2 Lift up your hands `in' the sanctuary, And bless ye Jehovah.
Hear the voice of my supplications, In my crying unto Thee, In my lifting up my hands toward thy holy oracle.
I wish, therefore, that men pray in every place, lifting up kind hands, apart from anger and reasoning;
My prayer is prepared -- incense before Thee, The lifting up of my hands -- the evening present.
Arise, cry aloud in the night, At the beginning of the watches. Pour out as water thy heart, Over against the face of the Lord, Lift up unto Him thy hands, for the soul of thine infants, Who are feeble with hunger at the head of all out-places.
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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:-