Among all the books of the Holy Scriptures, the Psalter is used as the largest use in reading and chanting in church services and home reading. This book contains 150 psalms written by Hebrew authors such as David the king of Israel, Asaph, Solomon the son of David, Moses, the sons of Korea, etc.
Use Psalms
Psalms, like sacred songs, were mostly written for temple worship in ancient Israel. Each psalm has its own story, its own special occasion for writing. In the Christian church, the Psalter also became the main book of worship, believers sing and pray in new ways reading the psalms, seeing in them an indication of the love of God manifested through Jesus Christ. Church experience defines a particular prayer mission for many psalms, in particular psalms that are read in sickness.
Psalms of healing
The most famous psalm of all that is read in the church and related to bodily recovery is Psalm 102. The general idea of this psalm, beginning with the words “bless my soul of the Lord, ” is that a person proclaims the greatness of God and his mercy and generosity to all areas of human life. In particular, the psalm contains the following lines: "He forgives all your sins, heals all your ailments, saves your life from death, surrounds you with grace and bounty!" (Psalm 102: 3-4). Similar words exist in Psalm 146: “The Lord heals the brokenhearted, bandages their wounds” (Psalm 146: 3). It is very important to pray the Psalms aloud, because prayer is primarily an experience of the feelings that the authors of the psalms prayed under the inspiration of God.
Other Psalms of Prayer
The following are the numbers of psalms, which also have the lines representing prayers to the Lord for healing from diseases. This is Ps. 12 ("let your eyes see the light, do not let you fall asleep in a dream of death"); Ps. 27; Ps. 28; Ps. 37 (during severe pain); Ps. 38; Ps. 40 ("On the bed of the disease the Lord will give him strength - you will transform the bed of the sick!"); Ps. 48 ("but God will deliver my soul from the power of the underworld, when He will receive me"); Ps. 90 ("neither night horror is terrible to you, neither an arrow shot during the day, nor a plague creeping in the night, nor pestilence in broad daylight"); Ps. 114 (praying in especially difficult, dying pains); Ps. 140; Ps. 141 (with pain and fear); Ps. 142 (with pain and gloom).