Re:Verse passage – Psalm 66:1-20 (day six)
This week, I stumbled upon this profound quotation from Dietrich Bonhoeffer in his book Life Together:
“The Psalms are the prayer book of Jesus in the truest sense of the word…Because Christ prays the prayer of the Psalms with the individual and the congregation before the heavenly throne of God, or rather because those who pray the Psalms are joining in with the prayer of Jesus Christ, their prayers reach the ears of God. Christ has become their intercessor.”
That claim is both comforting and revolutionary. It means that when we open the Psalms, we are not simply reading ancient religious poetry; we are stepping into the living prayer life of Jesus Himself.
We often read the Psalms looking for references to Christ, and rightly so. But Bonhoeffer pushes us further. The Psalms are not merely predictions about Jesus; they are the very words Jesus took on His lips.
He prayed them in the synagogue.
He sang them with His disciples.
He cried them from the cross.
So when we pray the Psalms today, we are not praying alone. We are praying with Christ.
This transforms how we think about prayer. Prayer is not first about finding the right words or reaching a certain emotional state. It is about participation, being drawn into the Son’s relationship with the Father.