
Praying the Psalms Pt. 1
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Narrated by:
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Dr. Bill Creasy
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By:
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Dr. Bill Creasy
About this listen
Seventy-three of the 150 psalms are traditionally ascribed to David. As we read the "Davidic Psalms," we see deeply into David's heart as he struggles with God, with others and with himself. These psalms are deeply moving and often, brutally honest.
©2014 William C. Creasy (P)2013 William C. CreasyListeners also enjoyed...
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Editorial reviews
Dr. Bill Creasy of Logos Bible Study uses a literary, historical approach to examine and enliven the bible for modern listeners. Dr. Creasy draws on his studies, travels, and personal anecdotes to vividly depict the works of scripture. He speaks in a pleasant, friendly voice but with authority, frequently incorporating contemporary references. The programs are a lively combination of a sermon and college lecture.
In this episode, Dr. Creasy discusses Praying the Psalms Pt. 1.
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Story
Titus is classified among Paul’s letters, but I put it in this lesson before turning to the General Epistles. The General Epistles are all those correspondences written by anyone other than Paul: Hebrews, once attributed to Paul, is now attributed to an anonymous author, someone in Paul’s inner circle; James is attributed to “James, the Lord’s brother” and the leader of the church in Jerusalem (Galatians 1: 19); 1 & 2 Peter are attributed to the Apostle Peter; 1,2,3 John are attributed to the Apostle John; and Jude is attributed to Jude, another of the Lord’s brothers (Matthew 13: 55).
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Relatable Teaching Style
- By Elle Flores on 12-29-24
By: Dr. Bill Creasy
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Left Behind, Part 1 (Esther 1: 1-4: 17)
- By: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Narrated by: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Length: 51 mins
- Original Recording
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When Cyrus the Great king of Persia allows the Jews to return home and rebuild Jerusalem, only 42,360 do (Ezra 2: 64), about 10% of the population. The rest stay behind in Assyria, Babylon and Persia. After all, it had been nearly 200 years since the Northern kingdom had been taken captive into Assyria and almost 70 years since the Southern kingdom had been taken captive to Babylon. The Jews had built homes, started businesses and settled into their new lives.
By: Dr. Bill Creasy
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One Year Bible
- By: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Narrated by: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Length: 62 hrs and 54 mins
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Study through the entire Bible, Genesis through Revelation, in one year! This "flagship" Logos course grew out of Dr. Creasy's year-long UCLA program, "The English Bible as Literature." One of the most highly rated courses on campus, "The English Bible as Literature" placed Dr. Creasy among the top 2% of UCLA teaching faculty for over 20 years!
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The Ultimate 60hr Bible Study Course!
- By PutNameHere on 02-09-16
By: Dr. Bill Creasy
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The Thundering Prophet, "Judgement" (Isaiah 1: 1-35: 10)
- By: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Narrated by: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Length: 40 mins
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From a literary perspective, Isaiah may be divided into three parts: 1) Part 1 (chapters 1-35) is written in dramatic form, and its theme is judgment; 2) Part 2 (chapters 36-39) is written in narrative form, and it serves as an historical interlude; and Part 3 (chapters 40-66) is written in poetic form and its theme is grace. In Part 1, we encounter a courtroom scene in which God sits as judge—with Israel in the defendant’s seat—as witnesses come forth and accuse Israel of sin and unfaithfulness: The verdict, guilty; the punishment, exile.
By: Dr. Bill Creasy
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Letters from Corinth (1 & 2 Thessalonians, Galatians)
- By: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Narrated by: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Length: 44 mins
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While Paul is in Corinth, A.D. 50 – 52, he writes three epistles, two to the church in Thessalonica and one to the churches in Galatia. Paul spends only “three Sabbath days” in Thessalonica (Acts 17: 2) and he encounters such opposition that “as soon as it was night, the brothers sent Paul and Silas away to Berea” (Acts 17: 16), lest they be stoned.
By: Dr. Bill Creasy
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The Weeping Prophet (Jeremiah 1: 1-52: 34)
- By: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Narrated by: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Length: 54 mins
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If Isaiah is the Thundering Prophet, Jeremiah is the Weeping Prophet. Called to be a prophet in the thirteenth year of King Josiah (626 B.C.), Jeremiah serves through the Babylonian conquest of Jerusalem (586 B.C.). Jeremiah is one of the few prophets who is both a priest and a prophet, an unenviable—and untenable—position, much like a lawyer representing both parties in a particularly nasty divorce! Jeremiah did not want to be a prophet; he tries to quit on several occasions; and he regularly weeps over the message God has given him.
By: Dr. Bill Creasy
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The "Prison" Epistles (Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, Philemon)
- By: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Narrated by: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Length: 50 mins
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When Paul is arrested in Jerusalem in late A.D. 57, it plunges Paul into a legal morass that sees him held under protective custody in Caesarea for nearly two years, transported to Rome for his legal appeal, and two more years waiting in Rome for his court hearing. Altogether, Paul is sidelined for nearly five years, A.D. 58 – 62. It is important to understand that Paul is not a prisoner at this time: He is a Roman citizen, first arrested for inciting a riot, but quickly put under protective custody and sent to Rome for a legal appeal that he initiates.
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Always the best
- By Rick E. Norris, Author on 05-31-22
By: Dr. Bill Creasy
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The Minor Prophets Pt. 1 (Hosea-Jonah)
- By: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Narrated by: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Length: 53 mins
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The Minor Prophets are minor because they are shorter in length than the Major Prophets, not because they are less important: Isaiah is 66 chapters long; Obadiah is 1 chapter. All of the Minor Prophets write during the time of the kings, 1050 – 586 B.C., or after the return from Babylonian Captivity, 539 – 430 B.C. Most tell us when they are active. Hosea, for example, begins: “The word of the Lord that came to Hosea son of Beeri during the reigns of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz and Hezekiah, kings of Judah…” (Hosea 1: 1).
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Definitely not fair!
- By cta on 05-13-23
By: Dr. Bill Creasy
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Genesis
- By: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Narrated by: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Length: 14 hrs and 45 mins
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In Genesis the curtain rises on our story. Genesis introduces most of the major themes in the Bible. Listen closely as Logos Bible Study’s Dr. Bill Creasy takes you through the story of creation, the fall of man, grace, atonement, faith, justification, redemption and much more in this extraordinary story of beginnings.
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Dr. Creasy brings the Bible to life!!!
- By Shari on 06-23-13
By: Dr. Bill Creasy
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The Imitation of Christ (Logos Educational Edition)
- By: Dr. Bill Creasy - translator, Thomas à Kempis
- Narrated by: Don Ranson
- Length: 7 hrs and 4 mins
- Unabridged
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The Imitation of Christ is one of the great spiritual classics of Christianity. Dr. Creasy's new reading of Thomas A Kempis' 1441 Latin Autograph Manuscript has become "the standard translation of this spiritual classic." The printed trade edition has been a best seller and was chosen as a Book of the Month Club selection. It remains an essential spiritual work for contemporary readers. This audio version read by Don Ranson captures the intimacy and depth of this superb translation.
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My favorite of the 5 versions I've tried
- By onlineshoppinggeek on 06-01-15
By: Dr. Bill Creasy - translator, and others
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Inside the Heart of Solomon Pt. 1 (Proverbs)
- By: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Narrated by: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Length: 52 mins
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As the Davidic psalms take us inside the heart of David, so do Proverbs, Ecclesiastes and Song of Songs take us inside the heart of Solomon. In 1 Kings 4: 32 we read that Solomon “spoke three thousand proverbs.” In the book of Proverbs we have 375 of them. In the classical genre of “advice to a son” literature, Proverbs offers sound advice for a young person going out into the world for the first time.
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Inside the Heart of Solomon
- By WRT on 06-10-19
By: Dr. Bill Creasy
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Timothy, My Dear Son (1 & 2 Timothy)
- By: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Narrated by: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Length: 45 mins
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Paul meets Timothy at the beginning of his second missionary journey. On the first missionary journey (A.D. 46 – 48), Paul visits Lystra, a city in central Asia Minor. It seems he had little success there, as in Lystra “they stoned Paul and dragged him outside the city, thinking he was dead” (Acts 14: 19). On his return to Lystra in A.D. 50, however, Paul meets Timothy, a young man whose grandmother Lois and mother Eunice had become believers, apparently during Paul’s first visit to Lystra.
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Good lesson
- By claudia mukai on 10-22-23
By: Dr. Bill Creasy
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The Corinthian Correspondence (1 & 2 Corinthians)
- By: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Narrated by: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Length: 39 mins
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Paul arrives in Corinth in mid-A.D. 50 and spends 18 months forming a church there. Of all the churches Paul founded, the Church at Corinth presented the greatest challenges and the most difficult problems. When Paul finally leaves Corinth in A.D. 52, he sails home via Ephesus, recognizing an enormous opportunity in that city. In A.D. 54, Paul begins his third missionary journey, going directly to Ephesus and spending most of his time there, A.D. 54-57.
By: Dr. Bill Creasy
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Psalms and Proverbs for Commuters Audio Bible—King James Version, KJV
- 31 Days of Wisdom and Praise from the King James Version Bible
- By: Zondervan Bibles
- Narrated by: Theodore Bikel, Kristoffer Tabori
- Length: 7 hrs and 39 mins
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Whether you take it with you on your morning run or listen to it in your car, this audiobook provides a month's worth of inspiration and wisdom. The 31 daily installments, drawn from Psalms and Proverbs in the King James Version (KJV), make for truly inspired listening—the ideal way to start your day with praise, wisdom, and hope.
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I'm in love 😍 with this audio!
- By Holt109 on 11-14-18
By: Zondervan Bibles
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The Minor Prophets Pt. 2 (Micah-Malachi)
- By: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Narrated by: Dr. Bill Creasy
- Length: 37 mins
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Although the primary meaning of what a prophet says always emerges from the historical context in which he writes, what he says will sometimes foreshadow messianic or eschatological (“end time”) events. It is our responsibility as educated readers of Scripture to determine when such foreshadowing occurs and when it does not.
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Good Summary
- By Alison Aleshire on 04-25-21
By: Dr. Bill Creasy
What listeners say about Praying the Psalms Pt. 1
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- a believer
- 01-09-19
learn and be entertained
Dr. Creasy has spent a lifetime learning his subject and has a gift for imparting his knowledge to his audience in an entertaining and engaging manner.
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- grayce
- 01-03-19
No visuals availble
No teaching visuals availble which he refers too. This is a college lecture, without overheads. Harbor has engaging style of teaching. Like your his good buddy.
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1 person found this helpful
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- NL
- 09-15-17
Not a complete audio
Would you try another book from Bill Creasy and/or Bill Creasy?
Bill Creasy is a wonderful teacher and I would definitely look into his other books, but maybe not on audible. The audio is cut off partway through the lecture and the last 10 minutes of the audiobook does not work.
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- Emma Agola
- 07-17-17
Great but...
book is awesome, audio runs out 10 mins before the of the book , too bad
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