Psaume 65:6-14

6 Tu nous répondras par des œuvres redoutables, selon ta justice, ô Dieu de notre salut, l'espoir des extrémités lointaines de la terre et de la mer!
7 Il tient ferme les montagnes par sa force; il est ceint de puissance.
8 Il apaise le bruit des mers, le bruit de leurs flots et la rumeur des peuples.
9 Et ceux qui habitent aux bouts de la terre, craignent à la vue de tes prodiges; tu fais chanter de joie et le Levant et le Couchant.
10 Tu visites la terre, tu l'arroses, tu l'enrichis abondamment; les ruisseaux de Dieu sont pleins d'eau; tu prépares leur froment, après que tu as ainsi préparé la terre.
11 Tu abreuves ses sillons; tu aplanis ses mottes; tu l'amollis par la pluie menue; tu bénis son germe.
12 Tu couronnes l'année de tes biens, et les roues de ton char distillent l'abondance.
13 Elles la répandent sur les pâturages du désert, et les coteaux sont parés de joie.
14 Les campagnes sont revêtues de troupeaux, et les vallées sont couvertes de froment; elles en triomphent, et elles en chantent.

Psaume 65:6-14 Meaning and Commentary

To the chief Musician, A Psalm [and] Song of David. Some copies of the Septuagint and Vulgate Latin versions read "a song of Jeremiah and Ezekiel, "sung" by the people of the captivity, when they were about to come out;" and some copies have "Haggai": but though it is possible it might be sung upon that occasion, it is certain it was not then composed, but was written by David, as the genuine title shows: as for Jeremiah; he was not carried captive to Babylon, and Ezekiel died before the return of the people from it; nor is there anything in the psalm relating to that captivity. The title of it, indeed, in the Arabic version, is concerning the captivity of the people; which it seems to have taken from some Greek copy; and Kimchi and Arama interpret it of the captivity of the people of the Jews; but then they mean their present captivity, and their deliverance from it. According to the title of it in the Syriac version, the occasion of it was the bringing up of the ark of God to Sion; and Aben Ezra is of opinion that David composed the psalm at that time; or that one of the singers composed it at the building of the temple, and which he thinks is right, and perhaps is concluded from Psalm 65:1; and who also says it was composed in a year of drought; but it rather seems to have been written in a year of great plenty, as the latter part of it shows; and the whole seems to respect the fruitful, flourishing, and happy state of the church in Gospel times, for which it is a song of praise.
The Ostervald translation is in the public domain.