Salmi 48:7

7 Furono rotti come per lo vento orientale Che rompe le navi di Tarsis.

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Salmi 48:7 Meaning and Commentary

Psalms 48:7

Thou breakest the ships of Tarshish with east wind.
] This is either another simile, expressing the greatness of the dread and fear that shall now seize the kings of the earth; which will be, as Kimchi observes, as if they were smitten with a strong east wind, which breaks the ships of Tarshish; and to the same purpose is the note of Aben Ezra; who says, the psalmist compares the pain that shall take hold upon them to an east wind in the sea, which breaks the ships; for by Tarshish is meant, not Tartessus in Spain, nor Tarsus in Cilicia, or the port to which the Prophet Jonah went and took shipping; but the sea in general: or else this phrase denotes the manner in which the antichristian kings, and antichristian states, wilt be destroyed; just as ships upon the ocean are dashed to pieces with a strong east wind: or it may design the loss of all their riches and substance brought to them in ships; hence the lamentations of merchants, and sailors, and ship masters, ( Revelation 18:15-19 ) .

Salmi 48:7 In-Context

5 Come prima la videro, furono attoniti, Si smarrirono, si affrettarono a fuggire.
6 Tremore li colse quivi; Doglia, come di donna che partorisce.
7 Furono rotti come per lo vento orientale Che rompe le navi di Tarsis.
8 Come avevamo udito, così abbiam veduto, Nella Città del Signor degli eserciti, Nella Città dell’Iddio nostro; Iddio la stabilirà in perpetuo. Sela.
9 O Dio, noi abbiamo, chetamente aspettata la tua benignità Dentro al tuo Tempio.
The Giovanni Diodati Bible is in the public domain.