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Psalm 135

Praise for God’s Goodness and Might

1

Praise the L ord!

Praise the name of the L ord;

give praise, O servants of the L ord,

2

you that stand in the house of the L ord,

in the courts of the house of our God.

3

Praise the L ord, for the L ord is good;

sing to his name, for he is gracious.

4

For the L ord has chosen Jacob for himself,

Israel as his own possession.

 

5

For I know that the L ord is great;

our Lord is above all gods.

6

Whatever the L ord pleases he does,

in heaven and on earth,

in the seas and all deeps.

7

He it is who makes the clouds rise at the end of the earth;

he makes lightnings for the rain

and brings out the wind from his storehouses.

 

8

He it was who struck down the firstborn of Egypt,

both human beings and animals;

9

he sent signs and wonders

into your midst, O Egypt,

against Pharaoh and all his servants.

10

He struck down many nations

and killed mighty kings—

11

Sihon, king of the Amorites,

and Og, king of Bashan,

and all the kingdoms of Canaan—

12

and gave their land as a heritage,

a heritage to his people Israel.

 

13

Your name, O L ord, endures forever,

your renown, O L ord, throughout all ages.

14

For the L ord will vindicate his people,

and have compassion on his servants.

 

15

The idols of the nations are silver and gold,

the work of human hands.

16

They have mouths, but they do not speak;

they have eyes, but they do not see;

17

they have ears, but they do not hear,

and there is no breath in their mouths.

18

Those who make them

and all who trust them

shall become like them.

 

19

O house of Israel, bless the L ord!

O house of Aaron, bless the L ord!

20

O house of Levi, bless the L ord!

You that fear the L ord, bless the L ord!

21

Blessed be the L ord from Zion,

he who resides in Jerusalem.

Praise the L ord!


7. Causing the clouds to ascend The Psalmist touches upon one or two particulars, in illustration of the point that nothing takes place of itself, but by the hand and counsel of God. Our understandings cannot comprehend a thousandth part of God’s works, and it is only a few examples which he brings forward to be considered in proof of the doctrine of a divine providence which he had just announced. He speaks of the clouds ascending from the ends of the earth; for the vapours which rise out of the earth form clouds, when they accumulate more densely together. Now who would think that the vapours which we see ascending upwards would shortly darken the sky, and impend above our heads? It strikingly proves the power of God, that these thin vapours, which steam up from the ground:, should form a body over-spreading the whole atmosphere. The Psalmist mentions it as another circumstance calling for our wonder, that lightnings are mixed with rain, things quite opposite in their nature one from another. Did not custom make us familiar with the spectacle, we would pronounce this mixture, of fire and water to be a phenomenon altogether incredible. 162162     “Si ce meslange du fen et de l’eau n’estoit cognu par usage, qui ne diroit que c’est une merveille,” etc. Fr. The same may be said of the phenomena of the winds. Natural causes can be assigned for them, and philosophers have pointed them out; but the winds, with their various currents, are a wonderful work of God. He does not merely assert the power of God, be it observed, in the sense in which philosophers themselves grant it, but he maintains that not a drop of rain falls from heaven without a divine commission or dispensation to that effect. All readily allow that God is the author of rain, thunder, and wind, in so far as he originally established this order of things in nature; but the Psalmist goes farther than this, holding that when it rains, this is not effected by a blind instinct of nature, but is the consequence of the decree of God, who is pleased at one time to darken the sky with clouds, and at another to brighten it again with sunshine.


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