Psalms in Worship—Psalm 15 as a Prayer of Confession

Published January 27, 2026

Updated January 27, 2026

trees by streams of water

I wonder if we aren’t too nonchalant about worshiping God. “Going to church” on Sunday is often little more than a routine, something we do—a habit. It happens to be a good habit, but we don’t often give it much thought. We are churchgoers. On Sunday we go to church and worship God. Psalm 15, however, suggests that our entering into God’s presence isn’t necessarily a given. 

“O Lord, who may abide in your tent? Who may dwell on your holy hill?” the psalmist asks. Nancy deClaissé-Walford in her commentary on the Working Preacher points out that it is a resident alien or foreigner who requests permission to abide. Such a person wouldn’t have an inherent right to residence. Therefore, the implication of Psalm 15’s opening questions is that the psalmist has no right to entrance and by wondering who gets access is requesting entrance. More than that, the psalmist desires a place to dwell, a place to call home. The psalmist is approaching the Lord as an outsider without any assumptions of a positive response.

What would change if we began worship with this question? Too often those who have a history of attending worship consider themselves the insiders who welcome outsiders. Somehow we believe that we, the “belongers,” get to be the gatekeepers and discern who gets to abide and eventually dwell in our church’s presence. Psalm 15 challenges this perspective with the two opening questions. We all start outside the tent. 

The answer that follows in the remaining verses is not meant to be prescriptive as much as descriptive. The person who may dwell in God’s presence is a lover of justice for all people. If we are honest, we quickly realize that this description only perfectly fits one person: our Savior, Jesus Christ. 

The only reason we can enter the “tent,” to worship our God, the only reason we can be at home in God’s presence is through our unity with Christ. Recognizing our dependence on God’s grace, we should approach worship with a deep sense of gratitude and privilege rather than as a mindless habit. When we gather, we must recognize that, at our core, we are no better than those who might not yet belong but are still beloved and invited in. When we gather, we are also confronted with the call of Psalm 15 to emulate Christ in living lives marked by justice. Psalm 15 says more about how we act than about what we believe. It is in our actions that we will find strength and a foundation that will make us unmoveable. 

While Psalm 15 can be an “entrance hymn,” it also functions as a call to holy living which is how it is used in the litany below. In this case, that call to holy living happens within the context of a prayer of confession for a leader or reader and congregation. The text of Psalm 15 is found in the brown font. 

A Prayer of Confession with Psalm 15

All

O Lord, who may abide in your tent?
    Who may dwell on your holy hill?

Leader

Those who walk blamelessly and do what is right
    and speak the truth from their heart;

All

Forgive us, Lord. 
We are not blameless. 
We have not done what is right. 
Too often we have spoken half truths 
and told outright lies. 
Too often we have failed to challenge falsehoods 
and remained silent. 

Leader

Those who may abide are those 

who do not slander with their tongue
    and do no evil to their friends
    nor heap shame upon their neighbors;

All

Forgive us, Lord,  
for using our tongues to slander and shame others 
on our socials and in conversations. 
Forgive us for not loving our enemies
as you have called us to. 
Forgive us for our participation in the evil done to neighbors
through our actions and our inaction. 

Leader

Those who may dwell are those

in whose eyes the wicked are despised
    but who honor those who fear the Lord;
who stand by their oath even to their hurt;

All

Forgive us, Lord, 
for counting the wicked as a friend, 
for desiring to be like them, 
for rationalizing or dismissing their actions
rather than despising their evil ways. 

Forgive us for being 
so worried about what following you might cost us 
that we are willing to dishonor you, 
to turn our back on you and those you love. 

Leader

Those who are welcomed in the Lord’s presence are those

who do not lend money at interest
    and do not take a bribe against the innocent.

All

Forgive us, Lord,
for taking advantage of those in need 
and failing to protect them from those who prey on them. 

Leader

Those who do these [acts of justice] 
shall never be moved.
—Psalm 15 NRSVUE

All

 

Lord, we have failed 
and do not deserve your mercy. 
Thank you for sending your Son, Jesus Christ, 
to perfectly fulfill your law in our place. 
Thank you that by believing in Christ as our Savior, 
we are united with him, 
and are counted as your children. 
Help us to live a life worthy of this grace 
that we have received. 

Leader

United with Christ, 
we dare pray for forgiveness. 

United with Christ, 
we desire to do justice, love kindness, 
and walk humbly with our God. 

All

Holy God, forgive us 
and welcome us into your tent
to dwell with you forever. 
Amen. 

Revised Common Lectionary: Epiphany 4A, Season after Pentecost Proper 17B, Proper 11C