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In this highly competent analysis of the Psalms, John Day begins by introducing the most common types of Psalms. He then examines Psalms of lament, praise and thanksgiving, confidence, wisdom and torah Psalms, historical Psalms, entrance Liturgies, pilgrimage Psalms, the Autumn Festival, and the Royal Psalms. Day then discusses the composition of the Psalter, and finishes up by scrutinizing the...

are pre-exilic. It should also be noted that some scholars who accept a temple setting for psalms generally make an exception of the wisdom and torah psalms, locating them in a school context, but even this is somewhat doubtful (see Chapter 4). As a book of cultic songs the Psalter has sometimes been referred to in the past as ‘the hymn book of the second temple’, i.e. of the post-exilic period. This is fair enough, provided that we remember that a considerable part of it was also the ‘hymn book’
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