2 Give praise to the Lord, lifting up your hands in his holy place.
Give ear to the voice of my prayer, when I am crying to you, when my hands are lifted up to your holy place.
It is my desire, then, that in every place men may give themselves to prayer, lifting up holy hands, without wrath or argument.
Let my prayer be ordered before you like a sweet smell; and let the lifting up of my hands be like the evening offering.
Up! give cries in the night, at the starting of the night-watches; let your heart be flowing out like water before the face of the Lord, lifting up your hands to him for the life of your young children who are falling down, feeble for need of food, at the top of every street.
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Commentary on Psalms 134 Matthew Henry Commentary
Psalm 134
This is the last of the fifteen songs of degrees; and, if they were at any time sung all together in the temple-service, it is fitly made the conclusion of them, for the design of it is to stir up the ministers to go on with their work in the night, when the solemnities of the day were over. Some make this psalm to be a dialogue.
In singing this psalm we must both stir up ourselves to give glory to God and encourage ourselves to hope for mercy and grace from him.
A song of degrees.
Psa 134:1-3
This psalm instructs us concerning a two-fold blessing:-