We are not told of David's location when this Psalm was written.
David wrote Psalm 38 through Psalm 47 :)
The entire Psalms has 150, while its first book has 41.
The book of psalms is made of one book only.
Several places. Job 3:8 Job 41:1, Job 41:12; Psalms 74:14; Psalms 104:26; Isaiah 27:1
There is only ONE book of Psalms and it has 150 chapters. It is true that there is only one book of psalms however within psalms there are five books that correspond to the first five books of the Bible: Book 1: Psalms 1-41 Book 2: Psalms 42-72 Book 3: Psalms 73-89 Book 4: Psalm 90-106 Book 5: Psalms 107-150
The absolute location is 41 degrees North and 77.5 degrees West The relative location can be that its under New York
The book of Psalms is divided into five sections that run parallel to the writings of Moses in the Pentateuch. These five books contain similar themes to the books of Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy. However, these five portions of the Psalms don't have individual names; they're just numbered Book One to Book Five.
Psalms is itself divided into 5 books.(1) Psalms 1-41; (2) Psalms 42-72; (3) Psalms 73-89; (4) Psalms 90-106; (5)Psalms 107-150Additional thoughts:The book of Psalms, written over a period of a thousand years, was actually the 'song book' for the nation of Israel, and these individual songs (psalms) were sung at the temple and at other occasions. The little 'headings' (superscriptions) above various Psalms tell us that King David wrote 73 of these songs, the Sons of Korah wrote 11 , the House of Asaph wrote 12 , Moses 1, Solomon 1, Ethan the Ezrahite 1, and over 40 are without a specific recorded writer.Many of the Psalms were prophetic, pointing to the coming Messiah(Psalm 40:6-8/Hebrews 10:5-10) ,(Psalm 2:7/Mark 1:9-11; Hebrews 1:5; 5:5), (Psalm 8:4-6 / Hebrews 2:6-8), (Psalm 22:22 /Hebrews 2:11, 12),(Psalms 78:2; Matthew 13:35),(Psalm 69:9/ John 2:13-17;Romans 15:3),(Psalms 35:19; 69:4/John 15:25), (Psalms 18:49; 117:1/Romans 15:9, 11)(Psalm 22:18/Matthew 27:35)...and many more. The book of Psalms contains not just lovely poetry(Psalm 8:3-4), but information on the value of God's word(Psalm 119:105), insight into God's activities(Psalm 46:1), expressions of praise and thanks to God(Psalms 148:13+14), Requests for help from God (Psalms 119:124, 125), Advice to help us gain God's approval (such as, at Psalms 112:1-4) and basic Bible doctrines(Psalms 83:18).
Mozart wrote 41 symphonys did you know he wrote only 2 in minor key o_O
Many psalms are signed by their author but others are not. Seventy-three bear David's name . Asaph is listed on twelve. Some are attributed to Solomon. Moses Ethan and Heman are thought to have written one each. The remainder are unknown in authorship. The Davidic psalms bear other hallmarks of David. He was known as a master musician throughout the Old Testament period and these psalms bear testimony to this. Many are reflections of events in his life. The New Testament writers also referred to David as being the author of specific psalms. The Sons of Korah wrote 11.Answer:David wrote the Psalms.Answer:The Book of Psalms is a collection of short writings believed to have been produced by a number of anonymous authors over a period of two or three hundred years during and after the Babylonian Exile. We do not know who selected the psalms for inclusion in the Book of Psalms, or who first wrote the book as a single collection on a scroll.Answer:The Book of Psalms had many authors, all of them anonymous, and most of them living during the Babylonian Exile or up to a century afterwards. However, those psalms that show any evidence of wisdom are traditionally attributed to King Solomon, and others to King David.Answer:King David wrote the Psalms, including among them a number of psalms that had first been spoken by others (who are named in those individual psalms). It is he who gathered all the Psalms into a single book. This is the traditional view, as recorded in the Talmud (Bava Batra 14b).According to the Old Testament book of Psalms, the psalms were written by several people--David, Asaph, Solomon, Ethan, the Sons of Korah, Moses, etc.The psalms were really just songs and poetic prayers. They were very much like a church songbook.The entire first Book of the Psalms (chapters 1-41) were written by David--both before he became king and afterward.The Psalms show the whole gamut of human emotions. Some are written out of anger, some out of severe anxiety and depression, some out of great joy. Because of this, the Psalms are great to turn to when seeking peace or understanding. Others--great figures in history--have suffered what we all suffer.The Psalms are also great as prayers. When you just don't know what to say to God--when it hurts and you can't find the words to say--turn to the Psalms and pray them to God. He's given you the words to say to Him, when words otherwise fail you.Read more in related link below.Answer:According to Jewish tradition, King David is the architect of the Book of Psalms (Tehillim; "Praises"). All unnamed Psalms are his, as well as the seventy-three that do bear his name.Those Psalms which bear names of authors other than David, were collated and canonized by him into his Book (Talmud, Bava Batra 14b). Some of their authors were contemporaries of David (such as Heiman, Eitan, Asaph, Jeduthun), while others lived before his time (Adam, Moses, Malkitzedek).
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41 degress N 29 degrees E