Psalm 23

Psalm 23 The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not lack. God has been my shepherd all my life to this day. O Lord, save your people and bless your heritage; be their shepherd and carry them forever. The Lord led out His people like sheep and guided them in the wilderness like a flock. Give ear, O Shepherd of Israel, you who lead Joseph like a flock! You who are enthroned upon the cherubim, shine forth. He will tend His flock like a shepherd; He will gather the lambs in His arms; He will carry […]

https://duckinthepulpit.com/2026/05/12/psalm-23/

Psalm 23

Psalm 23 The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not lack. God has been my shepherd all my life to this day. O Lord, save your people and bless your heritage; be their shepherd and carry them forever. The…

Duck in the Pulpit

"Even though my tanker floats through the valley of the shadow of death I will fear no evil, for Trump is with me; his rod and his staff, they comfort me.""

​ - Psalms 23:4
​​
https://www.wsj.com/world/middle-east/project-freedom-trump-iran-persian-gulf-ff02c827?st=5XguwY

#IranWar #iran #israel #oil #oiltanker #straitofhormuz #uspol #eupol #asiapol #Hormuz #projectFreedom #petehegseth #Psalms #Psalm

Another Psalm for you all my friends, about waiting--as we all love that so much. Happy Weekend! #AlignWithLove #Psalms #Philosophy #Love #Weekend #Waiting #Time #JesusCalling

https://align-with-love.com/2026/05/08/the-psalms-project-continued-2/

The Psalms Project (continued)

An open book of Psalms displayed outdoors with calligraphy pen and ink beside it If you are new to this blog, on Friday or Saturday I will post something from my Vault, or one of my other Writing P…

Align With Love

Clear guidance matters – especially when life feels uncertain.
The words in the EasyEnglish Bible are easy to read. God's word can be easy to understand.

"Your word is like a lamp that shines as my guide.
It shows me the right way to live."

Psalm 119, verse 105, EasyEnglish Bible
https://www.easyenglish.bible/bible/easy/psalm/119:105/

#Guidance #BibleVerseOfTheDay #Psalms #Bible #EasyEnglish #EasyEnglishBible

Psalm 13 doesn't leave us in despair because God doesn't leave us there. https://youtube.com/live/pk_s4YYz-5U

#Psalms #Christianity #Hope

Don't Cave In (May 4, 2026)

YouTube

Happy Friday! Kick off your weekend with another post from my Psalms Project--don't be turned off by the word "Psalms"-mine are a poetic, meditative essay. This one was a prayer where I wrestled with needing direction. #Psalms #Friday #AlignWithLove #Poetry #Philosophy #MentalHealth #Love

https://align-with-love.com/2026/05/01/the-psalms-project-continued/

The Psalms Project (continued)

An open book of Psalms displayed outdoors with calligraphy pen and ink beside it If you are new to this blog, on Friday or Saturday I will post something from my Vault, or one of my other Writing P…

Align With Love

Songbird: My Psalms — A Book I Stumbled Upon and Can’t Stop Thinking About

There is something uniquely disorienting about being an author. You spend so much time on the production side of literature, so focused on your own writing, your own releases, your own creative goals, that you sometimes forget you are also a reader. You forget that books are being born every day without your awareness, that entire collections of poems are floating out into the world while you are busy wrestling with your own sentences. That is exactly what happened when I stumbled upon […]

https://jaimedavid.blog/2026/04/26/14/19/42/analysis/jaimedavid327/10761/songbird-my-psalms-a-book-i-stumbled-upon-and-cant-stop-thinking-about/

Sheol

This is in the Hebrew Bible (the Tanakh). Sheol is the underworld, or the place of the dead. This is a place of stillness & darkness & dust, which is death.

Within the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible), there are a few, brief (& nondescript) mentions of Sheol. Sheol wasn’t a punishment or reward. It was the great equalizer. Whether King or beggar, wicked or righteous, every single person went to Sheol. Irregardless of their moral decision in their mortal life.

Even though such practices are prohibited, the residents of Sheol can, under certain circumstances, be summoned/called by the living to the mortal realm. Like when the infamous Witch of Endor makes Samuel’s spirit show up for King Saul.

It’s often pictured as being “down.” Either deep under the earth or the floor of the ocean.

The residents of Sheol were called Raphaim (shades or ghosts). They weren’t exactly “alive” per se. But they weren’t totally gone either. They exist in a state of extreme lethargy, cut off from the living & importantly, often pictured as being cut off from active communion with God.

As Jewish thought evolved, particularly during the Second Temple period (circa 500 BCE to 70 BCE), the idea of Sheol began to change. Sheol began to be viewed as having “compartments.” Like a pleasant area for the righteous (often called “Abraham’s Bosom”) & a separate place for the suffering of the wicked.

When the Hebrew Bible was translated into Greek (the Septuagint), Sheol was almost always translated as Hades. By the time the New Testament was written, the focus shifted further toward Gehenna (a place of fiery judgment) & Tartarus. So in the New Testament, Hades is both the underworld of the dead & the personification of the evil it represents.

Sheol is mentioned 66x throughout the Hebrew Bible. The 1st mentions of Sheol within the text associate it with the state of death & eternal finality. Jacob says that he’ll “go down to Sheol,” because he was still mourning the apparent death of his favorite son, Joseph (of Technicolor Dreamcoat fame).

Later in Genesis, the same scene plays out for a 2nd time when Jacob’s sorrow is repeated when another 1 of his sons, Benjamin, couldn’t return to him with his other brothers.

Sheol shows up again during Korah’s story in the Book of Numbers. After Korah attempted to provoke the Israelites to rebel against Moses, Moses vows that Yahweh will prove his legitimacy by splitting open the earth to hurl Korah & his conspirators into Sheol. Sure enough, after Moses stops talking, Yahweh splits the earth open. This causes Korah, his family, & all of his earthly possessions to “enter Sheol alive.”

In Deuteronomy, Moses sings that the anger of Yahweh is a flame which burns in the “depths” of Sheol, consuming the entire earth from the bottom up.

Later mentions of Sheol in the Tanakh picture it as a representation of death. Suggesting that entry into Sheol is an unavoidable consequence of dying.

I Samuel describes Yahweh as the 1 who brings souls down to Sheol. II Samuel further cements Sheol as humanity’s ultimate postmortem destination. I Kings uses “going down to Sheol” as a metaphor for death. Describing those who go do it both “in peace” & “in blood.”

Isaiah, the prophet, explains Sheol at great length during some of his “sermons.” He personified it as possessing an ever-increasing hunger for living people, with a great propensity for the souls of sinners, & where pleas to Yahweh cannot escape.

Ezekiel, during his prophecy of Egypt’s downfall, described Egypt metaphorically descending into Sheol as a dead person would, where all the spirits of the dead, as well as other fallen empires, such as Assyria, jeer & mock its fall from might.

The remaining mentions of Sheol are in the poetic literature of the Hebrew Bible. Job mentions Sheol in several of his laments, calling it his “home” as he lies in anguish & yearning for death to take him there to put an end to his suffering. Sheol is also mentioned in several Psalms as the grave of humanity.

Other biblical names for Sheol were/are: Abaddon (“ruin,” Psalms 88:11; Job 28:22; & Proverbs 15:11) & Sahat (“corruption,” Isaiah 38:17 & Ezekiel 28:8).

Owing to the evolution of its interpretation, some aspects of Sheol seem to contradict each other:

  • Those who are in Sheol don’t remember anything. Not even Yahweh. But elsewhere, in Sheol, its residents have an otherwise impossible perception of earthly events. Even those that happen AFTER their demise.
  • Pleas to Yahweh cannot escape Sheol. Yet, Yahweh stays its unmistakable master.
  • Those who go to Sheol can’t escape. Yet Yahweh raises souls from it.

Despite the abstract nature of Sheol, there’s some physicality to it. Because it was clearly understood to be underground, which is further supported by the term bor (“pit”, Isaiah 14:15 & 24:22 & Ezekiel 26:20).

It’s a “land,” has “gates,” has sections (think Dante’s Inferno), & there are multiple mentions of its “deepest depths” & “farthest corners.”

The concept of both the righteous & unrighteous eventually going to Sheol seems to be an unspoken assumption in the Hebrew Bible. With the codification of Rabbinical Judaism & the Talmud, Jewish theology concerning the afterlife largely rejected the idea of a single place for EVERYONE after death.

It adopted what we recognize today. It maintains a place of reward for the righteous & punishment for the wicked called Gehinnom. As a result, Sheol, Abaddon, Bor, Shakhat, & other related terms were reduced to synonyms for a realm of punishment.

In Mandaeism, the World of Darkness (the underworld) is sometimes called Sheol in the Ginza Rabba & other Mandaean scriptures.

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A fun little variant was pointed out to me by a friend:
MT Ps 84:8: יֵרָאֶ֖ה אֶל־אֱלֹהִ֣ים בְּצִיּֽוֹן
LXX: ὀφθήσεται ὁ Θεὸς τῶν θεῶν ἐν Σιών
Pesh: ܢܬܚܙܐ ܐܠܗ ܐ̈ܠܗܝܢ ܒܨܗܝܘܢ (= LXX)
Vulg: parebunt apud Deum in Sion

The only difference is the vowel in אל. The vowel in אל determines whether it is a noun (construct "God of") or a preposition ("to"), and thus whether the next word אלהים is "gods" or "God."

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#Psalms #HebrewBible #TextualCriticism

Happy weekend! A new 'Psalm for a Modern Day', about being alone, but realizing you are never really alone. New post next week-continuing "The Theory of the Realms" series. #AlignWithLove #Love #Psalms #Alone #AmWriting #WritingCommunity #Philosophy

https://align-with-love.com/2026/04/17/psalms-project/

Psalms Project

If you are new to this blog, on Friday or Saturday I will post something from my Vault, or one of my other Writing Projects. The Psalms Project is my attempt to take the spirit of the Psalms and re…

Align With Love