Psalm 30:1-12 · Psalm 30
“His Anger Lasts Only a Moment, but His Favor Lasts a Lifetime”
Psalm 30:1-12
Teach the Text
by C. Hassell Bullock
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Big Idea: Life’s pendulum swings from sorrow to joy, and faith’s lintel is inscribed with “weeping may stay for the night, but rejoicing comes in the morning” (30:5).

Understanding the Text

Like other psalms that straddle two or more genres, Psalm 30 is sometimes classified as an individual psalm of thanksgiving, or, as Kraus advocates, a prayer song of the sick (30:1–3, 8–9).[1] The more traditional form-critical classification is an individual psalm of lament (it contains complaints against God [30:5a, 7] and against enemies [30:1c]),[2] which also borders on an individual psalm of trust, since the element of trust is so pervasive.[3] The psalmist laments the divine anger he has experienced (30:5, 7), perhaps looking back over a lifetime, and celebrates God’s deliverance (30:11–12).[4]…

Baker Publishing Group, Teaching the Text, by C. Hassell Bullock