This has become one of my favorite introductions to the spiritual discipline of dwelling in the Psalter. Ever since I first encountered the Rule of St. Benedict and began visiting monasteries—where the entire Psalter is prayed weekly—I’ve fallen in love with the ancient spirituality of the Psalms. They form a living thread of continuity between Judaism and Christianity.
Pastor Reed Dunn offers a thoughtful balance of historical anecdotes—from the Desert Fathers, the early Church, and the Reformers—with gentle, pastoral application. The tone is more devotional than academic, making it especially accessible. I’d readily recommend it to fellow lovers of the Book of Common Prayer as a way to deepen one’s appreciation for the Psalter.
Too few realize that before there were prayer books—whether ancient, Roman, Eastern, or Anglican—there were the Psalms. Though Dunn is Presbyterian, I appreciated that he doesn’t impose the regulative principle on the reader.
My wife and I have been lamenting the stillbirth of our first baby girl Alice. There are many days of grief where I haven't had words to pray through the emotional weight. While not addressing the grief of loss explicitly, this book has helped me dive deeper into the Psalter for comfort. I paired it with the Monastic Breviary edited by the Order of the Holy Cross and the Order of Saint Helena (Anglican), including their two-week Psalter cycle of Matins, Midday, Vespers, and Compline prayer.
This book would pair beautifully with Hans Boersma’s Pierced by Love, which offers a richer dive into lectio divina across all of Scripture. If one were to combine Dunn’s call to inhabit the Psalter with Boersma’s sacramental vision of reading, they would find themselves rooted in a deeply nourishing spiritual life, grounded in the wisdom of the Church.
*Thank you to Lexham Press for sending me this pre-release review copy.*