Psaume 145:12-21

12 Pour faire connaître aux fils de l'homme ta puissance Et la splendeur glorieuse de ton règne.
13 Ton règne est un règne de tous les siècles, Et ta domination subsiste dans tous les âges.
14 L'Eternel soutient tous ceux qui tombent, Et il redresse tous ceux qui sont courbés.
15 Les yeux de tous espèrent en toi, Et tu leur donnes la nourriture en son temps.
16 Tu ouvres ta main, Et tu rassasies à souhait tout ce qui a vie.
17 L'Eternel est juste dans toutes ses voies, Et miséricordieux dans toutes ses oeuvres.
18 L'Eternel est près de tous ceux qui l'invoquent, De tous ceux qui l'invoquent avec sincérité;
19 Il accomplit les désirs de ceux qui le craignent, Il entend leur cri et il les sauve.
20 L'Eternel garde tous ceux qui l'aiment, Et il détruit tous les méchants.
21 Que ma bouche publie la louange de l'Eternel, Et que toute chair bénisse son saint nom, A toujours et à perpétuité!

Psaume 145:12-21 Meaning and Commentary

David's [Psalm] of praise. This psalm is rendered by Ainsworth "a hymn of David"; and the whole book of Psalms is from hence called "the Book of Hymns"; see Ephesians 5:19; It seems to have been a psalm David took great delight in, and it may be that he often repeated and sung it, as it was made by him with great care and contrivance, in a very curious manner, as well as he was assisted in it by divine inspiration; for it is wrote in an alphabetical order, each verse: beginning with the letter of the alphabet in course, and goes through the whole, excepting one letter; and very probably it was composed in this form that it might be the more easily committed to memory, and retained in it. The Jews have a very high opinion of it; their Rabbins say, that whoever says this psalm thrice every day may be sure of being a child of the world to come. This is mentioned by Arama and Kimchi; and which the latter explains thus, not he that says it any way, but with his mouth, and with his heart, and with his tongue. It seems to have been written by David after the Lord had granted him all his requests put up in the preceding psalms, and had given him rest from all his enemies; and when he turned his prayers into praises; for this psalm is wholly praise from one end to the other; and so are all the five following ones; they begin and end with "hallelujah": nor is there a single petition in them, as I remember; so that it may in some sense be said, "here the prayers of David the son of Jesse are ended." It no doubt, as Cocceius observes, belongs to the Messiah and his kingdom, which is everlasting, Psalm 145:13.
The Louis Segond 1910 is in the public domain.