How does Psalm 72:18 inspire us to praise God daily in prayer? Setting the verse in context - Psalm 72 closes a collection of royal psalms with a burst of worship. - Verse 18 is a doxology, turning attention from the king to the true King. - The psalmist models the move from reflection on God’s work to spontaneous praise. Key phrases that fuel daily praise 1. “Blessed be the LORD God” • The personal covenant name, “LORD,” invites intimate, family-like prayer. • Calling Him “God” reminds us He is supreme and worthy of honor every day. 2. “the God of Israel” • He keeps promises; remembering His faithfulness anchors our praise (Lamentations 3:22-23). 3. “who alone does marvelous deeds” • “Alone” shuts the door on rivalry—no circumstance or person outshines Him. • “Marvelous deeds” points to creation, redemption, and today’s mercies (Psalm 145:5-6). Why His uniqueness motivates continual prayer - A living God who “alone” saves deserves continual thanks (Psalm 96:2). - Knowing His deeds are “marvelous” shifts focus from worries to worship (Philippians 4:6-7). - Because all good gifts flow from Him, gratitude becomes a reflex (James 1:17). Practical ways to weave praise into each day • Morning start: echo the verse aloud before anything else. • Meal times: recount one “marvelous deed” you noticed since the last meal. • Commute moments: whisper, “Blessed be the LORD God” in rhythm with breathing. • Scripture breaks: pair Psalm 72:18 with “Every day I will bless You” (Psalm 145:2). • Bedtime review: thank Him for specific gifts, fulfilling “Pray without ceasing” (1 Thessalonians 5:17). Summary of the daily call Psalm 72:18 lifts our eyes to a God who is personal, covenant-keeping, unrivaled, and wonder-working. Let its sixteen Hebrew words become a daily heartbeat: bless His name, remember His exclusivity, recount His deeds, and let praise saturate every prayer. |