Psalms 144:5-15

5 O LORD, bend your heaven low, and come down. Touch the mountains, and they will smoke.
6 Hurl bolts of lightning, and scatter them. Shoot your arrows, and throw them into confusion.
7 Stretch out your hands from above. Snatch me, and rescue me from raging waters and from foreigners' hands.
8 Their mouths speak lies. Their right hands take false pledges.
9 O God, I will sing a new song to you. I will sing a psalm to you on a ten-stringed harp.
10 You are the one who gives victory to kings. You are the one who snatches your servant David away from a deadly sword.
11 Snatch me, and rescue me from foreigners' hands. Their mouths speak lies. Their right hands take false pledges.
12 May our sons be like full-grown, young plants. May our daughters be like stately columns that adorn the corners of a palace.
13 May our barns be filled with all kinds of crops. May our sheep give birth to thousands of lambs, tens of thousands in our fields.
14 May our cattle have many calves. May no one break in, and may no one be dragged out. May there be no cries of distress in our streets.
15 Blessed are the people who have these blessings! Blessed are the people whose God is the LORD!

Psalms 144:5-15 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.

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