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You rule over the proud sea.[a]
When its waves surge,[b] you calm them.
10 You crushed the Proud One[c] and killed it;[d]
with your strong arm you scattered your enemies.
11 The heavens belong to you, as does the earth.
You made the world and all it contains.[e]
12 You created the north and the south.
Tabor and Hermon[f] rejoice in your name.

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Footnotes

  1. Psalm 89:9 tn Heb “the majesty of the sea.”
  2. Psalm 89:9 tn Heb “rise up.”
  3. Psalm 89:10 tn Heb “Rahab.” The name “Rahab” means “proud one.” Since it is sometimes used of Egypt (see Ps 87:4; Isa 30:7), the passage may allude to the exodus. However, the name is also used of the sea (or the mythological sea creature) which symbolizes the disruptive forces of the world that seek to replace order with chaos (see Job 9:13; 26:12). Isa 51:9 appears to combine the mythological and historical referents. The association of Rahab with the sea in Ps 89 (see v. 9) suggests that the name carries symbolic force in this context. In this case the passage may allude to creation (see vv. 11-12), when God overcame the great deep and brought order out of chaos.
  4. Psalm 89:10 tn Heb “like one fatally wounded.”
  5. Psalm 89:11 tn Heb “the world and its fullness, you established them.”
  6. Psalm 89:12 sn Tabor and Hermon were two of the most prominent mountains in Palestine.