Psalm 106 begins with public praise for God’s enduring love, then rehearses Israel’s repeated rebellions from the exodus through life in the land, tracing alternating scenes of distress and rescue, and closing with a plea for renewed gathering and thanks.
Psalm 106 begins with public praise for God’s enduring love, then rehearses Israel’s repeated rebellions from the exodus through life in the land, tracing alternating scenes of distress and rescue, and closing with a plea for renewed gathering and thanks.
Context Snapshot
Date
Collected across Israel's worship life, c. 1000-450 BC
Genre
Poetry, prayer, and praise
Setting
Israel/Judah worship tradition
Audience
Israel
World Stage
c. 1000-450 BC
Israel and Judah across monarchy, exile, and return
Davidic and temple worship leaders collection over centuries
Psalms gathers prayers and songs from royal, temple, crisis, exile, and restoration settings. Its world is Israel's worship life across generations, bringing covenant memory into praise, lament, confession, and hope.