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Psalm 144:8

Listen to Psalm 144:8
8 Who lie through their teeth, who shake your hand then knife you in the back.

Psalm 144:8 Meaning and Commentary

Psalms 144:8

Whose mouth speaketh vanity
Vain words, lies, flatteries, and deceit, ( Psalms 12:2 ) ; when they speak loftily of themselves, and contemptuously of others; when they deliver out threatenings against some, and make fair promises to others; it is all vanity, and comes to nothing; and their right hand [is] a right hand of falsehood;
their strength and power to perform what they boast of, threaten, or promise, is fallacious, is mere weakness, and cannot effect anything; or their treaties, contracts, and covenants, they enter into and sign with their right hand, are not kept by them; they act the treacherous and deceitful part. The Latin interpreter of the Arabic version renders it, "their oath is an oath of iniquity"; and Ben Balaam in Aben Ezra, and R. Adnim in Ben Melech, say the word so signifies in the Arabic language; and Schultens F13 has observed the same: but the word in that language signifies the right hand as well as an oath, and need not be restrained to that; it is better to take it in the large sense, as Cocceius F14 does; whether they lifted up the hand to pray, or to swear; or gave it to covenant with, to make contracts and agreements; or stretched it out to work with; it was a right hand of falsehood.


FOOTNOTES:

F13 Observat. Philolog. p. 195.
F14 Lexicon, col. 312.
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Psalm 144:8 In-Context

6 Hurl your lightnings in every direction; shoot your arrows this way and that.
7 Reach all the way from sky to sea: pull me out of the ocean of hate, out of the grip of those barbarians
8 Who lie through their teeth, who shake your hand then knife you in the back.
9 O God, let me sing a new song to you, let me play it on a twelve-string guitar -
10 A song to the God who saved the king, the God who rescued David, his servant.
Published by permission. Originally published by NavPress in English as THE MESSAGE: The Bible in Contemporary Language copyright 2002 by Eugene Peterson. All rights reserved.

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