Psalms 103:1; Psalms 103:22; Psalms 104:1; Psalms 104:35; Psalms 105:45
Praise ye the Lord - “ Ye” - all people. Margin, Hallelujah. See Psalms 104:35 ; Psalms 106:1 . Praise the Lord, O my soul - See Psalms 103...
Praise ye the LORD. Praise the LORD, O my (a) soul. (a) He stirs up himself and all his affections to praise God.
CXLVI. This Ps., like the remaining Pss. to the end of the Psalter, begins and closes with the word Hallelujah (Praise Yah). These Pss. may origina...
The first of the five "Hallelujah" Psalms concluding the whole book; each beginning and ending with this word. The first has GENESIS for its subject;...
1. Praise Jehovah. The five last Psalms close with the same word with which they begin. (286) But having in general called upon all to prai...
Praise ye the LORD. Praise the LORD, O my soul.
The Psalmist voweth perpetual praises to God: he exhorteth not to trust in man. God for his power, justice, mercy, and kingdom, is only worthy to be...
Praise ye the LORD. Praise the LORD, O my soul. Psalms 146:1-10 .-Call to praise. Folly of trusting in dying man; the happiness of making the...
Here begins the final group, Psalms 146-150, known as the 'Hallelujah' Pss., because each begins and ends with that word, meaning, 'Praise ye the Lor...
Praise. — Following Psalms 103:1 ; Psalms 103:22 ; Psalms 104:33 , “praise” being substituted for “bless.”
Psalms 146:1-10 THE long-drawn music of the Psalter closes with five Hallelujah psalms, in which, with constantly swelling diapason, all themes of...
the Lord Loveth the Righteous Psalms 146:1-10 This and the four following psalms are the “Hallelujah” Psalms. Each begins with that word. They...
We now come to the final psalms of adoration, each one of which opens and closes with the great call to praise. “Hallelujah, praise the Lord.” The t...
CONTENTS The subject, begun in the former Psalm, is here continued. Praise may and will be opened by the church in time, but it will never cease thr...
Praise ye the Lord ,.... Or, "hallelujah"; which, in the Greek and Vulgate Latin versions, is the title of the psalm; but is rather the beginning of...
Praise ye the LORD. Praise the LORD, O my soul. Ver. 1. Praise the Lord, O my soul ] See Psalms 103:1 .
The Divine Bounty. 1 Praise ye the L ORD . Praise the L ORD , O my so...
PSALM 146 THE ARGUMENT The design of this Psalm is to persuade men to trust in God, and in him alone. The psalmist voweth perpetual praises to God,...
INTRODUCTION In the Hebrew this Psalm has no superscription. The Septuagint has the superscription, “Hallelujah. Of Haggai and Zechariah;” and is fo...
Psalms 146:1 . Praise ye the LORD. Or, «Hallelujah.» I am sorry to see that great word, Hallelujah, Hallelu-Jah, praise to Jah, Jehovah, become s...
This, and the two following, are called the Hallelujah psalms of Haggai and of Zechariah the prophets, being composed after the captivity. Psalms 1...
Praise ye the Lord. Hallelujah I. The grandest resolution (verses 1, 2). 1. The author’s belief in the existence of his soul. When this conv...
EXPOSITION THE psalter ends with a cluster of "Hallelujah Psalms," five in number, all of them both beginning and ending with the phrase. In t...
Praise ye the Lord! Praise the Lord, O my soul, this invitation, addressed to himself, placing the poet in the right mood to continue his hymn with a...
A Hallelujah to the True Helper. This psalm, whose author is not known, is the first of the five Hallelujah Psalms with which the psalter closes,...
1 Praise ye the LORD. Praise the LORD, O my soul.