Ed Walsh
Puritan Board Graduate
Greetings pilgrims,
I'm considering coauthoring a book on the Psalms.
A possible subtitle, etc., could be the title of this thread.
Here’s the first draft of a concept to present the positive future view of the Psalms.
We have gone beyond this, but the opening salvo has begun.
~~~~~~~
1. Direct Divine Promise — God Himself speaking or clear prophetic statements.
2. Prophetic / Messianic Hope — pointing forward to Christ or Gospel triumph.
3. Faith-Wishes of the Saints — personal or corporate prayers and hopes for future blessing.
Book I — Psalms 1–41
Book II — Psalms 42–72
Book III — Psalms 73–89
Book IV — Psalms 90–106
Book V — Psalms 107–150
• Quick Reference Concordance — verse references under each category.
• Full Verse Text — primarily KJV, with ESV included where helpful.
• Commentary Notes — concise theological or eschatological insights.
• Historical Commentary — occasional notes from Calvin, Spurgeon, Puritans, and modern scholars.
“Limiting your conclusion to the Complete Book of the Psalms, what is your eschatological view of the future of this earth in time and before the actual return of Christ?”
Many respondents reflected a hopeful, postmillennial tone, seeing the Psalms as testifying to Christ’s ultimate dominion and the triumph of grace across the world. This confirmed the value of the current study.
Prepared for: Ed Walsh (Walsh Estimating Service)
By: ChatGPT (GPT‑5)
I'm considering coauthoring a book on the Psalms.
A possible subtitle, etc., could be the title of this thread.
Here’s the first draft of a concept to present the positive future view of the Psalms.
We have gone beyond this, but the opening salvo has begun.
~~~~~~~
Positive Future in the Psalms – Project Setup and Discussion
This document captures the early planning and dialogue between Ed Walsh and ChatGPT (GPT‑5) regarding a biblical research project titled *Positive Future in the Psalms*. The goal is to identify every verse in the Book of Psalms with a forward-looking, optimistic, or eschatologically positive view of the future, including references to Christ’s dominion, the spread of the Gospel, and the triumph of righteousness.Project Plan and Methodology
The Psalms will be reviewed in their entirety. Each verse with a positive connotation of the future will be categorized under one of three headings:1. Direct Divine Promise — God Himself speaking or clear prophetic statements.
2. Prophetic / Messianic Hope — pointing forward to Christ or Gospel triumph.
3. Faith-Wishes of the Saints — personal or corporate prayers and hopes for future blessing.
Division of the Psalms
Following Ed’s insight, the Psalms will be studied according to their canonical five-book division:Book I — Psalms 1–41
Book II — Psalms 42–72
Book III — Psalms 73–89
Book IV — Psalms 90–106
Book V — Psalms 107–150
Output Format
Each Book will include the following layers:• Quick Reference Concordance — verse references under each category.
• Full Verse Text — primarily KJV, with ESV included where helpful.
• Commentary Notes — concise theological or eschatological insights.
• Historical Commentary — occasional notes from Calvin, Spurgeon, Puritans, and modern scholars.
Workflow Agreement
It was agreed that each Book of the Psalms would be treated as a self-contained study, complete with text, categorization, and commentary. This approach allows easy navigation and sequential study.Personal Context and Motivation
Ed Walsh shared that the inspiration came from a question posted in a Psalm-singing Facebook group:“Limiting your conclusion to the Complete Book of the Psalms, what is your eschatological view of the future of this earth in time and before the actual return of Christ?”
Many respondents reflected a hopeful, postmillennial tone, seeing the Psalms as testifying to Christ’s ultimate dominion and the triumph of grace across the world. This confirmed the value of the current study.
Next Step
The next step is to produce the complete analysis for Book I (Psalms 1–41), identifying every verse with positive or eschatological significance, grouped under the three categories. Each will be accompanied by brief commentary, and the result will form the template for Books II–V.Prepared for: Ed Walsh (Walsh Estimating Service)
By: ChatGPT (GPT‑5)