1Shout for Joy to the Lord, all the earth.
2Worship the Lord with gladness;
come before him with joyful songs.
3Know that the Lord id God.
It is he who made us, and we are his;
We are his people, the sheep of his pasture.
4Enter his gates with Thanksgiving
and his courts with praise,
give thanks to him and praise his name.
5For the Lord is good and his love endures forever;
his faithfulness continues through all generations
(NIV version)
Psalm 91 has 16 verses and Psalm 100 has 5 verses. Psalm 91 is about how God protects us and Psalm 100 is about singing praises to the Lord.
Psalm 100:1 - Psalm 98:4 100:2 - Psalm 2:11 100:4 - see 95:2 100:5 - 136:1
99 - Psalm 1 - Psalm 99
Yes and no. Yes, no name is given. And no, because tradition states that this Psalm (and certain others) was originally spoken by Moses (Rashi commentary, on Psalm 90:1, referring also to Psalm 100).
Psalm 9 is a lament Psalm.
lament
Asking for deliverance
Psalm 100 is quite popular among those who study the Bible but is not as popular as some of the more common Psalms. Psalm 100 talks about entering His gates with Thanksgiving and praise.
portions of jeremiah's prophecy are similar to psalm 100. true
Psalm 100 is known as a Psalm of joy and reverence. It is often called the "Psalm of Thanksgiving" because it focuses on praising God with joy and thankfulness for His steadfast love and faithfulness.
Psalm 14 focuses on the way of the wicked. Psalm 15 focuses on the way of the righteous. It is a Psalm showing how a righteous person should live.
A melody. A song. Of the sons of Kor′ah.