Bible Verses

Psalms · Chapter 19 · Prayer

Psalms 19:14 — Bible Verse Meaning & Context

Read this verse slowly. Let it settle before you move on.

1080 × 1080 · Square

Background

— or pick from our presets below —

Save this verse to Pinterest
Pinterest's Title field is blank by default — tap the button to copy a ready-made title, then paste it after the share window opens.
Download image

Every download includes a small bibleverses.au mark so others can find us too.

Copied to clipboard

Both translations, side by side

WEB · World English Bible

"Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in your sight, Yahweh, my rock, and my redeemer."

KJV · King James Version

"Let the words561 of my mouth6310, and the meditation1902 of my heart3820, be acceptable7522 in thy sight6440, O LORD3068, my strength6697, and my redeemer1350. strength: Heb. rock"

How the translations differ: The WEB is a modern public-domain revision of the 1901 ASV; the KJV dates to 1611. The KJV uses thy, lord, strength, heb, while the WEB renders these as your, yahweh. Both translate the same underlying Greek or Hebrew text — the differences are stylistic, not theological.

In context

Psalms 19:14 in Psalms 19

A Bible verse rarely stands alone. Here is Psalms 19:14 read with the verses immediately before and after — the surrounding flow of Psalms 19. Read the full chapter →

  1. v.12 Who can discern his errors? Forgive me from hidden errors.
  2. v.13 Keep back your servant also from presumptuous sins. Let them not have dominion over me. Then I will be upright. I will be blameless and innocent of great transgression.
  3. v.14 Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in your sight, Yahweh, my rock, and my redeemer.

Book background

About the Book of Psalms

Testament
Old Testament
Genre
Hebrew poetry
Author
David (73 psalms), Asaph, Sons of Korah, Solomon, Moses, others
Date written
c. 1410–430 BC (compiled over a millennium)
Audience
All of Israel's worshipping community — and the church
Chapters
150

The Psalms are 150 inspired songs and prayers covering every emotion the human heart knows — praise, lament, confession, thanksgiving, anger, longing. About half are attributed to David. The book is divided into five "books," each ending with a doxology. The Psalms shape Christian prayer more than any other Old Testament book and are quoted in the New Testament more than any other.

Setting: 150 sacred songs used in temple worship; the Bible's songbook.

Key themes: worship · lament · trust · kingship · thanksgiving

Read Psalms from the beginning →

Memorisation aid

How to memorise Psalms 19:14

Psalms 19:14 contains 23 words in 4 clauses. Learn one clause at a time, then chain them. The first-letter mnemonic (FLM) under each clause is a memory hook — once you can speak the FLM from memory, the full clause follows.

  1. 1

    Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in your sight

    LTWOMM

  2. 2

    Yahweh

    Y

  3. 3

    my rock

    MR

  4. 4

    and my redeemer.

    AMR

Frequently asked

FAQ about Psalms 19:14

What does Psalms 19:14 say?

Psalms 19:14 reads: "Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in your sight, Yahweh, my rock, and my redeemer." — from the Old Testament, Psalms (Hebrew poetry). The full verse is shown above with both the World English Bible (WEB) and King James Version (KJV) translations side by side.

What book of the Bible is Psalms 19:14 in?

Psalms 19:14 is in the book of Psalms, traditionally attributed to David (73 psalms), Asaph, Sons of Korah, Solomon, Moses, others and written around c. 1410–430 BC (compiled over a millennium). Psalms is hebrew poetry in the Old Testament, originally addressed to All of Israel's worshipping community — and the church. Best known for Psalm 23 ("The LORD is my shepherd") and Psalm 51.

What is Psalms 19:14 about?

Psalms 19:14 is primarily a Bible verse about Prayer. Within Psalms, The Psalms are 150 inspired songs and prayers covering every emotion the human heart knows — praise, lament, confession, thanksgiving, anger, longing. Read the full passage above with surrounding context.

What is the difference between Psalms 19:14 in WEB and KJV?

Psalms 19:14 in the World English Bible (WEB) reads: "Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in your sight, Yahweh, my rock, and my redeemer.". The King James Version (KJV) reads: "Let the words561 of my mouth6310, and the meditation1902 of my heart3820, be acceptable7522 in thy sight6440, O LORD3068, my strength6697, and my redeemer1350. strength: Heb. rock". The WEB is a modern public-domain translation that updates the KJV's 1611 English while keeping a similar formal-equivalence style. Both render the same underlying Greek or Hebrew text.

How long is Psalms 19:14?

Psalms 19:14 is 23 words in the WEB translation (119 characters), broken into 4 clauses. It is short and well-suited to memorisation. Estimated reading time is about 7 seconds.

How can I memorise Psalms 19:14?

To memorise Psalms 19:14, split it into its 4 natural clauses and learn one at a time. Repeat the full verse out loud five times, then write it from memory. Saving the verse as a photo wallpaper using our verse image studio helps daily review — the visual association with a memorable background dramatically improves recall.

Why does Psalms 19:14 matter in Psalms?

The Psalms are 150 inspired songs and prayers covering every emotion the human heart knows — praise, lament, confession, thanksgiving, anger, longing. About half are attributed to David. The book is divided into five "books," each ending with a doxology. The Psalms shape Christian prayer more than any other Old Testament book and are quoted in the New Testament more than any other. Psalms 19:14 sits within this larger story — Psalms as a whole emphasises worship, lament, trust.

How can I apply Psalms 19:14 today?

Many readers use Psalms 19:14 as a daily reminder verse — saving it as a phone wallpaper, sharing it on Pinterest, or memorising it for prayer. The verse studio on this page lets you download Psalms 19:14 on 52 different backgrounds for free. Pair the verse with the surrounding chapter context shown above to understand its full meaning before applying it.

More featured verses in Psalms 19

Read full chapter →

More featured verses in Psalms

Browse Psalms →