Every summer at Park Church, we spend several weeks in the Psalms. The Psalms give us a vocabulary and a “hymnal” for relating to God through the full range of human experience and emotion, ultimately pointing us to Jesus.
CHRIST IN THE PSALMS 2024: 140–150
We're in our thirteenth summer of "Christ in the Psalms." This year will take us from Psalm 140 to Psalm 150. Next summer we'll be back to Psalm 1!
Past Psalms Sermons
Psalm 150
Sunday, August 11, 2024
Every summer at Park Church, we spend several weeks in the Psalms. The Psalms give us a vocabulary and a […]
See More ›Psalm 149
Sunday, August 4, 2024
Every summer at Park Church, we spend several weeks in the Psalms. The Psalms give us a vocabulary and a […]
See More ›Psalm 148
Sunday, July 28, 2024
Every summer at Park Church, we spend several weeks in the Psalms. The Psalms give us a vocabulary and a […]
See More ›Psalms Artwork Series
Starting in Psalm 41, artists within our community have done a piece of artwork for each week's Psalm. There's been a lot of wonderful, stirring work over the years, and we've cataloged them here (save for during a tragically undermanned 2023), each with a write-up from the artist.
Psalm 150—Artwork
Wednesday, August 21, 2024
Every summer at Park Church, we spend several weeks in the Psalms. The Psalms give us a vocabulary and a […]
See More ›Psalm 149—Artwork
Monday, August 5, 2024
Every summer at Park Church, we spend several weeks in the Psalms. The Psalms give us a vocabulary and a […]
See More ›Psalm 148—Artwork
Tuesday, July 30, 2024
The Doxology is one of my favorite pieces of church liturgy, so reading Psalm 148 I immediately felt a familiar pull towards it...
See More ›Series Artwork
Jacob Boyles, 2019
In 2019, we had the opportunity to work with an artist named Jacob Boyles to re-think our series artwork for Christ in the Psalms. The previous Christ in the Psalms artwork—calligraphy and mixed-media by Park Church alumni Meagan Tidwell—had been used lovingly since 2014.
Frequently throughout the Psalms, Jesus is prophesied of, alluded to, longed for, and adored. To create the central image of the series (see above), we chose fifteen symbols from the Psalms that refer to Jesus, narrowed them down to ten, and gave them to Jacob to create in one of his distinctive styles, "monoline" illustration.
To create the two banners that hang on either side of the stage (see above), imagery was used from Psalm 1 and Psalm 150, the rhetorical "bookends" of the Psalter. This artwork will take us through the end of this summer (and the end of the book!) before we return to Psalm 1 with a new artistic perspective in 2025.