Kootenai Church Morning Worship: The Psalms

Jim Osman

This series explores selected Psalms, starting with an introduction to the book of Psalms and its theological significance. It focuses primarily on Psalms 1, 2, 37, and 49, while also touching on imprecatory elements found in these and other Psalms. The series aims to help listeners understand the Psalms' relevance for Christian life and worship today.

  1. Episode 2

    The Wonders of the Word (Psalm 119:97-104)

    Pastor Jim Osman opens in Psalm 119:97–104 with the psalmist's breathtaking declaration — "Oh, how I love your law!" — and shows what that kind of love actually looks like and what it produces in the life of a believer. This passage divides naturally into two halves, each anchored by a defining affection. The first four verses trace the fruit of loving the Word: wisdom that surpasses enemies, insight that exceeds teachers, and understanding deeper than age and experience. But the psalmist isn't boasting about himself. He's boasting about the Word of God — that one person armed with Scripture is better equipped for life and eternity than the accumulated wisdom of all the world's academics and sages without it. The second half moves from love to its necessary companion: a genuine hatred for every false way. Pastor Osman presses hard on this point — you cannot truly love truth without hating falsehood, and you cannot love God without hating evil. Spurgeon's insight frames it memorably: hatred is a stabbing affection, and the believer who rightly hates sin in himself will attack it, pursue it, and put it to death. The sermon closes with a direct challenge: the blessings of Psalm 119 are not for the lazy or negligent. They are reserved for those who consistently, relentlessly, and faithfully read, meditate on, and obey the Word of God. There is no shortcut to Christian maturity — only one path. ★ Support this podcast ★

    40 min

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About

This series explores selected Psalms, starting with an introduction to the book of Psalms and its theological significance. It focuses primarily on Psalms 1, 2, 37, and 49, while also touching on imprecatory elements found in these and other Psalms. The series aims to help listeners understand the Psalms' relevance for Christian life and worship today.