Psalms 144:4-14

4 They are like a breath; their days are like a fleeting shadow.
5 Part your heavens, LORD, and come down; touch the mountains, so that they smoke.
6 Send forth lightning and scatter the enemy; shoot your arrows and rout them.
7 Reach down your hand from on high; deliver me and rescue me from the mighty waters, from the hands of foreigners
8 whose mouths are full of lies, whose right hands are deceitful.
9 I will sing a new song to you, my God; on the ten-stringed lyre I will make music to you,
10 to the One who gives victory to kings, who delivers his servant David. From the deadly sword
11 deliver me; rescue me from the hands of foreigners whose mouths are full of lies, whose right hands are deceitful.
12 Then our sons in their youth will be like well-nurtured plants, and our daughters will be like pillars carved to adorn a palace.
13 Our barns will be filled with every kind of provision. Our sheep will increase by thousands, by tens of thousands in our fields;
14 our oxen will draw heavy loads.[a]There will be no breaching of walls, no going into captivity, no cry of distress in our streets.

Psalms 144:4-14 Meaning and Commentary

INTRODUCTION TO PSALM 144

\\<>\\. This psalm was written by David; not on account of the return of the Jews from the Babylonish captivity, by a spirit of prophecy, as Theodoret; but on his own account, after he was come to the throne, and was king over all Israel; and was delivered from the was between him and Israel, and from the war of the Philistines, as Kimchi observes, having gained two victories over them: or it was written between the two victories, and before he had conquered all his enemies; since he prays to be delivered from the hand of strange children, Ps 144:7,11. R. Obadiah thinks it was written on the account of his deliverance from Absalom and Sheba; but the former is best. Some copies of the Septuagint, and also the Vulgate Latin, Ethiopic, and Arabic versions, have in their titles these words, ``against Goliath;'' and so Apollinarius; as if it was written on account of his combat with him, and victory over him; but this clause is not in the Hebrew Bibles; nor could Theodoret find it in the Septuagint in the Hexapla in his time. The Syriac inscription is still more foreign to the purpose, ``a psalm of David, when he slew Asaph the brother of Goliath.'' R. Saadiah Gaon interprets this psalm of the times of the Messiah; and there are several things in it which are applicable to him.

Cross References 30

  • 1. S Job 7:7; Job 27:3; Isaiah 2:22
  • 2. S 1 Chronicles 29:15; S Job 14:2; S James 4:14; Psalms 39:11; Psalms 102:11
  • 3. Psalms 18:9; Isaiah 64:1
  • 4. S Genesis 11:5; S Psalms 57:3
  • 5. Psalms 104:32
  • 6. Habakkuk 3:11; Zechariah 9:14
  • 7. S Psalms 59:11; S Psalms 68:1
  • 8. Psalms 7:12-13; Psalms 18:14
  • 9. S 2 Samuel 22:17
  • 10. Psalms 3:7; S Psalms 57:3
  • 11. Psalms 69:2
  • 12. S Psalms 18:44
  • 13. Psalms 12:2; Psalms 41:6
  • 14. Genesis 14:22; Deuteronomy 32:40
  • 15. S Psalms 36:3
  • 16. S Psalms 28:7; S Psalms 96:1
  • 17. Psalms 33:2-3; S Psalms 71:22
  • 18. S 2 Samuel 8:14
  • 19. Psalms 18:50
  • 20. S Job 5:20
  • 21. Psalms 3:7; S Psalms 25:20
  • 22. S Psalms 18:44
  • 23. Psalms 41:6-7
  • 24. Psalms 12:2; S Psalms 36:3; Psalms 106:26; Isaiah 44:20
  • 25. Psalms 92:12-14; S Psalms 128:3
  • 26. Song of Songs 4:4; Song of Songs 7:4
  • 27. Proverbs 3:10
  • 28. Proverbs 14:4
  • 29. 2 Kings 25:11
  • 30. Isaiah 24:11; Jeremiah 14:2-3

Footnotes 1

  • [a]. Or "our chieftains will be firmly established"
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