us onFacebookandTwitterand subscribe to themailing list.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
More on Romania and Human Trafficking
PowerBlog readers will have noticed a strong, and from my point of view justified, negative reaction here to Elise Hilton’s Aug. 11 post titled, “The Lost Girls of Romania: A Nation of Sex Trafficking.” Commenters referred to the post as offensive and poorly researched. As editor with overall responsibility for the PowerBlog, I want to address the ments we’ve received that take issue with Hilton’s characterization of Romania and Romanian women. Before we go any further, I want to note...
Video: Timothy P. Carney On The Threat To Liberty From Big Business
We’ve had our busiest Acton Lecture Series in institute history over the course of the first six months of 2015 – we’ve had more public events at the Acton Building in that period of time than we had all of last year, I believe; I’d venture to say that 2015 is already the busiest year in that regard in the 25-year history of the Acton Institute. We’ve had a bit of a pause in the events schedule over the summer,...
FLOW Gift Pack: Now Available on RightNow Media
The Acton Institute’s latest film series,For the Life of the World: Letters to the Exiles, was created to help Christians dig deeper into and examine the bigger picture of Christianity’s role in culture, society, and the world. The series is well suited to a variety of settings, whether a college classroom, small group, or church setting. To promote these types of explorations and exchanges, a special Gift Pack version of the series is now available via RightNow Media, an online...
Audio: Samuel Gregg on Religious and Economic Liberty
Acton’s Director of Research Samuel Gregg made an appearance over the weekend on the Real Clear Radio Hour with Bill Frezza to discuss the relationship between economic and religious liberty, and the role that a Christian worldview plays in building thetype of world that prefigures the Christian idea of the next life. The interview runs for 25 minutes, and you can listen to it via the audio player below. ...
Almost Half of American Voters Would Vote for a Socialist President
Earlier this summer a Gallup surveyasked respondents to answer the following question: Between now and the 2016 political conventions, there will be discussion about the qualifications of presidential candidates—their education, age, religion, race, and so on. If your party nominated a generally well-qualified person for president who happened to be _______________, would you vote for that person? The survey provided some interesting findings, such as25 percent of Americans would not vote for an evangelical Christian. In contrast, fewer people said...
Amazon and the ‘All Jobs Delusion’
In the movie Annie Hall, Alvy Singer (Woody Allen) tells an old joke about two elderly women having dinner at a Catskill mountain resort. One of them says, “Boy, the food at this place is really terrible.” The other one says, “Yeah, I know; and such small portions.” Alvy says that’s essentially how he feels about life: it’s full of loneliness, and misery, and suffering, and unhappiness, and it’s all over much too quickly. Many people seem to have a...
The Not So New Russian Orthodox Banking System
The Orthodox Church in Russia has proposed a banking model that corrects what it sees as the most serious of that global banking industry’s moral failings, says Rev. Gregory Jensen in this week’s Acton Commentary.However the system the Church purposes is unlikely to foster economic growth. It also overlooks the convergence of the free market with key elements of the Orthodox moral tradition. Banks require varying amounts of collateral from and charge different interest rates to different customers. Yes, the...
Whitney Ball — A Remarkable Woman
Whitney BallThe freedom movement lost a champion today. Whitney Ball, president and CEO of DonorsTrust, died last night after a long and courageous fight with cancer. Whitney was a dear friend of more than two decades, and one with whom I shared both a passion for liberty and the Christian faith. She was indefatigable in the pursuit of both passions. DonorsTrust, which she has shepherded for most of its history, has been and will continue to be a bulwark of...
Matt Ridley vs. Environmentalist Cassandras
Highly mended reading es from Matt Ridley in the Wall Street Journal. His essay, “The Green Scare Problem,” rebuts environmentalist Cassandras from Rachel Carson to the present day, exposing the rampant hyperbole ecological warriors employ to sell their global warming and anti-genetically modified organism policies to an unsuspecting public. Ridley goes even further to show how these policies harm the world’s poorest. Ridley begins by quoting President Obama, who reduces the opposition of his climate-change agenda as nothing more than...
Giveaway: Win All 3 Books from Kuyper’s ‘Common Grace, Vol. 1’
Christian’s Library Press has released Volume 1 of its English translations of Abraham Kuyper’s most famous work, Common Grace, which is made up of 3 books (Noah-Adam, Temptation-Babel, Abraham-Parousia). The books are part of a larger translation project that you can read about here. The work presents a public theology of cultural engagement rooted in the humanity Christians share with the rest of the world, making it an extremely valuable resource for Christians seekingtodevelopa winsome and constructive social witness. The...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved