Recently as I read the psalms, I saw that some are classified as miktams. I tried to ascertain the meaning of the term miktam; unfortunately, this is one of the Hebrew words (other examples are selah, maskil, mizmor, etc.) whose meaning is uncertain. If I understood the text, would it make a difference in my comprehension of the content?
After some googling, I have come up with a reasonable answer that satisfies me. My discovery has become a personal spiritual motivator, so I will share it in hopes that it will also inspire another. **
A Hebrew word study by Skip Moen states that only six psalms are titled miktams (Psalms 16, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60). Their commonalities include:
– they are all attributed to David
– they are lament poems
– the term miktam is part of the text included by the writer, not a separate title
– they are personal psalms (as opposed to the usual community-minded writings)
– they refer to personal deliverance from trouble
In my observation, the six miktams follow a pattern. First, David unburdens his soul to his God, holding nothing back. No pretense, no religious murmurings, just a heart in pain and fear opened to God. He describes his situation. Then he moves to what he knows for sure:
– God is good
– God is just
– God is in control
– God knows my circumstances
– God does not change
– God loves and cares for me

Apparently, the modern Hebrew meaning of the word miktam is “an epigram, inscription or engraving.” It is a dark setting of dangerous experience that effectively highlights God’s inscription of faithfulness and deliverance.
Skip Moen says it well: “If a miktam is a poem about personal deliverance in the face of danger, then we all need a miktam.”
** This is a personal devotional discovery, not a scholarly treatise.
Wonderful post Janice!!!
Jan, thanks for the lovely encouragement; you sent me to the Psalms and I read through all the miktams at once to get the feel. Some of these verses are favourites from other times of stress/distress or are lines of worship choruses, and seeing God’s faithfulness brought joy to me this morning!
I’m glad we could share the joy! God bless you, my friend.
I love how David lays out the circumstances in all their mess and hugeness, and then decides to look at God in trust. It’s one of those “nevertheless” things — everything is falling apart; nevertheless I know who God is and I will trust Him.
Yes, Janet. It’s the nevertheless idea that so inspires me about David. That must be what God means by “a man after God’s own heart.”