Add parallel Print Page Options

Psalm 135[a]

Praise of God, Benefactor of His People

[b]Alleluia.

Praise the name of the Lord;
    offer him praise, you servants of the Lord,[c]
you who minister in the house of the Lord,
    in the courts of the house of our God.[d]
Praise the Lord, for the Lord is good;
    sing to honor his name, for he is gracious.[e]
For the Lord has chosen Jacob for himself,
    Israel as his treasured possession.[f]
[g]I know that the Lord is great,
    that our Lord is superior to all gods.[h]
The Lord does whatever he pleases
    in heaven and on earth,
    in the seas and in all their depths.[i]
He causes clouds to rise
    from the ends of the earth;
he sends lightning[j] with the rain
    and brings forth the wind from his storehouses.
[k]He struck down the firstborn of Egypt,[l]
    those of humans as well as of animals.
He sent signs and portents into your midst, O Egypt,[m]
    against Pharaoh and all his servants.
10 He struck down many nations
    and slew mighty kings:
11 Sihon, king of the Amorites,
    Og, king of Bashan,
    and all the kings of Canaan.[n]
12 He then gave their lands as a heritage,
    a heritage to his people Israel.[o]
13 Your name, O Lord, endures forever,
    your renown, O Lord, lasts throughout the ages.[p]
14 For the Lord will vindicate his people
    and show compassion to his servants.[q]
15 [r]The idols of the nations are silver and gold,
    the work of human hands.
16 They have mouths but they cannot speak;
    they have eyes but they cannot see.
17 They have ears but they cannot hear,
    and there is no breath in their mouths.
18 Those who make them end up like them,
    as do all who place their trust in them.
19 [s]O house of Israel, bless the Lord!
    O house of Aaron, bless the Lord!
20 O house of Levi, bless the Lord!
    You who fear the Lord, bless the Lord!
21 Blessed from Zion be the Lord,
    he who dwells in Jerusalem.
Alleluia.[t]

Psalm 136[u]

Thanksgiving for the Creation and Redemption

[v]Give thanks to the Lord, for he is good,
    for his love endures forever.
Give thanks to the God of gods,
    for his love endures forever.
Give thanks to the Lord of lords,
    for his love endures forever.
He alone works great wonders,
    for his love endures forever.
[w]In his wisdom he made the heavens,
    for his love endures forever.
He spread out the earth upon the waters,[x]
    for his love endures forever.
He made the great lights,
    for his love endures forever.
He made the sun to rule over the day,
    for his love endures forever.
He made the moon and stars to rule the night,
    for his love endures forever.
10 [y]He struck down the firstborn of Egypt,
    for his love endures forever.
11 He led forth Israel from among them,
    for his love endures forever.
12 He did so with a strong hand and outstretched arm,
    for his love endures forever.
13 [z]He divided the Red Sea in two,
    for his love endures forever.
14 Then he led Israel through its midst,
    for his love endures forever.
15 But he swept Pharaoh and his army into the Red Sea,
    for his love endures forever.
16 [aa]Then he led his people through the wilderness,
    for his love endures forever.
17 He struck down great kings,
    for his love endures forever.
18 He slew powerful kings,
    for his love endures forever.
19 Sihon, king of the Amorites,
    for his love endures forever.
20 Og, king of Bashan,
    for his love endures forever.
21 [ab]He gave their land as a heritage,
    for his love endures forever.
22 The heritage was for his servant Israel,
    for his love endures forever.
23 The Lord remembered us in our wretched state,
    for his love endures forever.
24 He rescued us from our enemies,
    for his love endures forever.
25 [ac]He provides food to every creature,
    for his love endures forever.
26 Give thanks to the God of heaven,
    for his love endures forever.

Psalm 137[ad]

The Exiles’ Remembrance of Zion

By the rivers[ae] of Babylon
    we sat down and wept
    when we remembered Zion.
[af]There on the poplars
    we hung up our harps.
For it was there that our captors
    asked us to sing them a song,
and, tormenting us, demanded a joyful song:
    “Sing us one of the songs of Zion.”
But how could we sing songs of the Lord
    while living in a foreign land?[ag]
[ah]If I forget you, O Jerusalem,
    may my right hand fail me.
May my tongue stick to the roof of my mouth
    if I do not remember you,
if I do not regard Jerusalem
    as the greatest of my joys.
[ai]Remember, O Lord, the cruelty of the Edomites
    on the day when Jerusalem fell,[aj]
how they shouted, “Tear it down!
    Tear it down to its very foundations!”
O Daughter[ak] of Babylon, you destroyer,
    happy will he be who repays you
    for the suffering you inflicted upon us!
Happy will he be who seizes your babies
    and smashes them against a rock![al]

Psalm 138[am]

Thanksgiving for God’s Favor

Of David.

I offer you thanks, O Lord, with all my heart;[an]
    before the “gods” I sing your praise.
I bow down toward your holy temple
    and I praise your name[ao]
    for your kindness and your faithfulness,
for you have exalted above all things
    your name and your word.
On the day I cried out, you answered me
    and granted strength to my spirit.
[ap]All the kings of the earth will praise you, O Lord,
    when they hear the words of your mouth.
They will sing of the ways of the Lord:
    “How great is the Lord’s glory!”
For though the Lord is exalted, he cares for the lowly,[aq]
    but he remains far distant from the proud.
Although I walk in the midst of hostility,
    you preserve my life.
You stretch out your hand against the wrath of my enemies,
    and with your right hand[ar] you deliver me.
The Lord will fulfill his plan for me.
    Your kindness, O Lord, endures forever;
    do not forsake the work of your hands.[as]

Psalm 139[at]

God’s Infinite Knowledge and Universal Power

For the director.[au] A psalm of David.

[av]Lord, you have examined me
    and you know me.
You know when I sit and when I stand;[aw]
    you perceive my thoughts from a distance.
You mark when I go out and when I lie down;
    all my ways are open to you.
A word is not even on my tongue
    and you, O Lord, are completely aware of it.
You enfold me from in front and from behind,
    and you place your hand upon me.[ax]
Your knowledge is beyond my comprehension,
    far too sublime for me to attain.
[ay]Where can I go to hide from your spirit?
    Where can I flee from your presence?
If I ascend to the heavens, you are there;
    if I take my rest in the netherworld, you are also there.
If I rise on the wings of the dawn[az]
    and settle at the farthest limits of the sea,
10 even there your hand will guide me,
    and your right hand will hold me fast.
11 [ba]If I say, “Surely the darkness will conceal me
    and the day around me will turn to night,”
12 even the darkness is not dark to you;
    the night is as bright as the day,
    for to you darkness and light are the same.
13 [bb]You created my inmost being;
    you knit me together in my mother’s womb.
14 I praise you because I am wonderfully made;
    awesome are your works,
    as I know very well.
15 My body was not hidden from you
    when I was being made in secret.
When I was woven together in the depths of the earth,
    you saw me in the womb.[bc]
16 [bd]The sum total of my days
    were all recorded in your book.[be]
My life was fashioned
    before it had come into being.
17 How precious to me are your designs, O God!
    How vast in number they are!
18 If I were to attempt to count them,
    they would outnumber the grains of sand.
When I awake,[bf]
    I am still with you.
19 [bg]If only you would slay the wicked, O God,
    and the bloodthirsty would leave me![bh]
20 They blaspheme your name
    and treacherously rise up against you.[bi]
21 Do I not hate those who hate you, O Lord,
    and loathe those who rise up against you?
22 My hatred for them is unlimited;
    I regard them as my personal enemies.
23 Examine me, O God, and know my heart;[bj]
    test me and understand my thoughts.
24 See if I follow an evil way,
    and guide me on the way to eternity.

Psalm 140[bk]

Prayer for Deliverance from the Snares of the Wicked

For the director.[bl] A psalm of David.

[bm]Deliver me, O Lord, from evildoers;
    protect me from those who are violent,
who plan evil schemes in their hearts[bn]
    and stir up strife continually.
Their tongues[bo] are as sharp as those of a serpent,
    while the venom of vipers is on their lips. Selah
Guard me, O Lord, from the hands of the wicked;
    protect me from those who are violent,
    who are determined to cause my downfall.
The arrogant[bp] have set a hidden trap for me;
    they have spread out cords as a net,
    laying snares for me along the way. Selah
[bq]I say to the Lord, “You are my God.
    Listen, O Lord, to the voice of my supplications.”
Lord, my God, my strong deliverer,
    you shield my head on the day of battle.
Do not grant the desires of the wicked, O Lord;
    do not permit their evil plots to succeed,
    or they will become proud. Selah
10 [br]Those who surround me raise up their heads;
    let them be overwhelmed by the malice they threaten.
11 May burning coals rain down on them;
    may they be flung down into the miry depths,
    never again to rise.[bs]
12 Do not permit slanderers to find rest in the land;
    may evil hunt the violent to their death.
13 [bt]I know that the Lord secures justice for the poor
    and upholds the cause of the needy.
14 Then the upright will give thanks to your name,
    and the righteous will dwell in your presence.

Psalm 141[bu]

Prayer for Protection against Evildoers

[bv]A psalm of David.

Lord, I call to you; come quickly to my aid;
    listen to my plea when I call out to you.
May my prayer be like incense[bw] before you,
    the lifting up of my hands like the evening sacrifice.
[bx]Set a guard over my mouth, O Lord;
    keep watch over the door of my lips.
Do not permit my heart to be drawn to evil,
    or to the pursuit of wicked deeds
in the company of those who do evil;
    let me not share in their corruption.
[by]If a righteous man strikes me, I regard it as kindness;
    if he rebukes me, it is oil on my head.[bz]
But never let the oil of the wicked anoint my head,
    for my prayer is always opposed to their evil deeds.
[ca]When their leaders are flung down in stony places,
    they will learn that my prayers were heard.
As the soil is shattered when the ground is plowed,
    so our bones are scattered at the mouth of the netherworld.
[cb]But my eyes are turned to you, O Lord God;
    in you I seek refuge;
    do not take my life away.
Keep me safe from the traps they have laid for me,
    from the snares of evildoers.
10 Let the wicked tumble into their own nets all together
    while I pass by unharmed.[cc]

Psalm 142[cd]

Prayer in Time of Abandonment

A maskil[ce] of David. When he was in the cave. A prayer.

[cf]I cry out to the Lord with my plea;
    I entreat the Lord to grant me mercy.
Before him I pour out my complaint
    and tell my troubles in his presence.
[cg]No matter how faint my spirit is within me,
    you are there to guide my steps.
Along the path on which I travel[ch]
    they have hidden a trap for me.
I look to my right,
    but there is no friend who knows me.
There is no refuge available to me;
    no one cares whether I live or perish.[ci]
[cj]I cry out to you, O Lord;
    I say, “You are my refuge,
    my portion in the land of the living.”[ck]
Listen to my plea for help,
    for I am in desperate straits.
Rescue me from those who seek to persecute me,
    for they are too strong for me.[cl]
Set me free from my prison,[cm]
    so that I may praise your name.
Then the righteous will assemble around me
    because of your great generosity to me.

Psalm 143[cn]

Prayer of a Penitent in Distress

[co]A psalm of David.

Lord, hear my prayer,
    incline your ear to my supplications.
In your faithfulness respond to me
    with your righteousness.
Do not subject your servant to your judgment,
    for no one living is righteous before you.[cp]
[cq]An enemy has stalked me unrelentingly
    and crushed me into the ground;
he has left me to live in darkness[cr]
    like those long dead.
My spirit is faint within me,
    and my heart[cs] has succumbed to fear.
I remember the days of old,
    reflecting on all your actions
    and meditating on the works of your hands.[ct]
I stretch out my hands[cu] to you;
    my soul thirsts for you like a parched land. Selah
[cv]Answer me quickly, O Lord,
    for my spirit grows faint.
Do not hide your face from me
    or I will be like those who go down to the pit.[cw]
At dawn[cx] let me experience your kindness,
    for in you I place my trust.
Show me the path I must walk,
    for to you I lift up my soul.
Deliver me from my enemies, O Lord,
    for in you I seek refuge.
10 Teach me to do your will,
    for you are my God.[cy]
Let your gracious Spirit lead me
    along a level path.
11 For your name’s sake,[cz]Lord, preserve my life;
    in your righteousness deliver me from distress.
12 In your kindness, destroy my enemies,
    and annihilate all those who oppress me,
    for I am your servant.[da]

Psalm 144[db]

Prayer for Victory and Peace

[dc]Of David.

Blessed be the Lord,[dd] my Rock,
    who trains my hands for war
    and my fingers for battle.
You are my safeguard[de] and my fortress,
    my stronghold and my deliverer,
my shield in whom I take refuge,
    the one who subdues nations under me.
Lord, what is man that you care for him,
    or the son of man that you think of him?[df]
Man is nothing more than a breath;
    his days are like a fleeting shadow.[dg]
[dh]Part the heavens, O Lord, and descend;
    touch the mountains so that they smoke.[di]
Flash forth lightning bolts and scatter my foes;
    rout them with your arrows.[dj]
Reach forth your hand[dk] from on high;
    deliver me and rescue me
from the mighty waters
    and from the power of foreign foes
whose mouths utter lies[dl]
    and whose right hands are raised to swear to untruths.
[dm]I will sing a new song to you, my God;
    on a ten-stringed lyre I will play music for you.[dn]
10 You grant victory to kings
    and deliverance to your servant David from the cruel sword.[do]
11 Deliver me and rescue me
    from the hands of foreign foes
whose mouths utter lies
    and whose right hands are raised to swear to untruths.[dp]
12 [dq]May our sons in their youth
    be like carefully nurtured plants,
and may our daughters be like pillars
    designed to adorn a palace.[dr]
13 May our barns be filled
    with every kind of crop.
May our sheep increase by thousands,
    by tens of thousands in our fields,[ds]
14     and may our cattle be well fed.[dt]
May there be no breach in our walls,
    no going into exile,
    no cries of distress in our streets.
15 Blessed are the people for whom this is true;
    blessed[du] are the people whose God is the Lord.

Psalm 145[dv]

Praise of the Divine Majesty

[dw]Praise. Of David.

I will extol you, my God and King;
    I will bless your name[dx] forever and ever.
Every day I will bless you
    and praise your name forever and ever.[dy]
[dz]Great is the Lord and worthy of the highest praise;
    no one can even begin to comprehend his greatness.[ea]
Each generation will praise your works[eb] to the next
    and proclaim your mighty deeds.
People will proclaim the glorious splendor of your majesty,
    and I will meditate on your wonderful works.
They will speak of the power of your awesome deeds,
    and I will relate your greatness.
They will celebrate your abundant goodness
    and sing joyfully of your saving justice.
[ec]The Lord is gracious and merciful,
    slow to anger and abounding in kindness.[ed]
The Lord is good to all,
    showing compassion to every creature.
10 All your creatures praise you,[ee]Lord,
    and all your saints bless you.
11 They relate the glory of your kingdom
    and tell of all your power.[ef]
12 They make known to all people your mighty deeds
    and the glorious majesty of your kingdom.
13 Your kingdom will last forever,
    and your dominion will endure throughout all generations.[eg]
[eh]The Lord is faithful in all his promises
    and kind[ei] in all his deeds.
14 The Lord supports all those who are falling
    and raises up all who are bowed down.[ej]
15 The eyes of all look hopefully to you,
    and you give them their food at the right time.
16 You open your hand
    and satisfy the needs of every living creature.[ek]
17 [el]The Lord is righteous in all his ways
    and merciful in everything he does.[em]
18 The Lord is near to all who call out to him,
    to all who call out to him sincerely.[en]
19 He satisfies the desires of all who fear him;
    he hears their cry and saves them.[eo]
20 The Lord watches over all who love him,
    but he will completely destroy all the wicked.[ep]
21 May my mouth declare the praise of the Lord,
    and may every creature[eq] bless his holy name
    forever and ever.

The Concluding Hallel—Pss 146–150[er]

Psalm 146[es]

Trust in God, Creator and Redeemer

[et]Alleluia.

Praise the Lord, O my soul.[eu]
    I will praise the Lord as long as I live;
    I will sing praise to my God throughout my life.[ev]
Do not place your trust in princes,
    in mortal men who have no power to save.
When the spirit departs, they return to the earth;
    on that very day all their plans come to naught.[ew]
[ex]Blessed is he whose help is the God of Jacob,[ey]
    whose hope is in the Lord, his God,
the Maker of heaven and earth,[ez]
    the sea, and everything in them—
    the one who keeps faith forever.
He grants justice to the oppressed[fa]
    and gives bread to the hungry.
The Lord releases prisoners
    and opens the eyes of those who cannot see.[fb]
The Lord lifts up those who are bowed down;
    the Lord loves the righteous.
The Lord watches over the stranger
    and sustains the fatherless and the widow,[fc]
    but he blocks the way of the wicked.
10 The Lord will reign forever,[fd]
    your God, O Zion, for all generations.
Alleluia.

Psalm 147[fe]

Hymn to the City of God

[ff]Alleluia.

How good it is to sing praises to our God;
    how pleasant it is to give him fitting praise.[fg]
The Lord restores Jerusalem
    and gathers together the dispersed people of Israel.[fh]
He heals the brokenhearted
    and bandages their wounds.[fi]
He fixes the number of the stars
    and assigns a name to each.[fj]
Great is our Lord and awesome in power;
    his wisdom is without limit.[fk]
The Lord sustains the poor
    but humbles the wicked in the dust.[fl]
[fm]Offer songs of thanksgiving to the Lord;
    play the lyre in honor of our God.
He veils the heavens with clouds,
    supplies the earth with rain,
    and makes the hills sprout with grass.[fn]
He provides food for the animals
    and for the young ravens when they call.[fo]
10 [fp]He takes no pleasure in the strength of the horse,
    or delight in the fleetness of a runner.
11 The Lord takes pleasure in those who fear him,
    those who place their hope in his kindness.
12 [fq]Praise the Lord, O Jerusalem!
    Glorify your God, O Zion!
13 For he strengthens the bars of your gates
    and blesses your children within you.[fr]
14 He brings peace to your borders
    and fills you with the finest of wheat.[fs]
15 He sends a command to the earth;
    his word runs with utmost speed.
16 He gives the snow like wool
    and scatters the frost like ashes.[ft]
17 He hurls down his hail like crumbs;
    who can withstand his cold?[fu]
18 He sends his word, and the ice melts;
    he stirs up his breezes, and the waters flow.
19 [fv]He has revealed his word to Jacob,
    his decrees and his judgments to Israel.
20 He has not done this for the other nations;
    they are not aware of his judgments.
Alleluia.

Psalm 148[fw]

Song of the Universe

[fx]Alleluia.

Praise the Lord from the heavens;
    offer praise to him in the heights!
Praise him, all his angels;
    offer praise to him, all his hosts![fy]
Praise him, sun and moon;
    offer praise to him, all you shining stars!
Praise him, you highest heavens,[fz]
    and you waters above the heavens.
Let them praise the name[ga] of the Lord,
    for it was at his command that they were created.
He established them in place forever and ever;
    he issued a law that will never pass away.[gb]
[gc]Praise the Lord from the earth,
    you sea monsters and ocean depths,
fire and hail, snow and clouds,
    storm winds that carry out his word,[gd]
all mountains and hills,
    all fruit trees and cedars,
10 wild animals and all cattle,
    creeping creatures and flying birds,[ge]
11 kings of the earth and all nations,
    princes and all rulers on the earth,
12 young men and women,
    the elderly, as well as children.[gf]
13 [gg]Let them all praise the name of the Lord,
    for his name alone is exalted;
    his majesty is above the earth and the heavens.[gh]
14 He has raised high a horn[gi] for his people,
    to the glory of all his saints,
    for the people of Israel who are close to him.
Alleluia.

Psalm 149[gj]

Glorification of God, Lord and Creator

[gk]Alleluia.

Sing to the Lord a new song,[gl]
    his praise in the assembly of the saints.
Let Israel rejoice in its Maker;
    let the children of Zion rejoice in their King.
Let them praise his name[gm] with dancing
    and make music to him with tambourine and lyre.
For the Lord takes delight in his people,
    and he crowns the humble with salvation.[gn]
Let the saints exult in their glory
    and sing for joy on their beds.[go]
[gp]May the praises of God be on their lips
    and a double-edged sword in their hands[gq]
to wreak vengeance[gr] on the nations
    and punishment on the peoples,
to shackle their kings with chains
    and their nobles with iron fetters,
to execute the judgments decreed against them:
    such is the glory for all his saints.[gs]
Alleluia.

Psalm 150[gt]

Harmonious Praise of God

Alleluia.

Praise God in his sanctuary;
    praise him in the firmament of his power.[gu]
Praise him for his awesome acts,[gv]
    praise him for his immeasurable greatness.
[gw]Praise him with the sound of the trumpet,
    praise him with the harp and lyre.
Praise him with tambourines and dancing,
    praise him with strings and flutes.
Praise him with clanging cymbals,
    praise him with crashing cymbals.
Let everything that breathes
    offer praise to the Lord.
Alleluia.[gx]

Footnotes

  1. Psalm 135:1 Composed of fragments taken from other psalms (Pss 113; 115; 134; 136), this hymn sings the praises of the true God. The psalmist acclaims the one who holds the whole universe in his hands; he glorifies the one who chose the people of Israel and guided them to their destiny from the liberation from Egypt up to their establishment in Canaan. The entire people—priests, Levites, faithful, and God-fearers (vv. 19-20)—is convoked to this praise, which celebrates the Creator of the world and the Redeemer of Israel. In the face of such solid faith, all mention of false gods becomes a caricature. Are our hymns to God true enough to cast scorn on all the new idols that we ceaselessly create for ourselves?
    We can use this psalm to praise the heavenly Father for his wonders in favor of Israel (with whom we are spiritually united) and in favor of his Son Jesus, King of Israel. We can also use it to praise the Lord Jesus, Master of nature for the service of the new Israel, Savior of his Church, the only true God in the unity of the Father and the Holy Spirit.
  2. Psalm 135:1 An exhortation to praise God, who is good and who has love for his own.
  3. Psalm 135:1 Taken from Ps 113:1; see Jud 4:14. The praise of God included a recitation of his wonders in creation (Ps 135:5-7) and in redemptive history (vv. 8-12). Servants of the Lord: although the identity of the “servants” is debated, the general consensus, based on the text itself, is that the word denotes the priests and Levites, who praised the Lord day and night (see 1 Chr 9:33; 23:26, 30).
  4. Psalm 135:2 Taken from Ps 134:1; see Ps 92:14.
  5. Psalm 135:3 Praise is due because the Lord himself is good and gracious (or beautiful; see Ps 27:4). The second part of the verse is close to Ps 147:1. He is gracious: another possible translation is: “it is pleasant.”
  6. Psalm 135:4 Although all the nations are the Lord’s, he has chosen Israel as his own in a special way. Treasured possession: this phrase is found in Ex 19:5; Deut 7:6; 14:2; 26:18; see also Ps 33:12.
  7. Psalm 135:5 The psalmist spells out the greatness of the Creator, who rules over all creation and is above all gods.
  8. Psalm 135:5 Our Lord is superior to all gods: taken from Ex 18:11; see Ps 95:3.
  9. Psalm 135:6 The Lord does whatever he pleases (see Ps 115:3) in his acts in heaven, on the earth, in the seas, and in the subterranean waters (all their depths).
  10. Psalm 135:7 The Lord’s greatness extends to the elements and powers of nature: lightning (see Ps 148:8), rain (see Ps 29), wind (see Ps 104:4), and the storehouses from which any of the elements could be brought forth (see Pss 33:7; 65:10f).
  11. Psalm 135:8 The psalmist indicates the greatness of the Lord’s redemption of Israel through the Exodus and the Conquest by using climactic strokes. Most of the phrases in these verses reappear in Ps 136:10, 18-22.
  12. Psalm 135:8 Struck . . . of Egypt: the tenth plague (see Pss 78:51; 105:36; Ex 12:29).
  13. Psalm 135:9 Into your midst, O Egypt: similar in form to Ps 116:19, this phrase recalls Ps 136:11 (see Ps 78:43).
  14. Psalm 135:11 Sihon . . . Og . . . and all the kings of Canaan: see Ps 136:19f; Num 21:21-26, 33-35; Deut 2:30-33; 3:1-6; Jos 12:2-24.
  15. Psalm 135:12 Recalls Ps 136:17-22.
  16. Psalm 135:13 Extract from Ex 3:15; see Ps 102:12; Isa 63:12. The name God revealed to Moses was to increase in significance as the Lord increased his activities in redemptive history.
  17. Psalm 135:14 Show compassion to his servants: taken from Deut 32:36.
  18. Psalm 135:15 The psalmist reproduces Ps 115:4-6, 8 almost exactly. His point is that idols, unlike the God of Israel, do not speak, reveal, promise, or utter any spoken word. Ultimately, divine revelation is the difference between the religions made by humans and the true religion of the Lord (see Ps 115:4-8; Deut 4:16; Isa 44:9ff; Jer 10:1ff; Bar 6:7ff).
  19. Psalm 135:19 Employing the language of Pss 115:9-11; 118:2-4 (with the addition of “O house of Levi”), the psalmist calls upon all to praise the Lord present in Zion.
  20. Psalm 135:21 Alleluia: i.e., “Hallelujah” or “Bless [or praise] the Lord”; some regard this line as belonging to the beginning of Ps 136.
  21. Psalm 136:1 This psalm was for Israel the last of the “Great Hallel” psalms or, according to some Jewish authorities, the only Hallel psalm, the supreme song of praise. Associated with the great annual feasts, especially with the Feast of Passover, it is made up of exclamations of gratitude to God (accompanying a list of his wonders) and of enthusiastic assents from the crowd. In this list there are three great wonders that are never separated in Israel. First, the creation and life of the world (vv. 5-9). Next, the deliverances worked by God for Israel: the Exodus from Egypt (vv. 10-12), the passage through the Red Sea (vv. 13-15), the sojourn and victories in the wilderness (vv. 16-20), and the Conquest of the Promised Land (vv. 21-24). Finally, God’s solicitude for every living being, the grace of the bread for each day (v. 25). As it goes through this list of favors, Israel sings of God’s merciful love.
    Such a psalm could not fail to become a favorite of the Church for the Easter Vigil. By his Passion and Resurrection, Christ has given life to a new world; human beings are snatched from slavery to sin and advance in their earthly pilgrimage to become the people reunited around God in the new Promised Land, the kingdom of heaven. In the accents of the Great Hallel, Christians thus sing of the Passover of the world.
  22. Psalm 136:1 The words give thanks here mean “confess” or “acknowledge” (see Lev 5:5; Prov 28:13) and therefore, call us to grateful worship indicating what we know of God’s glory and his deeds. Since he is the God of gods and the Lord of lords (see Deut 10:17), he alone is to be thanked for all the acts in creation and redemption (see Ps 72:18; Ex 15:11).
  23. Psalm 136:5 The psalmist here brings together two Old Testament treatments of the creation theme: that of Proverbs, which speaks of the understanding and wisdom (v. 5) presupposed by creation (see Prov 3:19f; 8:1, 22-31; see also Ps 104:24; Jer 10:12), and that of Genesis, which gives the account of it (Ps 136:6-9: see Gen 1:9f, 16-18).
  24. Psalm 136:6 Upon the waters: see Ps 24:2.
  25. Psalm 136:10 Of the many wonders during the Exodus from Egypt, the psalmist mentions the tenth plague (see Pss 78:51; 105:36; 135:8) and the Lord’s strong hand and outstretched arm, a metaphor for God’s great and personal strength in favor of his people (see Ex 6:1, 6; Deut 4:34).
  26. Psalm 136:13 At the Red Sea, the Lord discredited Pharaoh and his forces by judging them (see Ex 14:27), while he rescued his people (see Ps 106:7ff; Ex 4:23).
  27. Psalm 136:16 The Lord guided his people through the wilderness (see Deut 8:15; Jer 2:6; Am 2:10) and won victories for them. He struck down the great and mighty kings like Sihon and Og (see Ps 135:11; Deut 2:30ff; 3:1), who are representative of a long number of Canaanite kings. Verses 17-22 are practically identical with Ps 135:10-12.
  28. Psalm 136:21 God was with his servant Israel during the Conquest of the Promised Land, which became their heritage (see Ps 135:12), as well as from that time till the present. The Lord’s remembrance is based on the covenant and is intended to effectively bring out the complete redemption of his afflicted people (see Ex 6:5).
  29. Psalm 136:25 Finally, it is the Lord who provides daily bread for all his creatures; therefore, all should praise him. God of heaven: an expression current during the Persian epoch (see Ezr 1:2; 5:11; 6:9; Neh 1:5; 2:4) that became classic (see Jud 5:8; Dan 2:18).
  30. Psalm 137:1 Let us imagine the setting in which this psalm was sung for the first time. Some Levites, after returning from the Exile, have gathered for a penitential liturgy. They are unable to suppress the memory of the humiliations they suffered on the banks of the Euphrates, where, to heighten their sadness, they were compelled not to sing the songs they loved, since it would have been a profanation to make these known in a foreign land for the amusement of idolaters. Now their cry of attachment to Jerusalem becomes vehement and their song leads to an outburst of vengeful anger that, though in keeping with the custom of the time, seems to us cruel beyond description (see notes on Pss 5:11; 35).
    Events now in the distant past become symbols; the psalm speaks of Edom, but the singers think of all the forces united to destroy the People of God and the righteous; the psalm mentions Babylon, but this suggests the most hateful wickedness. This same wickedness the Book of Revelation will later image forth in the monstrous figure of “Babylon the Great,” mother of blasphemers (see Rev 17:5).
    We can pray this psalm as citizens of heaven (see Phil 3:20) living in exile on earth (see 2 Cor 5:6f). Strangers to a world that does not acknowledge us as its own, we are hated and persecuted by it for this reason (see Jn 15:18f; 17:14-18). We are cognizant that our exile deprives us of our true home and our Father and dooms us to divers physical and moral miseries including death, and we “groan inwardly as we wait for . . . the redemption of our bodies” (Rom 8:23).
  31. Psalm 137:1 Rivers: the Euphrates and Tigris, as well as the numerous irrigation-canals that branched off from them (see Ezr 8:21; Ezek 1:1; 3:15). Sat: the posture of mourning (see Job 2:8, 13; Lam 2:10); it could also refer to the idea of being settled in accord with the word of the prophet Jeremiah who urged the exiles to work for a living, to multiply, and to seek the peace and prosperity of the land (see Jer 29:4-9). Wept: see Isa 24:8; Jer 25:10; Lam 3:48; 5:14.
  32. Psalm 137:2 The exiles were tauntingly requested to sing the songs of Zion on their harps. The taunts were tantamount to the question “Where is your God?” (Pss 42:4, 11; 79:10; 115:2), and might have concerned the “songs of Zion” that celebrated the Lord’s majesty and protection (see Pss 46; 48; 76; 84; 87; 122).
  33. Psalm 137:4 The exiles could not bring themselves to sing any of the holy songs while they rested on foreign, unclean soil; that would be a profanation (see Hos 9:3; Am 7:17).
  34. Psalm 137:5 The exiles could not forget Jerusalem and what it symbolized: covenant, temple, God’s presence and kingship, atonement, forgiveness, and reconciliation. They vowed to wait for the redemption promised by God.
  35. Psalm 137:7 See notes on Pss 5:11; 35.
  36. Psalm 137:7 On the day when Jerusalem fell: literally, “the day of Jerusalem” or “that day at Jerusalem.” The “day” in question is either the ninth day of the fourth month (June–July 587 B.C.) when the Babylonians broke through the walls of Jerusalem (see Jer 39:2; 52:7) or the tenth day of the fifth month (July–August 587 B.C.) when the temple was set afire (see Jer 52:12; Zec 7:5; 8:19). The Edomites collaborated with the besiegers and did everything they could to disgrace Judah and keep the people from escaping (see Lam 4:21f; Ezek 25:12; 35:12; Ob 11), and their name became a symbol of Israel’s enemies, as well as an object of the Lord’s judgments (see Isa 63:1-4; Jer 49:7-22; Ezek 25:8, 12-14; 35; Ob 1-21).
  37. Psalm 137:8 Daughter: a personification of Babylon, on whom the Lord had passed judgment (see Isa 13; 21:1-10; 47; Jer 50–51; Hab 2:4-20).
  38. Psalm 137:9 Happy will he be who seizes . . . : in accord with the ruthless practice of ancient warfare, this scene was often played out during the sacking of a city after its fall (see 2 Ki 8:12; 15:16; Isa 13:16, 18; Hos 10:14; 14:1; Am 1:13; Nah 3:10). A beatitude is here transformed into a terrible curse.
  39. Psalm 138:1 This psalm begins a collection of eight Davidic psalms (Pss 138–145). The believer, representing the people of Israel, knows from experience the God who saves the human race from its distress. He does not want to keep this conviction for himself but to share it with all peoples, all human beings. A deep faith in a universal plan of the Lord illumines this beautiful thanksgiving prayer.
    We can pray this psalm keeping in mind the various victories that God empowers his Church to achieve against her material and spiritual enemies. These enable us to bless our Savior and to indicate the praise offered to him by earthly powers who witness and suffer under these victories.
  40. Psalm 138:1 The psalmist stresses that praise belongs to the Lord alone and not to the gods of the nations, whose kings will have to submit to the Lord. After the word “heart” the Greek adds another line: “for you have heard the words of my mouth,” which is not in the Hebrew; it seems to have been a variant of verse 4b accidently inserted here. Heart: see note on Ps 4:8. Gods: the Hebrew is elohim, which is the word for “God,” “gods,” and sometimes “godlike beings,” such as the angels. The Septuagint and Vulgate have “angels” (see Ps 8:6); other versions, “kings” or “judges.”
  41. Psalm 138:2 Name: see note on Ps 5:12. Kindness: see note on Ps 6:5. Your word: i.e., God’s promise. By his faithfulness to his promise, God has made his name renowned.
  42. Psalm 138:4 The psalmist prays that the nations, together with their gods and kings, will also pay homage to the Lord (see note on Ps 9:2). For the words and ways of the Lord reveal how great is his glory (see Ps 57:6; Isa 40:5; 60:1).
  43. Psalm 138:6 The Lord lifts up the lowly (see note on Ps 113:7-9; Lk 1:48, 52) and puts down the proud (see notes on Pss 31:24; 131:1; see also Ps 101:5).
  44. Psalm 138:7 The psalmist describes the Lord extending his hand to offer help while passing judgment on those who cause his adversity (see Ps 144:7; Ex 3:20; 9:15). Right hand: symbol of strength (see Pss 60:7; 139:10).
  45. Psalm 138:8 The Lord has loving concern for his people and creation (see Pss 90:16; 92:6; 143:5; Isa 60:21; 64:8) and has a purpose for them (see note on Ps 57:3).
  46. Psalm 139:1 This psalm is one of the pearls of the Psalter in its literary beauty and profound doctrine: the complete knowledge that God has about each person. The human heart is transparent to God’s look; he knows the most secret and most unknown movements of our souls. Feeling the hand of God on himself provoked sadness and anxiety in Job (see Job 23–24; Jer 15:6f), but in the psalmist, it instills serenity and abandonment. He no longer asks God to turn away his face but to lead him on the path of fidelity. The psalmist awakens to God; the one whom he thought he had to seek out is already there, present in him as his source of life, more present to him than he is to himself.
    We can pray this psalm to remind ourselves of the complete knowledge that Jesus has of us (see Jn 10:14f). For he is our Creator and Savior (see Col 1:16f; Heb 1:1f), who restores the supernatural world and re-creates each of his disciples, making new creatures of them to his own image (see Eph 2:10; Col 3:11).
  47. Psalm 139:1 For the director: these words are thought to be a musical or liturgical notation.
  48. Psalm 139:1 God is all-seeing and all-knowing. His knowledge is not sterile but personal and active, discriminating in favor of those who are faithful to the Lord.
  49. Psalm 139:2 You know when I sit and when I stand: a Hebrew idiom that, when combined with the parallel “go out and lie down” (or “go out and come in”: see Isa 37:28), signifies: “in all that I do.”
  50. Psalm 139:5 Place your hand upon me: a gesture performed by the judge or the witness (see Job 9:33). It expresses God’s absolute mastery over human beings (see Ex 33:22; Rev 1:17).
  51. Psalm 139:7 God is all-present; he is everywhere to protect his children. He perceives all things in all places and there is no escaping him. The same images and teaching are found in Am 9:2f. See also Job 11:8; 23:8f; Prov 15:11; Isa 7:11; Jer 23:24; Jon 1:3.
  52. Psalm 139:9 Rise on the wings of the dawn: go to the most distant extremities of the east. Settle at the farthest limits of the sea: the uttermost bounds of the west.
  53. Psalm 139:11 There is only light with God, and his light brightens up the darkness. For to you darkness and light are the same: some consider this line to be a gloss.
  54. Psalm 139:13 God not only sees all and penetrates the inaccessible, but he is completely operative there, creating people and providing a purpose for all.
  55. Psalm 139:15 God knows all human beings intimately.
  56. Psalm 139:16 The text of these verses is obscure in several places.
  57. Psalm 139:16 [They] were all recorded in your book: an image familiar to the Prophets (see Neh 13:14; Dan 7:10; Mal 3:16) as well as the psalmists (see Pss 69:29; 109:13), which was reprised in the Dies Irae (the Sequence formerly used at Masses for the Dead): Liber scriptus proferetur, in quo totum continetur: “Lo, the book exactly worded, in which all has been recorded.” See note on Ps 56:9.
  58. Psalm 139:18 When I awake: in this context, these words may express a glimpse of the resurrection on the part of the psalmist, as in Ps 17:15 (see note there).
  59. Psalm 139:19 God is all-holy and opposes the wicked, whom he punishes for their wrongdoing. He leads the psalmist and the righteous in the way of God (the way to eternity: see Pss 1:6; 5:9; 73:18; 143:10; and note on 16:9-11) and not in the way of idolaters (the evil way: see Ps 16:4; Isa 48:5).
  60. Psalm 139:19 See notes on Pss 5:11; 35.
  61. Psalm 139:20 And . . . against you: the Hebrew is uncertain here.
  62. Psalm 139:23 Heart: see note on Ps 4:8.
  63. Psalm 140:1 More than once already we have heard the voice of a suffering, righteous person; he is the persecuted victim of the wicked, thieves, and calumniators. He calls down the vengeance of God on his enemies, while retaining his trust in the Lord. The state of the righteous and the harshness of the wicked are expressed in images often used. The opposition that biblical prayer places between poverty and violence, humility and arrogance, simplicity and falsehood is inescapable. To recite this psalm is to bear human misfortune, to become poor.
    We can pray this psalm in the name of the Church who is continuously assailed by treacherous adversaries, both material and spiritual. Knowing the futility of earthly help, the Church takes her heavenly Spouse, Christ, as her sole refuge. He provides spiritual armor that is efficacious against the attacks of the enemy (see Eph 6:13-17; 1 Thes 5:8).
  64. Psalm 140:1 For the director: these words are thought to be a musical or liturgical notation.
  65. Psalm 140:2 The psalmist prays for deliverance from evildoers who sow discord with their speech and devise evil schemes, leading to anarchy and continuous agitation. Instead of following God’s way, they have chosen the alternative way of the “father of lies” who was “a murderer from the beginning” (Jn 8:44).
  66. Psalm 140:3 Hearts: see note on Ps 4:8.
  67. Psalm 140:4 Tongues: see note on Ps 5:10.
  68. Psalm 140:6 The wicked seek to entrap the righteous as a fowler catches animals with a snare, net, or trap (see Pss 31:5; 119:110; 141:10; 142:4; Mt 22:15; Lk 11:54). Arrogant: see note on Ps 31:24.
  69. Psalm 140:7 The psalmist seeks protection from the Lord of the covenant, for he alone is God and the Master of the world.
  70. Psalm 140:10 The psalmist’s plea now becomes an imprecatory prayer, which is an expression for God’s just rule. Using metaphors for the divine judgment (burning coals and miry depths), he asks for redress (see notes on Pss 5:11; 35).
  71. Psalm 140:11 Allusion to Sodom (see Gen 19) and Dathan (see Num 16). See also Pss 11:6; 36:13; 55:24; 141:10.
  72. Psalm 140:13 The psalmist is confident that the Lord, the just Judge (see Pss 7:9f; 9:5), will vindicate the righteous poor (see notes on Pss 22:27; 34:7), who will then praise his name (see note on Ps 7:18) and live in his presence (see notes on Pss 23:5-6; 27:4).
  73. Psalm 141:1 Surrounded by the wicked who persecute him in order to drag him with them into impiety, the psalmist offers up an evening prayer, matching the morning prayer referred to in Ps 5:4. The poet begs God to protect him against every defection, to help him refuse all connivance with the wicked, and to enable him ultimately to escape their plots against him.
    This psalm is a reminder to us that, impelled by the devil, our greatest enemy, the world hates us because we are not of the world (see Jn 15:19; 17:14). By every available means, it strives to snatch us away from Christ to serve the devil. Aware of our weakness, we should “pray that [we] may not enter into temptation” (Mk 14:38), reciting this psalm when necessary.
  74. Psalm 141:1 The psalmist is in a precarious position, so he hopes his prayer for help will be like a pleasing offering before the Lord.
  75. Psalm 141:2 Incense: literally, “smoke,” i.e., the fragrant fumes that wafted from the altar at the daily burning of sacrificial animals or aromatic spices. The lifting up of my hands: a symbol of dependence on and praise of the Lord (see Pss 28:2; 63:5; 1 Tim 2:8).
  76. Psalm 141:3 The psalmist, like the sages, carefully watches over his heart so as not to give in to sins of speech or action, for he knows that the wicked use their tongues for destruction (see Ps 140:4) while the righteous express love and fidelity (see Ps 15:2f). He begs the Lord to keep his heart from sin and temptation so that he may do God’s will (see Ps 119:10, 36, 133). Let me not share in their corruption: literally, “let me not eat of their delicacies.”
  77. Psalm 141:5 The psalmist delineates the fate of evil rulers at God’s hands, and hopes that the shock may bring their followers to their senses.
  78. Psalm 141:5 Oil was poured on the head in a gesture of welcome and hospitality (see Lk 7:46).
  79. Psalm 141:6 The text of these verses is obscure and their meaning uncertain. As it stands here, the meaning of verse 7 may be: “As a farmer breaks up the soil and brings up the rocks, so the bones of the wicked will be scattered without a decent burial” (see Ps 79:2-3).
  80. Psalm 141:8 The psalmist prays for deliverance and for vindication, for he remains with eyes of faith fixed on the Lord (see Ps 25:15).
  81. Psalm 141:10 God’s vindication comes in the form of retribution; the schemes of the wicked will recoil upon them (see notes on Pss 5:11; 35).
  82. Psalm 142:1 The psalmist issues a prayer for deliverance from powerful enemies. Whether he is King David (see 1 Sam 22:10) or someone unknown, he has been trodden upon by everyone and is undergoing the agony and passion of so many others. He is also an image of Christ, isolated and suffering without protest.
    Often we too find ourselves exhausted on our journey through life, strewn as it is with many snares. For some, it is social or political oppression that prevents us from leading a fully human and Christian existence. For others, religious persecution itself intervenes to restrain or destroy our goods and freedom. Upon each one, our spiritual enemies (the world and the devil) impose a continuous struggle, both fierce and treacherous, that each must wage practically without human help. In these struggles, we can make use of this psalm to direct to God an ardent and confident appeal.
  83. Psalm 142:1 Maskil: see note on Ps 32; When he was in the cave: see Ps 57:1; 1 Sam 22:10; 24:1f.
  84. Psalm 142:2 The psalmist uses the formal third person (customary when addressing kings) to pour out his troubles to God.
  85. Psalm 142:4 The psalmist is at the point of spiritual exhaustion (see Pss 76:13; 77:3; 143:4; Jon 2:8), and only God can help for he knows the faithful’s destiny, his present and future life (see Ps 139:24). Yet the Lord is not present to help him along this path of his enemies, which is filled with snares. My right: i.e., the place where one’s witness or legal counsel stood (see Pss 16:8; 109:31; 110:5; 121:5).
  86. Psalm 142:4 Along the path on which I travel: the present path on which the psalmist is traveling, i.e., the path of his opponents, which is covered with such snares as to fill him with dread, in contrast to the path of the Lord, which leads to such salvation as to fill him with hope (vv. 7-8).
  87. Psalm 142:5 No one cares whether I live or perish: the psalmist is like an outcast for whom no one cares and whom no one comes forward to protect. He is alone and extremely vulnerable.
  88. Psalm 142:6 The psalmist reiterates his distress and his plea for deliverance, confessing that the Lord is his refuge (see Ps 91:2; Jer 17:17) and his hope (my portion in the land of the living: see Pss 16:5; 73:26; 119:57; Lam 3:24). In turn, he will give thanks for his deliverance (see note on Ps 7:18), and the righteous will rejoice in the Lord with him (see Pss 22:25; 34:3; 64:10; 107:42).
  89. Psalm 142:6 Hence, the psalmist cries out to the Lord for help. The Lord is his Covenant God; he most of all should be solicitous for his servant. In the land of the living: i.e., here below, during his earthly life (see Ps 27:13).
  90. Psalm 142:7 The enemies of the psalmist are too strong for him. Unless the Lord comes to his aid, the afflicted man is lost. There is no one else who can save him.
  91. Psalm 142:8 Prison: a word that may denote actual imprisonment or may be a metaphor for the psalmist’s desperate plight characterized by adversity and isolation (see Ps 107:10; Isa 42:7). Assemble around me: the Greek and Syriac translate this phrase as “hope [or wait] around me” (see Job 36:2). All the friends of God are united in praise and joy (see Pss 22:26; 34:4; 64:11; 107:42).
  92. Psalm 143:1 This is the seventh and last of the Penitential Psalms (Pss 6; 32; 38; 51; 102; 130; 143), probably because of verse 2, with its admission of universal guilt, the only reference to sin and forgiveness in it. Throughout the Psalter, amid praise and joy, there is the lament of the poor person who is dependent on God for everything. Here is the last pressing supplication of the sufferer who cannot despair of God, of his love and his righteousness. The true Israel, the community of the poor of the Lord, understood it even unto suffering. As Paul indicates (Rom 3:20ff), no one merits to be delivered from evil, not even the person who observes the law; one can only rely on the Lord’s unfailing love for human beings. Those who truly pray will experience the Lord’s deliverance.
    There are many occasions on which we, too, can pray this simple and ardent psalm to implore divine aid. The demons and all those whom they incite never cease to threaten us, either in our material sustenance or in our physical and spiritual life.
  93. Psalm 143:1 The psalmist cries out to God to have mercy because of his faithfulness and righteousness, for he knows that God’s judgment could find him guilty of sin and condemn him to remain afflicted (see 130:3).
  94. Psalm 143:2 For no one living is righteous before you: this text is used in Rom 3:20 (see Pss 51:7; 130:3; Job 9:2; 14:3f; 15:14; Eccl 7:20).
  95. Psalm 143:3 The psalmist sketches the distress he suffers and is encouraged by the memory of God’s past acts of deliverance.
  96. Psalm 143:3 The same images are found in Ps 7:6; Lam 3:6; Mic 7:8. Darkness: see note on Ps 27:1.
  97. Psalm 143:4 Heart: see note on Ps 4:8.
  98. Psalm 143:5 See Pss 42:5; 77:6, 12f.
  99. Psalm 143:6 Stretch out my hands: in supplication (see Pss 44:21; 88:10; Ex 9:29). Soul: see note on Ps 6:4. Thirsts for you: see Ps 63:2.
  100. Psalm 143:7 The psalmist here appends a mosaic of prayers for deliverance, guidance, and commitment to the Lord.
  101. Psalm 143:7 See similar phrases in Pss 10:1; 28:1; 69:18; 84:3; 88:5; 102:3; 141:1.
  102. Psalm 143:8 At dawn: see notes on Pss 57; 57:9; see also Pss 17:15; 90:14; 101:8; 108:3. Kindness: see note on Ps 6:5. I lift up my soul: see Pss 25:1; 27:8; 32:6; 33:22; 86:4.
  103. Psalm 143:10 Teach me . . . my God: see Pss 25:4f; 118:28. Spirit: the divine Spirit was regarded as a force and not yet as a person (see Ps 51:13; Neh 9:20; Ezek 36:27). Lead . . . path: see note on Ps 26:12 (see also Pss 27:11; 139:24).
  104. Psalm 143:11 For your name’s sake: see Ps 25:11. Deliver me from distress: see Pss 31:5; 119:25, 88; 142:8.
  105. Psalm 143:12 The psalmist calls upon the Lord to deal righteously with his adversaries, reflecting a hope that is expressed in the imprecatory psalms (see notes on Pss 5:11; 35; see also Ps 54:5). Kindness: see note on Ps 6:5.
  106. Psalm 144:1 This psalm combines two compositions that are quite different in rhythm and tone. The first is suited to a royal liturgy and is drawn largely from Ps 18, a canticle of the king’s victories. The second part was originally a kind of fine painting to illustrate a time of prosperity. By the time of the final redaction of the psalm, the monarchy had disappeared, and the two compositions were combined into a hymn of the Messianic Hope.
    A new David will come, the true Messiah upon whom will rest the blessing of God for the benefit of the whole community. He will inaugurate an era of happiness and peace. The ancient images are nothing more than starting points, giving color and life to this prayer of expectation. The essential point is to preserve the hope of a humanity finally filled with the joy of God. It is in this vein that we can pray it with Christ in mind.
  107. Psalm 144:1 In jubilant language the psalmist praises God as the Redeemer-King who cares for him and watches over him, because he has the inherent weakness of all humans and is in need of help.
  108. Psalm 144:1 Blessed be the Lord: the psalm begins with the prayer of David in 1 Chr 29:10 and the prayers in Tob 3:11; 8:5, 15; 13:1 (see Dan 3:26; Lk 1:68; Eph 1:3). My Rock . . . for battle: see Ps 18:35, 47.
  109. Psalm 144:2 This verse reflects Ps 18:3, 48. My safeguard: literally, “my unfailing kindness” (see note on Ps 6:5).
  110. Psalm 144:3 This verse reflects Ps 8:5.
  111. Psalm 144:4 This verse is close to Ps 39:6-7 (see also Job 14:2).
  112. Psalm 144:5 The psalmist calls upon God to become involved and deliver him, to come as the Divine Warrior as he did at Sinai. There he came accompanied by volcanic eruption, thunder, and lightning to save his people (see Ex 19:11, 18f).
  113. Psalm 144:5 This verse takes up Pss 18:10; 104:32. It also reveals the anxious expectation of Israel, the prey of persecutors, and the hope of a divine intervention.
  114. Psalm 144:6 See Ps 18:15. Arrows: i.e., the Lord’s lightning that serves to rout the enemies and take away their power.
  115. Psalm 144:7 See Ps 18:17, 46. Hand: symbolic of the Lord’s power (see Ps 18:17), which is capable of rescuing the psalmist out of the mighty waters into which he is sinking, i.e., out of the clutches of foreigners. For the Lord, who has subdued the stormy seas (see Ps 65:8; Gen 1:2), can certainly overpower stormy foreign foes (see Isa 56:6; 61:5).
  116. Psalm 144:8 The enemies are completely opposed to the law of God and filled with lies, deceit, and wickedness. Mouths utter lies: see note on Ps 5:10. Right hands are raised to swear to untruths: see Ezr 10:19; see also Ps 106:26; Ex 6:8; Deut 32:40.
  117. Psalm 144:9 The psalmist makes a vow to praise the Lord for the expected victory.
  118. Psalm 144:9 This verse is close to Ps 33:2f (see Pss 40:4; 98:1; 149:1).
  119. Psalm 144:10 This verse takes up the conclusion of Ps 18. “My servant David” became a Messianic title (see Jer 33:21; Ezek 34:23ff; 37:24); it is found again in Pss 78:70; 89:4, 21.
  120. Psalm 144:11 The psalmist repeats the prayer in verses 7-8, probably as an introduction to verses 12-15.
  121. Psalm 144:12 The psalmist prays for the people, asking the Lord to bless their children, their lives, and their livelihoods. When the enemies are defeated, the rule of the Lord will reach its height and the Messianic blessings will pour in upon his people and upon the land. The blessings are described in terms that are understandable to a people whose main occupation was agriculture and cattle raising. Even the fortified cities will receive a Messianic blessing, that of invincibility.
  122. Psalm 144:12 The Hebrew text of this verse is obscure and its meaning uncertain. It may refer to the great strength of the sons and the physical beauty of the daughters.
  123. Psalm 144:13 Material abundance is a gift of God (see Lev 26:5; Deut 7:13).
  124. Psalm 144:14 May our cattle be well fed: other possible translations are: “may our oxen be heavy with flesh,” or “may our oxen be heavy with young,” or “may our chieftains be firmly established.”
  125. Psalm 144:15 Blessed are the people who experience the Lord’s ability to save, protect, and bless. Blessed: see note on Ps 1:1.
  126. Psalm 145:1 This psalm is a hymn to God, the Great King. It is not original, for the psalmist strings together his verses in the order of the alphabet and takes the passages from several other psalms. The cantors of Israel were not reluctant to dip into the common treasury of sacred chant to celebrate God’s praise with the same words and phrases. But the repetition of certain terms also enables one to express the ardor of a conviction. By means of the words kingdom, power, majesty, name, works, mighty deeds, righteousness, faithfulness, compassion, love, and truth, the psalm exalts above all the God of the covenant. It then proclaims his benevolence that is manifested in the help, subsistence, and salvation accorded in some manner to all who invoke him. Thus, the cantor acknowledges God’s presence in the world, in history, and in life.
    We can pray this psalm to bless, praise, and extol the heavenly Father in his perfections and prodigious works. But we can also recite it in honor of Christ, who shares fully in the perfections (see Col 1:15, 19; Heb 1:3) and works of his Father (see Jn 5:19).
  127. Psalm 145:1 The psalmist calls for praise of God, the Great King. This praise is to be given unceasingly and forever.
  128. Psalm 145:1 See Pss 30:2; 44:5; 71:14. Bless your name: see note on Ps 5:12.
  129. Psalm 145:2 See Pss 34:2; 68:20; 71:14; 146:2. This verse has been incorporated into the Te Deum, the great prayer of Christian praise to the Trinity.
  130. Psalm 145:3 The psalmist specifies the reason for praising God: his mighty deeds, which reveal his greatness and goodness. The same two themes are combined in Pss 86:10, 17; 135:3, 5.
  131. Psalm 145:3 See Pss 48:2; 96:3f; Job 36:26.
  132. Psalm 145:4 See Pss 71:17; 78:4; Isa 38:19. Salvation history is transmitted from generation to generation by the proclamation of God’s mighty deeds and wonderful works (see Ps 22:31f). Your works: of creation, providence, and redemption.
  133. Psalm 145:8 Now the psalmist moves to praise God because of his divine attributes, e.g., compassion and love. These attributes lead all his works, including the saints, to give him thanks for the expressions of his glory, power, and kingdom.
  134. Psalm 145:8 See Pss 86:15; 103:8, 13; Ex 34:6f; Num 14:18; Wis 1:13f; Isa 63:7.
  135. Psalm 145:10 All your creatures praise you: see note on Ps 65:14. Saints: see notes on Pss 4:4; 34:10.
  136. Psalm 145:11 See 93:1; 1 Chr 29:11.
  137. Psalm 145:13 Text cited in Dan 3:100; 4:31, and applied to Christ the King. See Ps 102:13; Tob 13:6ff; Dan 7:14; 1 Tim 1:17; Rev 11:15.
  138. Psalm 145:13 The psalmist calls for praise of God because of the Lord’s faithfulness to the covenant. The first two lines (v. 13c) are not in the Hebrew; they are in the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Septuagint.
  139. Psalm 145:13 Kind: see note on Ps 6:5.
  140. Psalm 145:14 See Pss 94:18; 146:8.
  141. Psalm 145:16 See Ps 104:27f; Mt 6:25-34.
  142. Psalm 145:17 The psalmist calls upon all creatures to praise God for his righteous acts—acts of restoration, redemption, and vindication.
  143. Psalm 145:17 See Deut 32:4.
  144. Psalm 145:18 See Deut 4:7; Isa 55:6; 58:9; Jer 29:13.
  145. Psalm 145:19 See Pss 20:4; 34:18; 85:10.
  146. Psalm 145:20 See Pss 34:18; 91:14; 104:35; 139:19; Jdg 5:31.
  147. Psalm 145:21 Every creature: literally, “all flesh.”
  148. Psalm 146:1 The Concluding Hallel (see notes on Pss 113–118). After all the prayers and praises of the Psalter, we are now at the end; all the instruments of creation and all the voices of human beings enter into a great chorus, a symphony destined never to end. The Psalms are a foretaste of and prelude to the acclamations of eternity.
  149. Psalm 146:1 The long procession of the unhappy and the persecuted has wound its way through the Psalter, endlessly repeating their supplications. This time, their prayer takes the form of a hymn of happiness and security. How uncertain is the help of the mighty! God alone truly frees us of every anxiety.
    Inaugurating the third Hallel and composed of reminiscences, this hymn sings of what the Prophets promised (see Isa 29:18f; 49:9; 61:1), promises whose fulfillment Jesus proclaims (see Lk 4:16-21). “The blind receive their sight, the lame walk, those who have leprosy are cured, the deaf hear, the dead are raised to life, and the poor have the good news proclaimed to them” (Mt 11:5)—such is the kingdom that comes; it inaugurates a new time, that of peace. Accordingly, like the next four psalms, it is framed with “Alleluia” or “Hallelujah” (“Praise [or bless] the Lord”).
    We can pray this psalm in honor of the heavenly Father but also in honor of Christ “[whom] God exalted . . . at his right hand as leader and Savior so that he might grant repentance and forgiveness of sins to Israel” (Acts 5:31).
  150. Psalm 146:1 The psalmist calls upon his people to praise and trust the Lord, for human beings are unable to provide salvation owing to their mortality.
  151. Psalm 146:1 The Septuagint and Vulgate attribute this psalm to the prophets Haggai and Zechariah. Soul: see note on Ps 6:4.
  152. Psalm 146:2 Life is for the purpose of praising the Lord (see Pss 103:1; 104:33).
  153. Psalm 146:4 See Pss 90:3; 104:29; Eccl 9:5; 12:7; Isa 2:22.
  154. Psalm 146:5 The psalmist identifies this Lord as the God of Jacob, the Covenant God who is Creator and Lord over all, Sustainer and Provider, the Righteous One who dispenses justice to both the godly and the wicked, and the Great King who reigns forever.
  155. Psalm 146:5 See Ps 2:12; Deut 33:29; Jer 17:7. God of Jacob: the God of Zion (see note on v. 10 below), whose kingship is established (see Pss 47:8; 48:2), and who blesses those who trust in him (see Ps 84:13).
  156. Psalm 146:6 The Lord is faithful, using his power to control creation, including the unruly sea, and to bless his creatures (see Ps 107:8f) with his kindness (see note on Ps 6:5). Maker of heaven and earth: see Pss 121:2 and note; 124:8; Ex 20:11; Jer 32:17; Acts 14:15.
  157. Psalm 146:7 He grants justice to the oppressed: see Ps 103:6; Deut 7:9. The Lord releases prisoners: see Ps 68:7; Isa 49:9; 61:1.
  158. Psalm 146:8 Opens the eyes of those who cannot see: see Isa 35:5; Bar 6:36; Mt 9:30; Jn 9:1ff; Acts 26:18. Lifts up those . . . bowed down: see Ps 145:14; Lk 13:12.
  159. Psalm 146:9 Watches over the stranger . . . the fatherless and the widow: see Ps 68:6; Ex 22:21. Blocks the way of the wicked: see Pss 11:6; 147:6; Job 5:12.
  160. Psalm 146:10 The Lord is the Great King who has promised to dwell with his people and to deliver them (see Pss 29:10; 132:13-15; Ex 15:17). The Lord will reign forever: see Ps 145:13; Ex 15:18.
  161. Psalm 147:1 Three times the psalmist sounds the invitation to praise, and three times he acclaims the almighty God. Immense is his power deployed throughout the universe, and without measure is his benevolence for his people. He rebuilds Jerusalem, leads captives back to freedom, and reveals his law. Yet the author of wonders in nature and the liberator of his people is a God who takes pleasure in the lowly. “He will wipe every tear from their eyes” (Rev 21:4)—such will be the grace of the Almighty in the new Jerusalem (see Isa 60; 62).
    In the Septuagint and Vulgate, this psalm is divided into two (147:1-11 = Ps 146; 147:12-20 = Ps 147) and attributed to the prophets Haggai and Zechariah. It contains many reminiscences of Isaiah, Job, and Psalms.
    We can pray this psalm while keeping in mind that the restoration of Jerusalem and Israel after the disaster of 587 B.C. and the Babylonian Captivity constitutes a wonderful work of God. However, it is only a pale image of a more beautiful work of restoration that the heavenly Father accomplishes through Christ in building his Church.
  162. Psalm 147:1 The psalmist enumerates the reasons why it is good to praise the Lord: the restoration that he has worked for his people in accord with his word by rebuilding Jerusalem and bringing back the exiles; his concern for all creation; and his redemption, i.e., the vindication of his people.
  163. Psalm 147:1 See Ps 92:2 and note on Ps 135:3.
  164. Psalm 147:2 See Deut 30:3f; Isa 11:12; 56:8; Jer 31:10; Dan 9:25.
  165. Psalm 147:3 See Job 5:18; Isa 30:26; 61:1; Jer 33:6; Ezek 34:16. Brokenhearted: e.g., those in exile (see Ps 137) and those who returned from exile and attempted to rebuild the walls of Jerusalem (see Neh 2:17-20; 4:1-17).
  166. Psalm 147:4 See Gen 15:5; Isa 40:26; Bar 3:34f. In this connection, scholars cite the Wisdom of Ahiqar (VIII, 116): “Numerous are the stars of heaven, and no one knows their names.”
  167. Psalm 147:5 See Ps 48:2; Job 36:22, 26; Isa 40:28; Jer 51:15.
  168. Psalm 147:6 See Pss 37:9-10; 145:20; 146:9; 1 Sam 2:7f; Job 5:11; Lk 1:52.
  169. Psalm 147:7 God is owed praise because he is the Great King over his creation, sustaining all that he has made, both the creatures in the heavens and the creatures on earth. He wants people to trust in him rather than in themselves.
  170. Psalm 147:8 See Pss 104:10-14, 27f; Job 5:9f; Jer 14:22; Joel 2:23.
  171. Psalm 147:9 See Job 38:41; Mt 6:26. When they call: the Lord feeds the birds, especially the ravens, whose cawing resembles a call for food (see Mt 6:26-30).
  172. Psalm 147:10 Arrogant reliance on one’s own natural ability is both futile (see Am 2:14f) and displeasing to God, who comes to the aid of those who trust only in him (see Pss 20:8f; 33:16-18; Eccl 9:11; Mal 3:16f). Kindness: see note on Ps 6:5.
  173. Psalm 147:12 The psalmist stresses that God is to be praised because he has brought about restoration, security, peace, and prosperity, for he alone commands the forces of nature.
  174. Psalm 147:13 See Pss 48:14; 128:5; Isa 65:18f; Jer 33:10f.
  175. Psalm 147:14 See Ps 81:17 and note; Lev 26:6.
  176. Psalm 147:16 See Job 37:6, 10.
  177. Psalm 147:17 See Job 6:16; 37:10; 38:22.
  178. Psalm 147:19 Finally, God is to be praised because he has given his people his word of revelation, making known his saving plan (see Ps 50:16f; Deut 33:3f; Neh 8; Eph 3:10f), which he has done for no other people (see Deut 4:7f; Acts 14:16).
  179. Psalm 148:1 The exiles have returned home, the temple has been rebuilt, and its precincts have been restored. God has reestablished the people he loves. What a testament to his glory (vv. 13-14). Joy invades all hearts and expands to worldwide dimensions. The whole universe and all earthly creatures are invited to praise the Lord, the Creator and Redeemer. This theme also permeates the next two psalms, forming the conclusion and the synthesis of the Psalter.
    We can pray this psalm to exhort all creation, both animate and inanimate, to praise the Triune God not only as the Creator but also as the Savior and Sanctifier. For although all creation is presently subject to vanity, it hopes to be freed from corruption so as to enter into the freedom of God’s children, when God will transform the universe with a new heaven and a new earth (see Rom 8:19-22; Rev 21:1-5). May the angels and saints of heaven do likewise.
  180. Psalm 148:1 The psalmist calls upon all creatures in the heavens to praise the Lord because of his creative and redeeming acts.
  181. Psalm 148:2 See Ps 103:20f; Job 38:7.
  182. Psalm 148:4 See Gen 1:6f; 1 Ki 8:27; 2 Cor 12:2; Eph 4:10. Highest heavens: literally, “the heavens of the heavens,” i.e., the space above the “expanse,” which separated the “waters above” from the “waters below” (see Ps 104:3, 13; Gen 1:6f).
  183. Psalm 148:5 Name: see note on Ps 5:12.
  184. Psalm 148:6 See Jer 31:35f.
  185. Psalm 148:7 The psalmist now calls upon all creatures on earth to praise the Lord: sea creatures, depths, the powers of nature, mountains and hills, fruit trees and the cedars, animals and birds, and finally all human beings, including the powerful as well as the young and old.
  186. Psalm 148:8 Carry out his word: i.e., “do his bidding” (see Ps 147:15).
  187. Psalm 148:10 See Gen 1:21, 24f; Isa 43:20.
  188. Psalm 148:12 See Jer 31:13.
  189. Psalm 148:13 The psalmist gives the reasons behind the praise: God is the exalted Ruler, who is not subject to the limitations of the earth or the heavens, and he has unique concern for his people, i.e., those devoted to him, his saints.
  190. Psalm 148:13 See Pss 108:5; 113:2-4.
  191. Psalm 148:14 Horn: i.e., the Lord’s anointed (see note on Ps 18:3; see also Ps 2:2); it may also refer to the strength and power of God’s people (see Ps 92:11; 1 Sam 2:1; Jer 48:25; Lam 2:17). Saints: see notes on Pss 4:3; 34:10.
  192. Psalm 149:1 The spiritual elite of God’s people rebuilt the walls of Jerusalem, weapons at the ready (see Neh 4:11); they put up an unyielding resistance to the persecution of Antiochus IV Epiphanes (see 1 Mac; 2 Mac). They were conscious of defending the rights of God and the right to worship him. This was their glory: Israel was the sword of God against the advance of blasphemous and wicked forces (see Zec 9:13-16). But the images of war foretell victories, those of God’s elect over the forces of evil at the time of the Messiah. The seer of the Book of Revelation will also describe great battles in heaven (see Rev 11:14).
    We can pray this psalm for the Church, the new People of God, enduring in this world an ever-difficult existence, an ever-renascent war. She scores blows and gains victories against her spiritual enemies, but never decisive ones. Happily, it is Christ who leads her and animates her in battle in order to ensure victory for her and renew her fervor (see Mt 16:18; 28:20).
  193. Psalm 149:1 The psalmist calls on the people to sing a new song in view of the restoration and the eschatological expectation of the Lord’s complete victory over evil (see Isa 61:2ff; Rev 14:3). The object of praise is the Maker and King of his people, and the devout among them are the beneficiaries of his mighty acts.
  194. Psalm 149:1 New song: see note on Ps 33:3. Saints: see notes on Pss 4:3; 34:10.
  195. Psalm 149:3 Name: see note on Ps 5:12. Dancing: which formed part of the liturgy (see Pss 87:7; 150:4; Ex 15:20; 2 Sam 6:14; Jer 31:4).
  196. Psalm 149:4 See Ps 73:1; 1 Sam 2:8; Isa 49:13; 61:9; 62:4f.
  197. Psalm 149:5 Beds: the beds, which had before been soaked with tears, share in the Lord’s deliverance (see Pss 4:5; 6:7; 63:7; Hos 7:14). Some take “beds” as “couches” used in worship or at banquets.
  198. Psalm 149:6 The psalmist envisages the eschatological future (see Isa 61:2ff) and presents God’s people as the instruments of the divine vindication (see Zec 9:13-16). The Lord will grant victory to his people, as he did to Nehemiah and his men (see Neh 4:10-12), which will be their glory.
  199. Psalm 149:6 The godly will become the sword of the Lord (see Jdg 3:16; Prov 5:4; Zec 9:13). Some interpret this verse as saying that the praise of God is a fearsome but peaceful weapon in the hands of the godly (see 2 Chr 20:17ff).
  200. Psalm 149:7 Vengeance: see notes on Pss 5:11; 35. The new People of God depends on the “sword of the Spirit” to combat the powers of evil (see 2 Cor 6:7; 10:4; Eph 6:12, 17; Heb 4:12) and will obtain complete victory only at the Last Judgment (see 1 Cor 6:2f).
  201. Psalm 149:9 Allusion to the prophecies against the nations, announcing their final defeat by Israel (see Ps 139:16 and note; Ezek 25:14; 39:10; Joel 4:2; Mic 4:13; Zec 10:5; 12:6; 14:3, 12ff).
  202. Psalm 150:1 In the same manner in which our “Glory be to the Father” concludes the recitation of our psalms, this doxological psalm concludes the Psalter on an urgent invitation to praise (see the conclusions to the first four Books: Pss 41:14; 72:18f; 89:53; 106:48). May every living creature praise the Lord everywhere, on the part of everyone, and by every means. The word “Alleluia” or “Hallelujah” (translated as “Praise [or bless] the Lord” or “Praise [or bless] him”) echoes thirteen times in this psalm. The Psalter could not end on a richer or more powerful note. Everything leads to the immensity of God’s glory (see Rev 15:3-4; 19:4-8). “Then I heard every creature in heaven and on earth and under the earth and in the sea, and all that is in them, saying: ‘To the One seated on the throne / and to the Lamb / be blessing and honor and glory and might / forever and ever!’. . . Amen!” (Rev 5:13f).
    We should heed this recommendation and carry it out, for we Christians are more aware than the psalmist of the work of God and Christ in the world and in us. Christ is enthroned in the highest heavens, his own sanctuary, but he is present and active in the heart of every creature, giving to each existence, motion, and life, as the case may be. He is in the heart of the whole world, directing its march in the material, living, human, and spiritual spheres and realizing his greatest victory in the last—the construction of the Church, his Body, his spiritual Spouse.
  203. Psalm 150:1 God is to be praised in his sanctuary on earth and his sanctuary in heaven (see Ps 8:3). The Church of the New Covenant has the mission to glorify God in the world, and her members must gather in the house of God in order to carry out this mission. Firmament of his power: this is also translated as “mighty heavens,” which ensures the well-being of those on earth.
  204. Psalm 150:2 God is to be praised because of his creating and redeeming awesome acts (see Pss 106:2; 145:4, 12), which reveal his greatness (see Pss 145:3; 147:5; 1 Chr 29:11).
  205. Psalm 150:3 God is to be praised with a full orchestra (with trumpet, harp, lyre, and tambourine) and with dance in a liturgy of praise that will reach as high as the heavens.
  206. Psalm 150:6 God is to be praised by everyone and everything endowed with life by the Creator (see Pss 103:22; 148:7-12; Rev 5:13). By doing so, Christians will be following the “way” of the Lord, with which the Psalter began (see Ps 1:2), a way that leads to eternal life.