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Psalms 57:8 Bible in Basic English (BBE)

8 You are my glory; let the instruments of music be awake; I myself will be awake with the dawn.

Cross Reference

Psalms 16:9 BBE

Because of this my heart is glad, and my glory is full of joy: while my flesh takes its rest in hope.

Psalms 30:12 BBE

So that my glory may make songs of praise to you and not be quiet. O Lord my God, I will give you praise for ever.

Judges 5:12 BBE

Awake! awake! Deborah: awake! awake! give a song: Up! Barak, and take prisoner those who took you prisoner, O son of Abinoam.

Psalms 108:1-3 BBE

<A Song. A Psalm. Of David.> O God, my heart is fixed; I will make songs and melody, even with my glory. Give out your sounds, O corded instruments: the dawn will be awaking with my song. I will give you praise, O Lord, among the peoples; I will make melody to you among the nations.

Psalms 150:3 BBE

Give him praise with the sound of the horn: give him praise with corded instruments of music.

Isaiah 52:1 BBE

Awake! awake! put on your strength, O Zion; put on your beautiful robes, O Jerusalem, the holy town: for from now there will never again come into you the unclean and those without circumcision.

Isaiah 52:9 BBE

Give sounds of joy, make melody together, waste places of Jerusalem: for the Lord has given comfort to his people, he has taken up the cause of Jerusalem.

Acts 2:26 BBE

And for this cause my heart was glad and my tongue full of joy, and my flesh will be resting in hope:

Commentary on Psalms 57 Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible


PSALM 57

Ps 57:1-11. Altaschith—or, "Destroy not." This is perhaps an enigmatical allusion to the critical circumstances connected with the history, for which compare 1Sa 22:1; 26:1-3. In Moses' prayer (De 9:26) it is a prominent petition deprecating God's anger against the people. This explanation suits the fifty-eighth and fifty-ninth also. Asaph uses it for the seventy-fifth, in the scope of which there is allusion to some emergency. Michtam—(See on Ps 16:1, title). To an earnest cry for divine aid, the Psalmist adds, as often, the language of praise, in the assured hope of a favorable hearing.

1. my soul—or self, or life, which is threatened.

shadow of thy wings—(Ps 17:8; 36:7).

calamities—literally, "mischiefs" (Ps 52:2; 55:10).

2. performeth—or, completes what He has begun.

3. from … swallow me up—that pants in rage after me (Ps 56:2).

mercy and … truth—(Ps 25:10; 36:5), as messengers (Ps 43:3) sent to deliver him.

4. The mingled figures of wild beasts (Ps 10:9; 17:12) and weapons of war (Ps 11:2) heighten the picture of danger.

whose … tongue—or slanders.

5. This doxology illustrates his view of the connection of his deliverance with God's glory.

6. (Compare Ps 7:15; 9:15, 16).

7. I will … praise—both with voice and instrument.

8. Hence—he addresses his glory, or tongue (Ps 16:9; 30:12), and his psaltery, or lute, and harp.

I myself … early—literally, "I will awaken dawn," poetically expressing his zeal and diligence.

9, 10. As His mercy and truth, so shall His praise, fill the universe.