There is nothing in Psalm 23 that actually tells us who wrote the psalm, but there is a possible clue. It was the practice of the Hebrew people to anoint their kings and high priests with oil, a practice mentioned in verse 5. Psalm 23 is traditionally attributed to King David, but scholars say they form a literary genre unknown at the time of David. They say that the psalms were really written during and after the Babylonian Exile, a time when there were no longer any kings of Judah. Verse 5 points, with some uncertainty, to its author as a high priest.
Yes
from Psalm 106:4Remember me, Lord = זָכְרֵנִי יהוה (zochreni, Adonai)
Psalm 23 is the most popular Psalm.
The most quated psalm is psalm 23.
There are 150 psalms in the biblical book of Psalms. The longest psalm is Psalm 119, which contains 176 verses and is the longest chapter in both the Hebrew Scriptures and the Christian Bible. The psalm opens with the words in Hebrew that say 'happy are those whose way is perfect" and is a prayer of an individual who delights in and lives by the Torah, the sacred law.
Psalm 130 is an unnamed psalm in the Hebrew psalter composed by a penitential Israelite
In Greek, Psalm 23 is pronounced as "Ψαλμός 23" (Psalmos είκοσι τρία).
Mostly it should be psalm 23.
Psalm 23 is a assertion that what and who David knows is True, and therefore in knowing this his confidence exists. It is a psalm of his confidence in God.
The LORDPsalm 23 (New King James Version)Psalm 23A Psalm of David. 1 The LORD is my shepherd;I shall not want.
Psalm 23 was written by king David when he was a king.