Psalms 143:5

5 Domine inclina caelos tuos et descende tange montes et fumigabunt

Psalms 143:5 Meaning and Commentary

Psalms 143:5

I remember the days of old
Former times he had read and heard of, in which the Lord appeared for his people that trusted in him; or the former part of his own life, his younger days, when the Lord delivered him from the lion and bear, and from the uncircumcised Philistine, whom he slew; and made him victorious in battles, and preserved him from the rage and malice of Saul. If this was written on account of Absalom, those times of deliverance he called to mind, in order to encourage his faith and hope, and cheer his drooping spirits;

I meditate on all thy works; I muse on the work of thy hands;
the works of creation and providence, in order to observe the instances of divine power, wisdom, and goodness in them; and from thence fetch arguments, to engage his trust and confidence in the Lord: he both thought of these things within himself, and he "talked" F23 of them to his friends that were with him, as the last of these words used may signify; and all this he did to cheer his own spirit, and the spirits of the men that were with him, in the time of distress and danger.


FOOTNOTES:

F23 (xxwva) "loquor", Piscator; "sermocinatus sum", Cocceius; "aut colloquor", Gejerus, Michaelis.

Psalms 143:5 In-Context

3 Domine quid est homo quia innotuisti ei aut filius hominis quia reputas eum
4 homo vanitati similis factus est dies eius sicut umbra praetereunt
5 Domine inclina caelos tuos et descende tange montes et fumigabunt
6 fulgora coruscationem et dissipabis eos emitte sagittas tuas et conturbabis eos
7 emitte manum tuam de alto eripe me et libera me de aquis multis de manu filiorum alienorum
The Latin Vulgate is in the public domain.