Worthy.Bible » BBE » Psalms » Chapter 145 » Verse 11

Psalms 145:11 Bible in Basic English (BBE)

11 Their words will be of the glory of your kingdom, and their talk of your strength;

Cross Reference

1 Chronicles 29:11-12 BBE

Yours, O Lord, is the strength and the power and the glory, and the authority and the honour: for everything in heaven and on earth is yours; yours is the kingdom, O Lord, and you are lifted up as head over all. Wealth and honour come from you, and you are ruler over all, and in your hand is power and strength; it is in your power to make great, and to give strength to all.

Psalms 45:6-7 BBE

Your seat of power, O God, is for ever and ever; the rod of your kingdom is a rod of honour. You have been a lover of righteousness and a hater of evil: and so God, your God, has put the oil of joy on your head, lifting you high over all other kings.

Psalms 2:6-8 BBE

But I have put my king on my holy hill of Zion. I will make clear the Lord's decision: he has said to me, You are my son, this day have I given you being. Make your request to me, and I will give you the nations for your heritage, and the farthest limits of the earth will be under your hand.

Psalms 72:1-20 BBE

<Of Solomon.> Give the king your authority, O God, and your righteousness to the king's son. May he be a judge of your people in righteousness, and make true decisions for the poor. May the mountains give peace to the people, and the hills righteousness. May he be a judge of the poor among the people, may he give salvation to the children of those who are in need; by him let the violent be crushed. May his life go on as long as the sun and moon, through all generations. May he come down like rain on the cut grass; like showers watering the earth. In his days may the upright do well, living in peace as long as there is a moon in heaven. Let his kingdom be from sea to sea, from the River to the ends of the earth. Let those who are against him go down before him; and let his haters be low in the dust. Let the kings of Tarshish and of the islands come back with offerings; let the kings of Sheba and Seba give of their stores. Yes, let all kings go down before him; let all nations be his servants. For he will be a saviour to the poor in answer to his cry; and to him who is in need, without a helper. He will have pity on the poor, and be the saviour of those who are in need. He will keep their souls free from evil designs and violent attacks; and their blood will be of value in his eyes. May he have long life, and may gold from Sheba be given to him: may prayers be made for him at all times; may blessings be on him every day. May there be wide-stretching fields of grain in the land, shaking on the top of the mountains, full of fruit like Lebanon: may its stems be unnumbered like the grass of the earth. May his name go on for ever, as long as the sun: may men be blessing themselves by him; may all nations be blessing his name. Praise be to the Lord God, the God of Israel, the only doer of wonders. Praise to the glory of his noble name for ever; let all the earth be full of his glory. So be it, So be it. The prayers of David, the son of Jesse, are ended. <A Psalm. Of Asaph.>

Psalms 93:1-2 BBE

The Lord is King; he is clothed with glory; the Lord is clothed with strength; power is the cord of his robe; the world is fixed, so that it may not be moved. The seat of your power has been from the past; you are eternal.

Psalms 99:1-4 BBE

The Lord is King; let the peoples be in fear: his seat is on the winged ones; let the earth be moved. The Lord is great in Zion; he is high over all the nations. Let them give praise to your name, for it is great and to be feared; holy is he. The king's power is used for righteousness; you give true decisions, judging rightly in the land of Jacob.

Isaiah 9:6-7 BBE

For to us a child has come, to us a son is given; and the government has been placed in his hands; and he has been named Wise Guide, Strong God, Father for ever, Prince of Peace. Of the increase of his rule and of peace there will be no end, on the seat of David, and in his kingdom; to make it strong, supporting it with wise decision and righteousness, now and for ever. By the fixed purpose of the Lord of armies this will be done.

Isaiah 24:23 BBE

Then the moon will be veiled, and the sun put to shame; for the Lord of armies will be ruling in Mount Zion and in Jerusalem, and before his judges he will let his glory be seen.

Isaiah 33:21-22 BBE

But there the Lord will be with us in his glory, ... wide rivers and streams; where no boat will go with blades, and no fair ship will be sailing. For the Lord is our judge, the Lord is our law-giver, the Lord is our king; he will be our saviour.

Daniel 7:13-14 BBE

I saw in visions of the night, and there was coming with the clouds of heaven one like a man, and he came to the one who was very old, and they took him near before him. And to him was given authority and glory and a kingdom; and all peoples, nations, and languages were his servants: his authority is an eternal authority which will not come to an end, and his kingdom is one which will not come to destruction.

Zechariah 9:9 BBE

Be full of joy, O daughter of Zion; give a glad cry, O daughter of Jerusalem: see, your king comes to you: he is upright and has overcome; gentle and seated on an ass, on a young ass.

Matthew 6:13 BBE

And let us not be put to the test, but keep us safe from the Evil One.

Mark 11:9-10 BBE

And those who went in front, and those who came after, were crying, Glory: A blessing on him who comes in the name of the Lord: A blessing on the coming kingdom of our father David: Glory in the highest.

Revelation 5:12-13 BBE

Saying with a great voice, It is right to give to the Lamb who was put to death, power and wealth and wisdom and strength and honour and glory and blessing. And to my ears came the voice of everything in heaven and on earth and under the earth and in the sea, and of all things which are in them, saying, To him who is seated on the high seat, and to the Lamb, may blessing and honour and glory and power be given for ever and ever.

Revelation 11:15-17 BBE

And at the sounding of the seventh angel there were great voices in heaven, saying, The kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord, and of his Christ, and he will have rule for ever and ever. And the four and twenty rulers, who are seated before God on their high seats, went down on their faces and gave worship to God, saying, We give you praise, O Lord God, Ruler of all, who is and who was; because you have taken up your great power and are ruling your kingdom.

Worthy.Bible » Commentaries » Keil & Delitzsch Commentary » Commentary on Psalms 145

Commentary on Psalms 145 Keil & Delitzsch Commentary


Introduction

Hymn in Praise of the All-Bountiful King

With Psalms 144:1-15 the collection draws doxologically towards its close. This Psalm, which begins in the form of the beracha ( ברוך ה ), is followed by another in which benedicam (Psalms 145:1-2) and benedicat (Psalms 145:21) is the favourite word. It is the only Psalm that bears the title תּהלּה , whose plural תּהלּים is become the collective name of the Psalms. In B. Berachoth 4 b it is distinguished by the apophthegm: “Every one who repeats the תהלה לדוד three times a day may be sure that he is a child of the world to come ( בן העולם הבא ).” And why? Not merely because this Psalm, as the Gemara says, אתיא באלף בית , i.e., follows the course of the alphabet (for Ps 119 is in fact also alphabetical, and that in an eightfold degree), and not merely because it celebrates God's care for all creatures (for this the Great Hallel also does, Psalms 136:25), but because it unites both these prominent qualities in itself ( משׁום דאית ביה תרתי ). In fact, Psalms 145:16 is a celebration of the goodness of God which embraces every living thing, with which only Psalms 136:25, and not Psalms 111:5, can be compared. Valde sententiosus hic Psalmus est , says Bakius; and do we not find in this Psalm our favourite Benedicite and Oculi omnium which our children repeat before a meal? It is the ancient church's Psalm for the noon-day repast (vid., Armknecht, Die heilige Psalmodie , 1855, S. 54); Psalms 145:15 was also used at the holy communion, hence Chrysostom says it contains τὰ ῥήματα ταῦτα, ἅπερ οἱ μεμυημένοι συνεχῶς ὑποψάλλουσι λέγοντες· Οἱ ὀφθαλμοὶ πάντων εἰς σὲ ἐλπίζουσιν καὶ σὺ δίδως τὴν τροφὴν αὐτῶν ἐν εὐκαιρίᾳ .

Κατὰ στοιχεῖον , observes Theodoret, καὶ οὗτος ὁ ὕμνος σύγκειται . The Psalm is distichic, and every first line of the distich has the ordinal letter; but the distich Nun is wanting. The Talmud ( loc cit. ) is of opinion that it is because the fatal נפלה (Amos 5:2), which David, going on at once with סומך ה לכל־הנפלים , skips over, begins with Nun . On the other hand, Ewald, Vaihinger, and Sommer, like Grotius, think that the Nun -strophe has been lost. The lxx (but not Aquila, Symmachus, Theodotion, nor Jerome in his translation after the original text) gives such a strophe, perhaps out of a MS (like the Dublin Cod. Kennicot , 142) in which it was supplied: Πιστὸς ( נאמן as in Psalms 111:7) κύριος ἐν ( πᾶσι ) τοῖς λόγοις αὐτοῦ καὶ ὅσιος ἐν πᾶσι τοῖς ἔργοις αὐτοῦ (according with Psalms 145:17, with the change only of two words of this distich). Hitzig is of opinion that the original Nun -strophe has been welded into Psalms 141:1-10; but only his clairvoyant-like historical discernment is able to amalgamate Psalms 145:6 of this Psalm with our Psalms 145. We are contented to see in the omission of the Nun -strophe an example of that freedom with which the Old Testament poets are wont to handle this kind of forms. Likewise there is no reason apparent for there fact that Jeremiah has chosen in Lamentations 2:1, Lamentations 3:1, and Lamentations 4:1 of the Lamentations to make the Ajin -strophe follow the Pe -strophe three times, whilst in Lamentations 1:1 it precedes it.


Verses 1-7

The strains with which this hymn opens are familiar Psalm-strains. We are reminded of Psalms 30:2, and the likewise alphabetical song of praise and thanksgiving Psalms 34:2. The plena scriptio אלוהי in Psalms 143:10; Psalms 98:6. The language of address “my God the King,” which sounds harsh in comparison with the otherwise usual “my King and my God” (Psalms 5:3; Psalms 84:4), purposely calls God with unrelated generality, that is to say in the most absolute manner, the King. If the poet is himself a king, the occasion for this appellation of God is all the more natural and the signification all the more pertinent. But even in the mouth of any other person it is significant. Whosoever calls God by such a name acknowledges His royal prerogative, and at the same time does homage to Him and binds himself to allegiance; and it is just this confessory act of exalting Him who in Himself is the absolutely lofty One that is here called רומם . But who can the poet express the purpose of praising God's Name for ever ? Because the praise of God is a need of his inmost nature, he has a perfect right to forget his own mortality when engaged upon this devotion to the ever-living King. Clinging adoringly to the Eternal One, he must seem to himself to be eternal; and if there is a practical proof for a life after death, it is just this ardent desire of the soul, wrought of God Himself, after the praise of the God of its life (lit., its origin) which affords it the highest, noblest delight. The idea of the silent Hades, which forces itself forward elsewhere, as in Psalms 6:6, where the mind of the poet is beclouded by sin, is here entirely removed, inasmuch as here the mind of the poet is the undimmed mirror of the divine glory. Therefore Psalms 145:2 also does not concede the possibility of any interruption of the praise: the poet will daily (Psalms 68:20) bless God, be they days of prosperity or of sorrow, uninterruptedly in all eternity will he glorify His Name ( אהללה as in Psalms 69:31). There is no worthier and more exhaustless object of praise (Psalms 145:3): Jahve is great, and greatly to be praised ( מהלּל , taken from Psalms 48:2, as in Psalms 96:4, cf. Psalms 18:4), and of His “greatness” (cf. 1 Chronicles 29:11, where this attribute precedes all others) there is no searching out, i.e., it is so abysmally deep that no searching can reach its bottom (as in Isaiah 40:28; Job 11:7.). It has, however, been revealed, and is being revealed continually, and is for this very reason thus celebrated in Psalms 145:4 : one generation propagates to the next the growing praise of the works that He has wrought out ( עשׂה מעשׁים ), and men are able to relate all manner of proofs of His victorious power which prevails over everything, and makes everything subject to itself ( גּבוּרת as in Psalms 20:7, and frequently). This historically manifest and traditional divine doxa and the facts ( דּברי as in Psalms 105:27) of the divine wonders the poet will devoutly consider. הדר stands in attributive relation to כּבוד , as this on its part does to הודך . Thy brilliantly gloriously (kingly) majesty (cf. Jeremiah 22:18; Daniel 11:21). The poet does not say גּם אני , nor may we insert it, either here in Psalms 145:5, or in Psalms 145:6, where the same sequence of thoughts recurs, more briefly expressed. The emphasis lies on the objects. The mightiness ( עזוּז as in Psalms 78:4, and in Isaiah 42:25, where it signifies violence) of His terrible acts shall pass from mouth to mouth ( אמר with a substantival object as in Psalms 40:11), and His mighty acts ( גּדלּות , magnalia , as in 1 Chronicles 17:19, 1 Chronicles 17:21) - according to the Kerî (which is determined by the suffix of אספּרנּה ; cf. however, 2 Samuel 22:23; 2 Kings 3:3; 2 Kings 10:26, and frequently): His greatness ( גּדלּה ) - will he also on his part make the matter of his narrating. It is, however, not alone the awe-inspiring majesty of God which is revealed in history, but also the greatness ( רב used as a substantive as in Psalms 31:20; Isaiah 63:7; Isaiah 21:7, whereas רבּים in Psalms 32:10; Psalms 89:51 is an adjective placed before the noun after the manner of a numeral), i.e., the abundant measure, of His goodness and His righteousness, i.e., His acting in inviolable correspondence with His counsel and order of salvation. The memory of the transcendent goodness of God is the object of universal, overflowing acknowledgement and the righteousness of God is the object of universal exultation ( רנּן with the accusative as in Psalms 51:16; Psalms 59:17). After the poet has sung the glorious self-attestation of God according to both its sides, the fiery and the light sides, he lingers by the light side, the front side of the Name of Jahve unfolded in Exodus 34:6.


Verses 8-13

This memorable utterance of Jahve concerning Himself the writer of Ps 103, which is of kindred import, also interweaves into his celebration of the revelation of divine love in Psalms 145:8. Instead of רב־חסד the expression here, however, is וגדול חסד ( Kerî , as in Nahum 1:3, cf. Psalms 89:29, with Makkeph וּגדל־ ). The real will of God tends towards favour, which gladly giving stoops to give ( חנּוּן ), and towards compassion, which interests itself on behalf of the sinner for his help and comfort ( רחוּם ). Wrath is only the background of His nature, which He reluctantly and only after long waiting ( ארך אפּים ) lets loose against those who spurn His great mercy. For His goodness embraces, as Psalms 145:9 says, all; His tender mercies are over all His works, they hover over and encompass all His creatures. Therefore, too, all His works praise Him: they are all together loud-speaking witnesses of that sympathetic all-embracing love of His, which excludes no one who does not exclude himself; and His saints, who live in God's love, bless Him ( יברכוּכה written as in 1 Kings 18:44): their mouth overflows with the declaration ( יאמרוּ ) of the glory of the kingdom of this loving God, and in speaking ( ידבּרוּ ) of the sovereign power with which He maintains and extends this kingdom. This confession they make their employ, in order that the knowledge of the mighty acts of God and the glorious majesty of His kingdom may at length become the general possession of mankind. When the poet in Psalms 145:12 sets forth the purpose of the proclamation, he drops the form of address. God's kingdom is a kingdom of all aeons, and His dominion is manifested without exception and continually in all periods or generations ( בּכל־דּור ודר as in Ps 45:18, Esther 9:28, a pleonastic strengthening of the expression בּדר ודר , Psalms 90:1). It is the eternal circumference of the history of time, but at the same time its eternal substance, which more and more unfolds and achieves itself in the succession of the periods that mark its course. For that all things in heaven and on earth shall be gathered up together ( ἀνακεφαλαιώσασθαι , Ephesians 1:10) in the all-embracing kingdom of God in His Christ, is the goal of all history, and therefore the substance of history which is working itself out. With Psalms 145:13 (cf. Dan. 3:33, Daniel 4:31, according to Hitzig the primary passages) another paragraph is brought to a close.


Verses 14-21

The poet now celebrates in detail the deeds of the gracious King. The words with ל are pure datives, cf. the accusative expression in Psalms 146:8. He in person is the support which holds fast the falling ones ( נופלים , here not the fallen ones, see Psalms 28:1) in the midst of falling (Nicephorus: τοὺς καταπεσεῖν μέλλοντας ἑδραιοῖ, ὥστε μὴ καταπεσεῖν ), and the stay by which those who are bowed together raise themselves. He is the Provider for all beings, the Father of the house, to whom in the great house of the world the eyes ( עיני with the second toneless, Ew. §100, b) of all beings, endowed with reason and irrational, are directed with calm confidence (Matthew 6:26), and who gives them their food in its, i.e., in due season. The language of Psalms 104:27 is very similar, and it proceeds here, too, as there in Psalms 104:28 (cf. Sir. 40:14). He opens His hand, which is ever full, much as a man who feeds the doves in his court does, and gives רצון , pleasure, i.e., that which is good, which is the fulfilling of their desire, in sufficient fulness to all living things (and therefore those in need of support for the body and the life). Thus it is to be interpreted, according to Deuteronomy 33:23 (after which here in the lxx the reading varies between εὐδοκίας and εὐλογίας ), cf. Acts 14:17, ἐμπιπλών τροφῆς καὶ εὐφροσύνης τάς καρδίας ἡμῶν . השׂבּיע is construed with a dative and accusative of the object instead of with two accusatives of the object (Ges. §139. 1, 2). The usage of the language is unacquainted with רצון as an adverb in the sense of “willingly” (Hitzig), which would rather be ברצונך . In all the ways that Jahve takes in His historical rule He is “righteous,” i.e., He keeps strictly to the rule (norm) of His holy love; and in all His works which He accomplishes in the course of history He is merciful ( חסיד ), i.e., He practises mercy ( חסד , see Psalms 12:2); for during the present time of mercy the primary essence of His active manifestation is free preventing mercy, condescending love. True, He remains at a distance from the hypocrites, just as their heart remains far from Him (Isaiah 29:13); but as for the rest, with impartial equality He is nigh ( קרוב as in Psalms 34:19) to all who call upon Him בּאמת , in firmness, certainty, truth, i.e., so that the prayer comes from their heart and is holy fervour (cf. Isaiah 10:20; Isaiah 48:1). What is meant is true and real prayer in opposition to the νεκρὸν ἔργον , as is also meant in the main in John 4:23. To such true praying ones Jahve is present, viz., in mercy (for in respect of His power He is everywhere); He makes the desire of those who fear Him a reality, their will being also His; and He grants them the salvation ( σωτηρία ) prayed for. Those who are called in Psalms 145:19 those who fear Him, are called in Psalms 145:20 those who love Him. Fear and love of God belong inseparably together; for fear without love is an unfree, servile disposition, and love without fear, bold-faced familiarity: the one dishonours the all-gracious One, and the other the all-exalted One. But all who love and fear Him He preserves, and on the other hand exterminates all wanton sinners. Having reached the Tav , the hymn of praise, which has traversed all the elements of the language, is at an end. The poet does not, however, close without saying that praising God shall be his everlasting employment ( פּי ידבּר with Olewejored , the Mahpach or rather Jethib sign of which above represents the Makkeph ), and without wishing that all flesh, i.e., all men, who αρε σὰρξ καὶ αἷμα , בּשׂר ודם , may bless God's holy Name to all eternity. The realization of this wish is the final goal of history. It will then have reached Deuteronomy 32:43 of the great song in Deut. 32 - Jahve one and His Name one (Zechariah 14:9), Israel praising God ὑπὲρ ἀληθείας , and the Gentiles ὑπὲρ ἐλέους (Romans 15:8.).