“The Heavens Declare the Glory of God”
Psalm 19:1-14
Teach the Text
by C. Hassell Bullock

Big Idea: We see God’s ubiquitous revelation in the world he created and his unique revelation in the Torah.

Understanding the Text

Mays has made a convincing case for the pairing of the Torah psalms (Pss. 1 and 2; 18 and 19; 118 and 119)[1] in order to pre­sent the eschatological kingdom of God, which will come in the context and through the instrumentality of Torah piety.[2] In the case of Psalm 18, David’s deliverance from Saul is a foreshadowing of future salvation. Psalms 18 and 19 both give a picture of God’s appearance, Psalm 18 in terms of the exodus and Sinai (18:7–15), and Psalm 19 in terms of the heavens’ declaration of God’s glory (19:1–6) and the Torah’s enlightenment (19:7–11).[3]

When one should have expected the Lord to speak from his heavenly temple in 18:6b, David gave…

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