Easy English Bible - Psalms

Chapter ///

The Psalms of David

(Book 4)

An EasyEnglish Translation with Notes (about 1200 word vocabulary) on Psalms 90 to 106

www.easyenglish.bible

Gordon Churchyard

Words in boxes are from the Bible. Words in brackets, ( ), are not in the *Hebrew Bible.

A word list at the end explains words with a *star by them. The notes also explain these words.

The translated Bible text has yet to go through Advanced Checking.

Introduction

Here are some of the things that you should know as you read the psalms in this book.

1. At the top of each psalm (say it "sarm") is a title in Dark Letters. This title is not in the *Hebrew psalm. It is not part of the Bible. It is there to give us help to remember the psalm and what it is about.

2. Under the title are some words either that Jesus said, or that somebody said about him. These words are from the *Gospels. They are part of the Bible.

3. The psalm itself is in a box. Everything that is in the box is part of the psalm. This includes the words at the top that tell us who wrote the psalm and why. In this book, we believe that these words are true and that they give us some help to understand the psalm. Other parts from the Bible are also in boxes, except the verses under the titles.

4. Words in brackets like this: ( ) are not in the *Hebrew Bible. They give us help to understand what the psalm means.

5. The *Hebrew writers of the psalms used some words that we cannot translate into EasyEnglish words. These are in a word list at the end. Some words are very important, like *LORD and *righteous. You will find a whole page about these words after some of the psalms. *Righteous is after Psalm 5, the *Covenant is after Psalm 25 and the names of God (*LORD, *Lord and God) are also after Psalm 25. These psalms are in Book 1 of the Psalms of David.

6. After each psalm is the story of the psalm. Some of the psalms we know a lot about, as Psalm 18. Other psalms we do not know anything about, as Psalm 1. When this happens we say "perhaps" or "maybe".

7. After the stories comes "what the psalm means". Sometimes Bible students are not sure what the writer meant. When that happens the notes tell you.

8. At the end of each psalm, there is "something to do". This will give you help to learn more about the psalm.

God will always be alive!

Psalm 90

Psalm 90

(These are) words that Moses prayed.
   (He was) a servant of God.

v1   *Lord, you have always been (as) a home for us.

v2   You were God before the mountains were born.
   (You were God) before you were as a mother to the earth and the world.
   You always were and you always will (be God).

v3   You make people go back to (being) powder in the ground (when they die).
   You say, "Go back (to the ground), sons of Adam".

v4   For you see a thousand years as just a day (that) passes.
   (The years are as) a few hours in the night when they are over.

v5   You pour the sleep (of death) on them (the sons of Adam).
   They become as new grass in the morning.

v6   In the morning, it grows well;
   but by the evening, it becomes dry and it dies.

v7   You destroy us because you are angry.
   Because you are so angry, you make us very much afraid.

v8   You see in front of you the wrong (things) that we do.
   Your light (even) shows the secret bad (things) that we do!

v9   All our days hurry past because you are angry with us.
   We finish our years in (just the time it takes for) a cry.

v10   The number of our days is 70 years.
   Or maybe 80 years if we are strong.
   Yet, even in the best years of our lives,
   we have trouble and we are not really happy.
   And they soon go and we hurry away (towards death).

v11   (*LORD), who knows how strong you are when you are very angry?
   (The people that) you frighten when you become so angry (will know).

v12   Teach (us) to count well our days.
   Then we will get a heart that thinks (as God thinks).

v13   *LORD, how long (will it be until) you change your mind?
   Be kind to your servants!

v14   Give us your kind love (every) morning.
   Then we will sing and be happy for as long as we live.

v15   Make us happy for as long as you have hurt us.
   (Make us happy) for as many years as we have had trouble.

v16   Let (us) your servants see the work that you do.
   And show how great you are to (our) children.

v17   Let the *Lord our God show how happy he is with us.
   Let him make the work that our hands do continue.
   Let the work that our hands do continue.

The Story of Psalm 90

These are "words that Moses prayed". That does not mean that Moses wrote the psalm. Some Bible students think that he did. Other students think that later writers used words and ideas from "the Books of Moses". These are the first 5 books of the Bible. This psalm makes Bible students think of Genesis 3 and Deuteronomy 32. The psalm uses "words that Moses" said, from these books.

The psalm is in 4 parts. The first 3 parts are in verses 1-12. They could be about anybody in the world. They are true for all of us. But the last part, verses 13-17, is about God's people, the *Jews. Something bad had happened to them. They are praying that God will be good to them. We do not know what this bad thing was. Some Bible students think that it was when the Babylonians beat them and took them to Babylon. We call this "the exile". But it could be anything after the time of Moses!

What Psalm 90 means

In this psalm, there are 3 words for God: *Lord, *LORD and God. They are 3 different words in the Hebrew Bible. Hebrew is the language that the *Jews spoke when they wrote the psalms. Jews are people who were born from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their children. In verses 1 and 17,there is the word Lord. This means "master", someone with authority. It translates the Hebrew word "Adonai". In verse 13,there is LORD, with 4 capital letters. This translates "Yahweh" or "Jehovah". It means "I am". This tells us that God is always alive. In verses 2 and 17, there is the word God. This translates "Elohim". It is a plural word; it means "the powerful rulers that have authority".

Study the psalm in 4 parts:
  ·   Verses 1 - 2 start the psalm and tell us about God. They tell us that God has always been alive and always will be alive.
  ·   Verses 3 - 6 tell us that people on earth will not always be alive. Life is short!
  ·   Verses 7 - 11 tell us this: The people that wrote the psalm have not obeyed God’s rules.
  ·   Verses 12 - 17 tell us that these people are praying to God for him to be kind to them.

In verse 1, "a home for us" means a place that we can always go to. In John 14:2 it says, "I (Jesus) am going to make a place for you". Jesus meant the place we go to when we die. But we can always go to God while we are still alive on the earth wherever we are. God will be with us if we ask him.

Verse 2 sees God as a mother. He has children ... the earth and the world. The world is that part of the earth where people live. This tells us in special words (poetry) that God made (created) the world.

In verse 3, there are two things that make us think about Genesis 2-3:
  ·   "powder in the ground". Another word for this is "dust". Genesis tells us that God made (created) men and women from dust.
  ·   "Adam" was the first man that God made. We are all "sons of Adam". We could translate this "all men and women".

In verse 4, "a thousand years" here may again make us think of the beginning of Genesis. Men and women then lived for a very long time. Methuselah was nearly a thousand years old when he died! The verse means this: What is a very long time to us is a short time to God.

Verse 5 The Bible talks about death as "sleep". One day, after we die, we will all awake ... and see God!

Verse 6 Grass in Israel did not grow for long. It soon died. The psalm tells us that people are the same. God will always be alive, but men and women will soon die.

Verse 7 The Bible tells us that "God is a light, and nothing in him is dark", (1 John 1:5). This verse tells us that this light lets God sees the wrong things that we do, even the secret wrong things!

Verse 9 Because God is angry with us, our lives seem to go very fast. "Just a cry" means "just the time it takes to cry".

Verse 11 Here is a question and an answer. The verse means that everybody will know when God becomes angry.

Verse 12 An important Christian word is repent. Often people tell us that it means this: We are sorry for the wrong things that we have done. This is true. But it means more than this. It means that we see things as God sees them. This makes us want to obey his rules and not do wrong things again. We think as God thinks. The verse says we "will get a heart that thinks as God thinks". This is because the *Jews believed that you thought in your heart! They also thought that you loved with your stomach! We call this a "*Jewish thought" or a "*Jewish idiom".

Verse 13 Some English translations say, "*LORD, how long will it be until you repent?" This uses the word "repent" in its proper way as "think again". It does not mean that God is sorry for what he has done!

Verse 14 "Kind love" is a special word in Hebrew. It is "hesed". It means the love that God goes on giving us, even when we do not obey him. That is why the psalm says "every morning". God never stops loving us!

Verse 15 There are some words in this verse that only come in Deuteronomy 32:7 and here in the Hebrew Bible. Moses wrote these words! That is why some people think that Moses wrote Psalm 90.

Verse 16 "The work that you do" means "what God does to make his people safe". He stops their enemies hurting the *Jews. Then the children will see it also.

Verse 17 This is how the *Lord will show that he is happy. Nobody will destroy the things that his people do. They will always be there!

Something to do

1.  Think as God thinks ... or repent. When something happens that you do not understand, ask God, "What do you think about this?"

2.  Learn to say verse 14 by heart. This means that you can say it without looking at the words.

My safe place!

Psalm 91

Jesus said, "Jerusalem, I often wanted to get your children together as a mother bird gets her babies under her wings" (Matthew 23:37). (A bird uses its wings to fly.)

In Psalm 91, many Bible students think that there are three people, or groups of people, that speak. We have shown this in the letters. This makes the psalm easier to study. The three are:
  ·   A crowd of people (called the "chorus") in the usual letters: verses 1, 3 - 8, 9b – 13. (9b means the second part of verse 9).
  ·   One person (called the "psalmist") in leaning letters: verses 2 and 9a.
  ·   God himself in dark letters: verses 14 - 16.

Psalm 91

v1   Whoever stays in the secret place of the *Most High
   will remain under the shadow of the *Almighty.

v2   I will say to the *LORD,
   "(You are) my safe place and my strong *castle.
   (You are) my God and I am *trusting in you".

v3   He (God) really will save you from the *trap that the *bird-catcher (hid).
   And (God will save you) from illnesses that cause death.

v4   He will cover you with his *feathers.
   You will be safe under his *wings.
   (God) will do what he promised.
   And he will be like big and small *shields over you.

v5, v6  Do not be afraid of:
   ·   *bad spirits at night,
   ·   or the *arrow that flies in the day,
   ·   or illnesses that come when it is dark,
   ·   or something bad that may destroy you at midday.

v7   A thousand (people) may die by your side.
   Ten thousand (people may die) by your right hand.
   But (the danger) will not come near to you.

v8   Your eyes will see it and watch,
   while it destroys bad people.

v9, v10   For you, *LORD, make me safe.
   (Because) the Most High is your home,
   bad things will not happen to you.
   And there will be no fighting near where you live.

v11   For (God) will tell his *angels what to do for you.
   They will make you safe everywhere that you go.

v12   Their hands will give you help
   so that you will not (even) hurt your feet on a stone.

v13   You will walk on the *lion and the *cobra.
   The young lion and the *serpent will be under your feet.

v14   (God says) I will make the person safe that loves me.
   Danger will not hurt him that knows (and trusts in) my name.

v15   He will pray to me and I will answer him.
   When he has trouble, I will be with him.
   I will save him and make him famous.

v16   I will make him happy with a long life.
   He will enjoy what I will do for him.

The Story of Psalm 91

There is nothing in Psalm 91 that tells us who wrote it or when. It may be "words that Moses prayed", as Psalm 90. The two psalms do have the same feeling.

Jesus knew this psalm. He repeated words from it when his enemy (Satan) tried to tempt him. "Tempt" means "try to make someone do what they should not do". The story is in Matthew 4:11.

What Psalm 91 means

Bible students study this psalm as if three people are speaking.
  ·   a priest (one of God’s servants in his house) speaks in verses 1, 3 - 8 and 9b - 13.
  ·   someone praying to God speaks in verses 2 and 9a.
  ·   God speaks in verses 14 - 16.

(9a means the first part of verse 9; 9b means the second part.)

There are 4 names for God in the first 2 verses of this psalm: Most High, Almighty, LORD and God. Some of them come again later. They are 4 different words in the Hebrew Bible. Hebrew is the language that the *Jews spoke when they wrote the psalms. Jews are people that were born from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their children. This is what the words mean:
  ·   Most High means that God is more important than anyone else.
  ·   Almighty means that God is more powerful than anyone else.
  ·   LORD means that he will never die.
  ·   God means that he decides what will happen.

The priest says that everyone will be safe with the Most High, who is the Almighty. The person that he says it to replies. He replies that the LORD is his castle. He trusts in God. A castle is a strong building where you are safe from your enemies. He does not mean that God is a castle. He means that God is as a castle. So, he trusts (or believes that he will be safe) in God.

The priest answers that God will make him safe. He puts this into picture language:
  ·   a trap is what people catch birds in. The bird cannot see it. But God will not let anything catch his servant (verse 3a).
  ·   God will not let illness destroy his servant (verse 3b).
  ·   Verse 4 gives us a picture ... of God as a bird! A bird has wings (that it flies with) and feathers (on its wings). It makes young birds safe under these feathers and wings. God does the same for his servants. He makes them safe. Another word for "make safe" is "protect".
  ·   there are two shields in verse 4 also, big and small. Shields are what soldiers protect themselves with. God protects ... or makes safe ... his people. But the shield is only a picture. It is a picture of God’s loyalty. Loyalty means that you do not stop being a friend to someone. You do not stop giving them help whatever happens. Wings and feathers are pictures of big and small shields. Here is an example of Hebrew poetry. The *Jews wrote the psalms in Hebrew. Poetry is a special and beautiful way to use words. The *Jews said the same thing with two different sets of words!

In verses 5 - 10, we read about dangers, arrows, illnesses, bad things and fighting. Arrows are sharp sticks that bows shoot. Today we have guns! Bible students have two ideas about all these things:
  ·   they are a plague. A plague is an illness that people catch from each other. If one person becomes ill, many other people that live near become ill also.
  ·   they are bad (or evil) spirits. An evil spirit is a servant of God’s enemy Satan. We cannot see them, but we can see what they do. They make people ill in their minds and their bodies.

These verses tell us not to be afraid! If we trust in God (ask God for help and believe that he will give it) then he will protect us from illness and evil spirits. It is important to know that the psalm does not mean the illnesses that we often get, like colds. It means plagues. Even if we become ill through a plague, God will protect us after we die. We will live with him in heaven, his home. And God will always protect us from evil spirits. In verse 7, "by your side" may mean "by your left side". In verse 9, it says "the Most High is your home". This is picture language while we live on earth. It means we can go to God any time and anywhere. We can pray to him and he will hear and answer us. As it says in verse 15. When we die and get to heaven then God’s home will be our home. But we must love and obey God for this to happen.

In verse 11, the angels are God’s servants. We cannot always see them, but they are always there to give us help. In verse 13, lions are animals that eat other animals. They even eat people! Cobras and serpents are snakes. When they bite you, they put poison into you. But "walk on" and "under your feet" mean that lions and snakes will not hurt us if we love and obey God. But this does not mean that we have to walk on snakes to see if the psalm is true. It means that if we walk on it without knowing that it is there, we will be safe.

The last three verses are words of God. "What I will do for him" in verse 16 means "the things I do to save him". We call this "his salvation". Salvation means "saving" or "making safe". In the psalm, it means while we are alive on earth. Christians believe it means after we die also.

Something to do

1. Get a group of people together. Make one of them be the priest and say verses 1, 3 - 8 and 9b - 13. Make another say verses 2 and 9a. Make the whole group say God’s words, verses 14-16.

2. Learn to say Psalm 91:2 by heart. (This means, without looking at the words.)

3. Study some verses from the psalms ... any psalms. Look for Hebrew poetry. Hebrew poetry says the same thing more than once with different words. Or else it says the same thing twice, with words that are more powerful the second time.

4. If you have a Bible, read Revelation 12. Here is a story about people who were safe while they did what God wanted them to do. Then he took them to be with him in heaven.

A Song for Saturday

Psalm 92

Jesus said, "Thank you, Father". (Matthew 11:25)

Psalm 92
  (This) psalm (is a) song (to sing) on Saturday.

v1   It is good to tell the *LORD that he is great,
   and to make music to your name, Most High (God).

v2   (It is good) to talk about your kind love in the morning.
   And (to talk) every night (about) how you do what you have promised.

v3   (It is good) to make music with *lutes and *harps.
   And (it is good) to sing with the *lyre.

v4   Because, *LORD, the things that you have done make me so happy.
   I want to tell you that you are great
   because of the things that your hands have made!

v5   *LORD, how great are the things that you have done!
   Your thoughts are (often) hard to understand!

v6   (Only) a silly man would not know this
   and (only) a fool would not understand it.

v7   That:
   ·   if bad people grow as grass
   ·   and all the very bad people grow as weeds
   (you) will destroy them and they will never (grow) again.

v8   But you, *LORD, will always be the Most High!

v9   Because your enemies, *LORD, your enemies will certainly die.
   You will chase all the people that do bad things to different places.

v10   You have made me very strong, as strong as a big wild animal.
   (You did this when) you poured fresh oil over me.

v11   Mine eyes have seen (you) beat mine enemies.
   Mine ears have heard you beat the bad people that attack me.

v12   *Righteous people will grow as well as a *palm-tree.
   They will grow as the *cedars in Lebanon.

v13   They are as (trees that someone) planted in the house of the *LORD.
   They grow really well (near) the *temple of our God.

v14   When they are old, they will still give fruit!
   They will always be fresh and green.

v15   They will show (everyone) that the *LORD is good.
   He is my rock. There is nothing bad in him.

The Story of Psalm 92

The Jews (people that were born from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their children) had a story that Adam sang this song the day after God made him. The Jews called that day the Sabbath, the 7th day. We call it Saturday. Really, we do not know who the person was that wrote Psalm 92. We call the person that wrote a psalm the psalmist. Maybe it was after God had done something good for his people Judah or Israel. Many Bible students think that it was when King Cyrus of Persia beat King Belshazzar of Babylon. Cyrus then sent the Jews home to their own country. For 70 years, the Babylonians had made them live in Babylon. Now they were free!

The Meaning of Psalm 92

Study the psalm in 5 parts:
  ·   Verses 1 - 3 say that it is good to tell the *LORD that he is great and to use music to do it.
  ·   Verses 4 - 6 say that God has done something good. You would have to be silly not to see it.
  ·   Verses 7 - 9 tell us that even if the enemy is strong, God will destroy them.
  ·   Verses 10 - 11 tell us that God has made the *psalmist very strong. And also that God has destroyed his enemies.
  ·   Verses 12 - 15 tell us that all *righteous people will be strong.

Verses 1 – 3: In this part there are two words for God and three words for things that make music. We call these things "musical instruments". They are the lute, harp and lyre. The psalm calls God "LORD" and "Most High". "LORD" means that he is always alive. "Most High" means that he is more important than anyone else is. In verse 2, "do what you have promised" suggests that God has done something good.

Verses 4 – 6: Now the *psalmist says that God has done something good. The *psalmist is now very happy. Only a silly man would not see what God has done. What God thinks is often hard to understand. Only fools would not agree that grass and weeds grow everywhere.

Verses 7 – 9: Grass and weeds grow everywhere! So do bad people. But God will destroy them and they will never come back again. Really, they destroy themselves, as Hosea 13:9 tells us. It says, "You have destroyed yourselves (yourselves means more than one yourself)".

Verses 10 – 11: Here Bible students think that the *psalmist was a leader of the people. If he wrote the psalm before Babylon beat the *Jews, then that leader was the king.

They made people king by pouring special oil over them. We are not sure what the wild animal was. Maybe it was a wild ox. An ox is a kind of cow.

Verses 12 – 15: Now the *psalmist talks about righteous people. Righteous is a word that means "very, very good". Only God is really righteous. But God makes people that love him righteous too. It does not mean that they are good. It means that they love God and want to obey him. They will not be as grass and weeds that do not live long, verse 7. Instead, they are as trees. They are as palm trees that produce fruit called "dates"; and as the cedar tree which lives for centuries. "The temple of our God" in verse 13 is the same as "the house of the *LORD". It was a special building where the people went to meet God.

Something to do

1. Count how many times me, my or mine come in the psalm.

2. How many times does "*LORD" come in the psalm?

3. If you have a Bible, read Ezekiel 18.

4. Learn to say Psalm 92:8 by heart. (This means without looking at the words.)

The *Lord is King!

Psalm 93

(The first *royal psalm)

The Roman leader said to Jesus, "Are you the King of the *Jews?" And Jesus said to him, "(Yes), it is as you say". (Matthew 27:11)

Psalm 93: 1 - 5

v1   The *LORD is King! He is ruling with authority.
   The *LORD is ruling with great power.
   Also, the world will not change.
   Nobody will move it any more.

v2   You (*LORD) have been king for a very long time.
   You were alive before the world started.

v3   The rivers rose up, *LORD,
   the rivers rose up and made a loud noise.
   The rivers rose up as a great storm.

v4   But the *LORD rules over everyone!
   He is greater than all the noise of the waters,
   stronger than the sea itself.

v5   *LORD, the rules that you make will remain.
   Your house will always be beautiful because you are so good.

The Story of Psalm 93

This psalm has no words at the top to tell us about it. But there may be a story! Some Bible students think that the psalm is about God making (creating) the world. It describes what God did in Genesis 1:6-10. This is when God made the waters of the sea separate from the dry land. Here are the verses from Genesis 1.

Genesis 1:6-10

v6   And God said, "I want a space in the middle of the waters.
   I want it to make the waters separate".

v7   And God made (created) the space.
   He made the waters that were under the space
   separate from those that were over the space.
   And so it happened.

v8   And God called the space "sky".
   And the evening and the morning were the second day.

v9   And God said, "I want the waters under the sky to be together in one place.
   I want the dry land to appear. And so it happened.

v10   And God called the dry land "earth".
   And where the waters were together, he called "seas".
   And God saw that it was good.

But other Bible students tell us that in verse 3 the word is "rivers", not "waters" or "seas". They say the rivers are the River Tigris, the River Euphrates and the River Nile. So they say that the psalm has this meaning:
 ·   God was always king (Exodus 15:18) but his people said, "We want a king to rule us" (1 Samuel 12:12). They meant a man on earth, not God. So, God gave them kings, Saul, David, Solomon and many other kings.
 ·   Many of the kings were bad kings. They did not rule well. And God’s people did not obey God’s rules. God let foreign kings destroy them. These foreign kings came from Assyria, Egypt and Babylon. The rivers in these countries are the Euphrates, the Nile and the Tigris. Verse 3 says that the rivers rose up. That means this. The countries that would destroy Israel and Judah were attacking them. They took Israel and Judah away from their own country. We call this "the exile".
 ·   But the exile ended in 538 B.C. (B.C. means "years Before Christ came to the earth")

The Jews (people that were born from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their children) went back to their own country. God had destroyed Assyria, Egypt and Babylon. He was more powerful than all these waters, (verse 4).
 ·   The *Jews now had no king, so God became their king again. They were not ruled by human kings any more, but by God. The *LORD is king, (verse 1)! What Isaiah said in Isaiah 52:7 happened. "How beautiful on the mountains are the feet of him that brings good news. He says to *Zion 'Your God is king!' " Zion here is another name for Jerusalem.

Both meanings are true. We do not know if there was another meaning for the psalm. But it tells us one important thing: Whatever happens, God is still King over everything! We must remember this when bad things happen. Psalm 93 is the first of "The Royal Psalms". "Royal" is a word that describes kings. In Psalms 93 and 95-99, God is King of Everything.

What Psalm 93 means

Verse 1: In the *Hebrew Bible, "The *LORD is ruling" is "The *LORD is wearing". He wears his authority and his power as clothes. Everyone can see them. The word "great" in *Hebrew is really "belt". Nobody can take this power and authority away from God. This is because he has fastened the belt and nobody can undo it! LORD is a special name for God. It means that he will always be alive. He will always make his people safe. They are the people that love and work for him. The word "war" is not in the *Hebrew Bible. It is there to give us help to understand how the *Jews felt. Hebrew was the language that the *Jews spoke. They wrote the psalms in *Hebrew.

Verse 2: tells us that God has been king for a very long time. He was king of everything before he made (created) the world. It is this verse that suggests Genesis 1:6-10. He was king before there was a world!

Verse 3: Three times we read "the rivers rose up". This suggests rivers that get higher and higher ... until they drown people! This means "danger!" The loud noise and the storm also mean "danger!" That danger was maybe when Assyria, Egypt and Babylon attacked Judah and Israel. This happened many times between 750 and 590 B.C.

Verse 4: But God is stronger than Assyria, Egypt and Babylon. Or, if the first meaning is correct, stronger than the waters in Genesis 1:6-10.

Verse 5 The rules of God are in the Bible. Psalm 119 says a lot about God’s rules. The house of God is usually the temple in Jerusalem. The temple was a special house that Solomon built. When Babylon destroyed Jerusalem, they also destroyed the temple. But, after the *exile, the *Jews built it again. If the second meaning is the correct one, then this means the new temple. They believed that God lived in this house. And God is good. That made his house special. It made it beautiful.

Something to do

1.  Study Psalm 119 in this series of Psalms. It is in Book 5 of "The Psalms of David". Learn about the rules (or laws) of God.

2.  Read Isaiah 8:7-8. This will tell you about Assyria and the River Euphrates.

3.  Read Jeremiah 46:7-8. This will tell you about Egypt and the River Nile.

4.  Read Psalm 46:3, Psalm 89:9 and Isaiah 17:12-13. This will tell you that the sea is a picture of God’s enemies.

God, Show that You Are a Great *Judge!

Psalm 94

Jesus said, "I am a good *judge. I do not do what I want to do. I obey the words of (God) that sent me". (John 5:30)

Psalm 94

v1   *LORD, God, you are a great *judge.
   So, God, show people that you are a great *judge!

v2   *Judge of the earth, do something!
   Give to *proud people what they ought to get.

v3   How long will bad people, *LORD,
   how long will bad people laugh (at good people)?

v4   (The bad people) speak many *proud words.
   All the bad people are always saying that they are great.

v5   (The bad people) are as a heavy weight on your people, *LORD.
   They are cruel to the people that belong to you.

v6   They kill *widows and foreign people that live here.
   They *murder children that have no fathers.

v7   They say, "The *LORD is not looking (at us).
   The God of Jacob will not see (what we are doing)".

v8   Be careful, all you fools among the people!
   Fools ... learn to do the right thing!

v9   Does (God) that made the ear not hear?
   Does he that made the eye not see?

v10   Will he that rules the world not *punish (our bad leaders)?
   He teaches people what they know.

v11   The *LORD knows people’s thoughts.
   (Their thoughts) are worth nothing.

v12   The man that the *LORD rules is very happy.
   (The *LORD) teaches him (God’s) *laws.

v13   You (*LORD) give him rest from days of trouble,
   until someone digs a *pit for bad men.

v14   For the *LORD will not leave his people;
   he will not forget people that belong to him.

v15   Rulers will do what is fair
   and people with good in their hearts will do the same.

v16   Who fought for me against the bad people?
   Who kept me safe from the people that did wrong things?

v17   Unless the *LORD had given me help,
   I would soon have gone to live in the quiet (place of death).

v18   When I thought that my feet were nearly falling,
   your kind love, *LORD, kept me safe.

v19   When I was not happy in my mind,
   you made me strong and happy again.

v20   Can you (ever) agree with bad rulers?
   (No! Because) their rules make people sad.

v21   They join together against good people.
   They say that people that have done nothing wrong must die.

v22   But the *LORD is my strong place.
   And my God is a rock where I can hide and be safe.

v23   He will *punish the bad (leaders).
   He will destroy them because they are so bad.
   The *LORD our God will destroy them.

The Story of Psalm 94

Bible students are not sure who wrote Psalm 94 or when. Maybe David wrote it. Maybe the psalmist (person who wrote the psalm) lived just before the exile. The exile was when the army from Babylon took the *Jews (people that were born from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their children) away from Judah. They made them live in Babylon. 70 years later, they came home again. Perhaps the *psalmist wrote it then.

Psalms 93 - 99 are "*royal psalms". Royal describes someone who is a king. Bible students call these psalms "*royal" because they call God "king". He is the ruler (or king) of everything! But Psalm 94 is not a *royal psalm. It is between two psalms that are *royal psalms. Why is it here? Because it tells us that God will destroy kings and rulers that do not obey him. Then everyone will see that God is king!

What Psalm 94 means

Study the psalm in 4 parts:
  ·   verses 1 - 7: the *psalmist asks God to do something about bad leaders.
  ·   verses 8 - 11: the *psalmist tells the bad rulers this. God does see what you are doing.
  ·   verses 12 - 15: the *psalmist describes life when rulers are good.
  ·   verses 16 - 23: the *psalmist tells us what God has done for him.

In many verses in this psalm, you will read the word *LORD, with 4 capital letters. This translates the *Hebrew word Yahweh (or Jehovah). The *psalmist wrote Psalm 94 in the *Hebrew language. Hebrew was the language that the *Jews used. The word does not mean "master", as the English word "*lord" does. It means "always alive". It is a special word. People that have agreed to love and obey God call him "*LORD". It is the covenant name of God. People make a covenant with God when they agree to love and obey him.

In verses 1-7, the *psalmist is *complaining. Complaining means "saying that something is wrong". He is *complaining about the "bad people", verse 3. Who are these bad people? The bad people before the exile, when the *Jews went to Babylon, were foreign leaders. After the exile, the *Jewish leaders were the bad people. Because we do not know the date of the psalm, we say that they are all bad leaders, foreign or *Jewish. What is the *psalmist *complaining about? That God is doing nothing about it!

In verse 1 the *psalmist says, "You are a great *judge". A judge is someone that decides who is good and who is bad. Because God does nothing, the *psalmist says, "show people that you are a great *judge", verse 1. The *Hebrew word for "great *judge" really means "*punish bad people". Because God is *judge of all the earth, the *psalmist says: "Give to *proud people what they ought to receive", verse 2. Proud people think that they are great (when often they are not). These *proud people do bad things, verses 4-7. They are as a heavy weight on God's people, verse 5. This means that God’s people have hurt and pain. The bad people kill widows and *murder children, verse 6. Widows are married women, but their husbands are dead. Murder is another word for kill. The worst thing is in verse 7. They say that God is not looking. God will not see what they are doing. So the *psalmist says to God "Do something!" (verse 2). He means "*punish these bad people". Punish means "hurt them because they have been bad people". This is what "they ought to receive", (verse 2).

In verses 8-11, the *psalmist speaks to the bad leaders. He tells them that they are fools. This does not mean that they are silly, or cannot think. It means that they are fools to think that God does not see what they are doing. In verses 8-9, the *psalmist asks three questions. The answer to them all is "yes"! Yes, God can hear. Yes, God can see. And yes, God will *punish bad leaders. The *LORD God knows that what these people think is worth nothing. The *Hebrew word "nothing" is "abel". It means "air". We often translate it "foolish" or "silly".

Then, in verses 12-15, the *psalmist talks about good people. They have "good in their hearts", (verse 15). The *Jews said that you thought in your heart. So, these people think good things. The *LORD rules them, (verse 12). This means that God is their king. Remember, the psalms before and after Psalm 94 are *royal psalms. "Laws", in verse 12, is another word for "rules". But God's laws are special rules. We find them in the Bible. The *Hebrew word for "law" is "torah". They called the first 5 books of the Bible the Torah, also Isaiah, Jeremiah and other prophets. (Prophets were people that spoke God’s words. Some prophets wrote books in the Bible.)

In verse 13, we read about "the pit". The *Jews thought that when you died you went to Sheol. Sheol was a dark place under the ground. In it was a big hole. They called it "the pit". It was where very bad people went. So, some people translate "until someone digs a pit" as "until they die". When that happens God promises good things for his people in verses 14 and 15.

There is a change in verses 16-23. The *psalmist is now writing about himself. Some Bible students say that this is a separate psalm. Other students do not agree. It does not matter. God speaks to us through both parts of the psalm. Maybe the *psalmist was the king! That would make Psalm 94 a *royal psalm also.

The *psalmist had trouble. He does not say what it was. Who fought for him and kept him safe, (verse 16)? It was the *LORD, (verse 17), so the *psalmist did not die. When the *psalmist nearly fell, God made him safe, (verse 18). When he was not happy, God made him happy again, (verse 19). A better word for happy here is "confident". It means that you know everything will be OK. The psalm ends where it began. In verse 2, the *psalmist asks God to *punish bad leaders. Now he is confident that God will do that, (verse 23).

Something to do

1.  Ask God to be your king. Tell him that you will love him and obey him. Then he will be your *LORD.

2.  Psalm 94:22 says, "God is my strong place (or fortress), and a rock". Read Psalm 18 and look for these words. How can God be a rock?

Do Not Make The Same Mistake!

Psalm 95

(The second *royal psalm)

Jesus said, "Go and do not break God's rules again". (John 8:11)

Psalm 95

v1   Come, we will sing together to the *LORD!
   We will shout aloud to the *Rock that makes us safe!

v2   Come into (God’s) house and thank him!
   Tell him that he is great!
   (Do it) with music and with songs!

v3   (This is) because the *LORD is the great God.
   He is the great king that is more important than every other god.

v4   The deep places of the earth are in his hand.
   The tops of the mountains are his.

v5   The sea is his, because he made it.
   Also, his hands made the dry land.

v6   Come, we will fall down on our knees in front of him.
   We will stay on our knees in front of the *LORD that made us.

v7   (We will do this) because he is our God.
   Also, we are the people that he feeds and keeps safe.
   We are as animals and he is as the farmer (that feeds us)!
   Today, if you hear his voice,

v8   do not refuse to listen (to him).
   You did this at *Meribah
   and you did it one day at *Massah, in the *desert.

v9   There, your fathers *tested me to discover what I could do.
   But they had already seen my work!

v10   For 40 years I was angry with those people.
   And I said, "They are people that refuse to obey me.
   They (say that they) do not know what I want them to do".

v11   I was so angry that I said,
   "They will never come into my rest".

The Story of Psalm 95

Hebrew is the language that the *Jews spoke when they wrote the psalms. Jews are people who were born from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their children. We do not know who wrote Psalm 95, or when. In verse 2, we read "Come into God's house". In *Hebrew this is, "Come to where God is". Because the *Jews thought that they met God in his house, Bible students think this means the temple. The temple was God's house in Jerusalem. God had done something good for his people. They came to thank him in the temple. Perhaps it was after they first built the temple. Perhaps it was after they built it again when they returned from Babylon. But the psalm also says that it is not enough just to sing (talk) to God. We must also listen to him. Then we will not make the mistake of God's people at Massah and Meribah. (See note on verse 8). This is the second "Royal Psalm". Royal is a word that describes kings. The other Royal Psalms are 93 and 96-99.

What Psalm 95 means

Study the psalm in 2 parts:
  ·   verses 1 - 7a, telling God that he is great,
  ·   verses 7b - 11, telling us to obey God.

7a means the first part of the verse; 7b means the last part.

In verse 1, the psalmist (the person that wrote the psalm) asks people to come with him. Together they will praise the *LORD, (or tell him that he is great). LORD is a special name for God. Only people who have promised to love and obey him should use it. The promise to love and obey is the Covenant. If they do this, God will make them safe. So, LORD is the "Covenant name" for God. "Rock" is another name for God, as in Psalm 94:22.

In verses 4 and 5 "in his hand" and "his" means that he rules over them. So, God rules everything on the earth, including the sea.

In verse 6, "fall on our knees" means that we go on our knees in front of him. We do this when we worship him. "Worship him" means "tell him that we love him and think that he is very great".

In verse 7, the animals are sheep. God feeds his sheep and keeps them safe. But his people are the sheep. We find this in Psalm 23:1: "The *LORD is my shepherd". A shepherd is a sheep farmer. We also find it in John 10:14, where Jesus says, "I am the good shepherd". He also says in John 10:27, "My sheep hear my voice. I know them and they follow me". In all these verses, sheep are a picture of people that love and obey God.

The last part of verse 7 starts the second part of the psalm. If we hear God speak, we must listen to him (verse 8). Here, "you" means the *Jewish people who were at Massah and Meribah. They were the people that Moses led from Egypt to Israel. They had seen what God could do, (verse 9b). But they asked for more! At Massah and Meribah (2 names for the same place), they *tested God. A test is an exam, something to find out what a person can do. Here is the story from Exodus 17:1-7.

v1  All the people of Israel made the journey from the Sinai *desert. They travelled from place to place as the *LORD told them. They stopped at Rephidim. But there was no water for the people to drink.

v2  So the people were angry with Moses. They said, "Give us water so that we can drink". But Moses said to them, "Why are you angry with me? Why are you *testing the *LORD?"

v3  But the people wanted water to drink. So they were angry with Moses and they said, "Have you brought us out of Egypt to kill us? And to kill our children and our animals because they have no water?"

v4  Then Moses prayed to the *LORD. He said, "What can I do with these people? They want to throw stones at me to kill me!"

v5  And the *LORD said to Moses, "Go in front of the people. Take with you the leaders of Israel. And take your special stick in your hand. (I mean) the stick you used by the River (Nile in Egypt). Go (with them)

v6  to a rock in Horeb. I will be there before you. You must hit the rock (with your stick). Water will come out of it so that the people can drink". And Moses did this so that all the leaders of Israel could see him (do it).

v7  And he called the name of the place Massah and Meribah. (He did this) because the people of Israel were angry. Also, they *tested the *LORD. They said, "Is the *LORD among us, or not?"

A desert is a dry place. There is much sand but little water or no water. The people were angry, so they *tested God. Massah and Meribah are *Hebrew words for "*testing" and "angry". *Hebrew was the language that the people of Israel spoke. This *testing made God angry so he made them stay in the *desert for 40 years, (verse 10). None of them came into his rest, (verse 11). They all died in the *desert. It was their children that came into the land of Israel.

This psalm is also important in the New Testament. Hebrews 3:7b-11 repeats Psalm 95:7b-11. Then it tells Christians, in Hebrews 3:12-14:

v12  Be careful, brothers. None of you should have a bad heart that does not believe. It will lead you away from the God that is alive.

v13  Tell each other (this) every day, while it is still "today". Then none of you will stop listening (to God). And *sin will not make any of you think what is wrong.

v14  Because we will have some of what Christ gives us if we believe to the end.

The bad heart means "the mind that stops believing in God". The "today" in verse 13 is the same as in Psalm 95:7b. Sin is not obeying God's rules. Christ gives us many things. The most important is life that never finishes, with him in *heaven.

Hebrews 3 and 4 says a lot about Psalm 95:7b-11. The "rest" in verse 11 of the psalm is not the land of Israel. It is living with God in *heaven after we die. Heaven is the home of God. We do not know where it is.

Something to do

1.  If you have a Bible, study Exodus 17:1-7, Psalm 95 and Hebrews 3:1-4:16.

2.  Learn to say Psalm 95:1-2 by heart. (This means, without looking at the words.)

3.  If you like music, try singing parts of Psalm 95. You can make your own music for this!

Sing A New Song!

Psalm 96

(The third *royal psalm)

Jesus said, "Tell your Father in *Heaven that he is a great (God)". (Matthew 5:16)

Psalm 96

v1   Sing a new song to the *LORD!
   Sing to the *LORD, all the world!

v2   Sing to the *LORD and say good things about him!
   Every day, say that he has made us safe!

v3   Tell every *nation that he is very great!
   Tell everybody the *wonderful things that he has done!

v4   Because the *LORD is great, and everybody should say that he is great!
   People should be more afraid of him than of all (other) gods.

v5   Because all the gods of every country are false.
   But the *LORD made everything.

v6   (People that) are near him can see that he is a very great king.
   (People that) are in his house can see that he is strong and beautiful.

v7   Say to the *LORD, you families of *nations,
   say to the *LORD that he is *glorious and powerful.

v8   Say that the *LORD has a *glorious name.
   Bring a gift and come near his house.

v9   Fall down in front of the *LORD who is beautiful and *holy.
   Be afraid of him, everyone (that lives) on the earth.

v10   Tell all the *nations that the *LORD is King!
   (He has) fixed the world so that nothing can move it.
   He will be a fair *judge of the people.

v11   Earth and sky, be happy!
   Sea and everything in it, *roar (because you are happy!)

v12   Fields, you be happy as well, and everything in you!
   Then, all the trees in the forests will sing because they are so happy!

v13   (They will sing) to the *LORD when he comes.
   He will come to be a *judge of the earth.
   He will be a good *judge and he will be fair to the people.

The Story of Psalm 96

King David used this psalm when he brought the ark into Jerusalem. The ark was a special box. There were special things in it. These things gave the *Jews help to remember their past story. Jews are people who were born from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their children. Later, when David was dead, his son Solomon built the temple. This was the house of God in Jerusalem. Then the *Jews kept the ark in the temple. But 400 years later enemies destroyed the temple. After 70 years, the *Jews built it again. They changed the psalm a bit, to the psalm as we know it. They used it in their new temple. David's psalm is in 1 Chronicles 16:23-33.

What Psalm 96 means

Study Psalm 96 in 4 parts:
  ·   verses 1-3, the *LORD's people must tell everybody about him.

LORD is a special name for God. Only his people use this name. His people agree (or covenant) to love him, work for him and obey him. So, LORD is the Covenant Name of God. But, in verses 1 and 3, "all the world" and "every nation" must sing to the LORD. A nation is a country with a government. This means that some people from every country have agreed to love, work for and obey him. "He has made us safe", in verse 2, tells us about the date of the psalm. Bible students suggest three dates:
  1) after David made his country safe, about 1 000 B.C.
  2) in the time of Isaiah, after Assyria failed to destroy Jerusalem, about 700 B.C.
  3) after the exile, when the *Jews came home from Babylon, about 500 B.C.

The exile was when the Babylonians took the *Jews away from Judah. They took them to Babylon. They were there from 606-536 B.C. B.C. means "years Before Christ came to the earth". Most Bible students think that David wrote the psalm, but that someone re-wrote it (changed it) after the exile. In verse 3, "wonderful things" are things that surprise us. They make us think, "How did God do that?"
  ·   verses 4-6, the *LORD is greater than all the gods of the earth.

There are many gods in the world, but they are all false gods. Isaiah tells us that men "make a god", (Isaiah 44:15). There is only one God who really is alive, "the *LORD (that) made everything", verse 5. Men did not make him; he made men! Verses 4-6 tell more about God. They tell us that:
  1) he is great, so we should praise him. "Praise him" means "tell him that he is great".
  2) we need not be afraid of other gods, but we should be afraid of God.
  3) he is a great king. This is why the psalm is "a royal psalm", because "royal" means "as a king".

4) he is strong and powerful.

5) he is also beautiful. God’s house, the *temple, was beautiful. This made people think that God was beautiful also. The same is true in many of our churches. Because they are beautiful, they make us remember that God is beautiful. But God will still be beautiful when there are no more church buildings!
  ·   verses 7-9, everyone on earth must say that the *LORD is great.

The "families of *nations" in verse 7 makes us think that all people are as one big family. This is true because God made everybody. But the *psalmist (the person who wrote the psalm) does not mean this. He means that all the people that love, work for and obey God are as one big family. The *psalmist tells us again that the *LORD is powerful and beautiful. But now he also says that he is *glorious and *holy.

"Glorious" means "*wonderful and shining very much". Psalm 84:11 says, "The *LORD God is a sun". It does not mean that God is the sun, but that he shines as a sun shines. "Holy" means that he is "very, very good". He has never done anything that is wrong. The "gift" in verse 8 is a special *Hebrew word. The *Jews spoke Hebrew and wrote the psalms in Hebrew. The word is "minchah". It is a gift that has no blood in it. This means that it is not an animal that they had killed. "Near his house" means the open spaces round the *temple. There was no *temple when David wrote the psalm, but there was when another *psalmist *re-wrote it. Christians have no *temple, but see themselves as a *temple where their *Lord lives. Verse 9 has been difficult for many translators! There are three ideas in it:
  1) fall down in front of the *LORD. Some Bible students translate "fall down" as "lie down on your front"; other students translate it as "worship". "Worship" means "tell God that he is much greater than you are, but you love him". Some people worship with words, other people by going on their knees, yet other people by lying flat on their fronts. Our translation uses the third of these.
  2) the *LORD is beautiful and *holy. Some Bible students think that the *Hebrew means that God is beautiful and *holy. Other students think that the people who *worship him must wear beautiful clothes. Our translation uses the first of these.
  3) be afraid of the *LORD. This tells us that God really is much more powerful than we are. *Worship must have love and being afraid in it. Another word for this kind of "being afraid" is "awe".
  ·   verses 10-13, not only people must say the *LORD is great: earth, sky and sea must also say it!

The last part of the psalm says that the *LORD is king and that one day he will come and rule the earth. He made (or fixed, verse 10) the earth in its place. Everything must be full of joy (be very happy). This means not only people, but also things. It means the earth and the sky. The *Hebrew word here for "the sky" is "the heavens". "Heaven" means two things in the Bible. It can mean the sky, or it can mean the place where God lives. Here it means the sky, with all its suns, moons and stars. The sea includes everything that lives in it. If you have heard the sea, you will know the kind of "roar" (or loud noise) that it makes. Fields and everything in them must be happy also; so must the forests, with all their trees. For 2 000 years Christians have remembered that Jesus was King on a Tree. The tree was the Cross of Calvary, where he died. At the end of the psalm, in verse 13, the *psalmist becomes a prophet. This means that he says what the *LORD God will do. He will come to the earth and he will be a great and fair judge. A judge decides who has done right and who has done wrong. The "right" people are those who love, work for and obey the *LORD. The "wrong" people are those who do not do this. We must choose ourselves which group we are in.

Something to do

1. Tell God that you want to love, work for and obey him. You will then be one of his people.

2. Look at some of the verses in this psalm and then look at the verses in brackets from other psalms. Verse 1 (33:3; 98:1); verse 3 (9:11; 105:1); verse 4 (48:1; 95:3); verse 10 (9:7-8; 98:9). If you have Isaiah, do the same with that. Verse 2 (Isaiah 52:7); verse 3 (60:6); verse 5 (40:18-20); verses 11-13 (41:19; 44:23; 49:13).

*Lord of Far-Away People

Psalm 97

(The fourth *royal psalm)

Jesus said, "I have other sheep. They do not live here. I must fetch them also. And they will hear my voice. And there will be one home for sheep and one shepherd". (John 10:16) (A shepherd is a sheep farmer.)

Psalm 97

v1   The *LORD is king! (Everyone) on earth will be very happy!
   (Even) all the (people) on far-away islands will be very happy!

v2   Clouds and black (skies) are all round (the *LORD).
   He is a good and fair ruler.

v3   Fire goes in front of him.
   It burns up his enemies on every side.

v4   His *lightning is a light over the (whole) world.
   The earth sees it and is afraid.

v5   The mountains *melt as butter in front of the *LORD,
   in front of the master of the whole world.

v6   The skies tell (us) that he is *righteous
   and people (from every country) will see his *glory.

v7   All the servants of *images (of gods) will be ashamed.
   Also, all those that say that *idols are great (will be ashamed)!
   Because (even) the gods will fall down in front of (the *LORD).

v8   *Zion will hear about it and be happy.
   The people of Judah will be very happy!
   (This will be) because of what you decide to do, *LORD.

v9   Because you, *LORD, are the *Most High (God) over all the earth.
   You are much more important than any other god!

v10   If you love the *LORD, then *hate what bad people do!
   (The *LORD) makes safe the lives of his people.
   He will make them free from the hands of bad people.

v11   Light will shine on *righteous people
   and honest people will be very happy.

v12   Everyone that is *righteous, you be happy with the *LORD!
   And say "thanks" to his *holy name.

The Story of Psalm 97

Bible students think that whoever wrote Psalm 96 also wrote Psalm 97. But Psalm 96 remembers what God has done. Psalm 97 looks to the future. It says (or prophesies) what God will do. Psalm 96 remembers that God brought his people home from a foreign country. He did this because he was a powerful king. Psalm 96:2 says "God has made us safe". Psalm 97 is another royal psalm. "Royal" means "as a king". Psalm 97 tells us what will happen when everybody sees that God is king. That is why some Bible students say that this is a psalm about the end of the world.

What Psalm 97 means

The psalm starts with "the *LORD is king", (verse 1). This is always true, but many people do not believe it! But the psalm goes on to say this: Everybody will know that it is true. It says what will happen then. The word LORD is a special name for God. His people use this name. His people love and obey him. These people will be very happy when everyone knows that the *LORD is king. It does not matter where they live. Even if they live in far-away places.

We cannot see God and we do not know what he looks like. "Like" is another word for "as". In the Bible, we often read that God is like a storm. You will find this in Joshua chapters 4 and 5, Psalm 18, Psalm 29, and many other places. You will find it here, in verses 2-6. There are black skies, (verse 2). There is fire, (verse 3). There is lightning, or a bright light in the sky that appears just for a second, (verse 4). Many people are afraid of lightning, and the thunder (or loud noise) that follows it. When God appears at the end of time, people will be afraid. It will frighten them, like a bad storm frightens them. But the *LORD's people will not be afraid. They will be happy that God has appeared to judge the world. "To judge" means "to decide who is good and who is bad". The good people are those who love and obey God. The bad people do not do this.

But when God appears, it will frighten even the earth itself! The mountains will melt, (verse 5)! This means that the rocks and stones will become as water, or as butter when it becomes hot. This is only a picture; we do not know what will really happen. But God is not only master of the people on the earth. He is master ("*Lord" in *Hebrew, not the same word as "*LORD") of the earth itself.

In verse 6, there are two important Bible words, *righteous and *glory. They are not easy to explain.
  ·   "righteous" means "very, very good". It means "never done anything bad". Only God is really righteous. But in verses 11 and 12, the psalm calls God’s people "righteous". This is not because they are very, very good. It is not because they have never done anything bad. It is because God has forgiven their sin. We sin when we do not obey God’s rules. But if we are sorry, God takes that sin away. We say that God forgives us. God then calls us righteous. He decides not to remember that we have not obeyed his rules! So, righteous people are not always good people. They are people that God has forgiven. They are people that sometimes still do bad things. But when they do, they always ask God to forgive them again.
  ·   "glory" means "shining very much, shining like the sun". Psalm 84:11 says that "God is like the sun". It does not mean that God is the sun. Some people believe that, but they are wrong. We cannot look at the sun, because it shines so bright. But that is a picture for us of God’s glory.

Verse 6 tells us that the skies say that God is *righteous and glorious. ("Glorious" means "has a lot of *glory".) We can also translate the word "skies" as "*heavens". Heaven is the home of God. We do not know where it is. But when we see it, we will see that God is *righteous and glorious. In some strange way, even seeing a storm tells us that God is *righteous and glorious.

Verses 7 - 9 are about other "gods". Countries all round Judah had their own gods. Often they made gods out of wood or stone. We call these "images" or "idols". The *Hebrew word "idols" really means "nothings". Hebrew was the language that they spoke in Judah. Their word for idols tells us that the idols were false gods. They were not gods at all, because there is only one God! They were (and still are) "nothings"! When God appears, everyone will know that there are no other gods. These gods will all fall down in front of the God that really lives. Everyone will see that the false gods are dead nothings. The *LORD God is more important than any other god because he is alive and they are dead. The *LORD God is the Most High God. The "Most High" is another name for God. It means that he is more important than anyone else. Zion, in verse 8, was the capital city of Judah. It was another name for Jerusalem.

The psalm ends with promises to God's people. God's people must hate (or not like) what bad people do. But the *LORD will make his people safe and free, (verse 10). This will happen when the *LORD God appears on earth. But it often happens now for his people. It is certain that it is true when they die. They will be safe and free with God in *heaven. "The hands of bad people" means "what bad people do to them with their hands". Bible students are not certain what "light will shine" in verse 11 means. The *Hebrew word translated "shine" really means "become planted"! Perhaps God sows (or plants) seeds of light in us, so that we will shine also! We will have a part of God's *glory if we love and serve (work for) him. Paul tells us that in Romans 8:30. So, we must say "thanks" to his *holy name, (verse 12). "Holy" means all good with no bad in it, separate from *sin.

In verses 1, 8, 11 and 12 we read the word "happy". A better word is "joyful" or "full of joy". It is a good feeling deep down inside us. Nobody can take it away, because God put it there.

Something to do

1. Read some of the other psalms that are about storms. Psalms 18 and 29 are good examples.

2. Think about *idols and false gods. Must they be made of wood or stone? Can they be things in our lives that we love more than God?

God Rules The World!

Psalm 98

(The fifth *royal psalm)

Jesus said, "You will see the Son of man sitting by the right hand of the Powerful One. He will come in clouds in the skies". (Matthew 26:64) (The Son of man is a name that Jesus called himself. The Powerful One is a name for God.)

Psalm 98
  (This is) a psalm.

v1   Sing a new song to the *LORD.
   Because he has done *wonderful things.
   His right hand and his *holy arm
   have made (his people) safe.

v2   The *LORD has made everybody to know
   that he has made (his people) safe.
   He has shown everybody (in the world)
   that he is a *righteous (God).

v3   He remembered his kind love to the people of Israel.
   And he did what he had promised.
   Everyone (that lives) far away has seen
   that (God) has made (his people) safe.

v4   Everybody (that lives) on earth,
   shout to the *LORD because you are so happy!
   Start singing and making music!

v5   Make music to the *LORD with a *harp!
   Make music with *harp and voice!

v6   With *trumpets and the sound of the *horn
   make a happy noise to the *LORD (who is) King!

v7   The sea and everything that is in it
   must make a loud noise.
   The earth and everything that lives in it
   must also (make a loud noise).

v8   The rivers must *clap their hands
   and the mountains must make a happy sound

v9   to the *LORD.
   Because he is coming to rule the earth.
   He will be a *righteous king.
   He will be a very fair *judge.

The Story of Psalm 98

This is a *royal psalm. "Royal" means "as a king". In the royal psalms, (93 and 95 to 99) God is the king of everything. The *Jews wrote the psalm when they returned from the *exile. Jews are people who were born from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their children. The exile was in Babylon. The king of Babylon took them from Judah where they lived. He made them stay in Babylon. After 70 years, the king of Persia beat the king of Babylon in a war. He let the *Jews go home to Judah. They built the temple in Jerusalem again. The king of Babylon had destroyed it. The *Jews made the book of psalms to sing in the temple. The temple was God's house in Jerusalem. The *Jews wrote the *royal psalms because they believed that God was really the king that sent them home.

Christians believe that God is the king of everything. So, Christians sing the *royal psalms also. But Christians believe that one day God will come to the earth. As Jesus came to Bethlehem, so God will come again to the earth. Jesus is God. But next time, he will not come as a baby. He will come as a king ... King of Everything! As verse 9 says, "he is coming to rule the earth". We do not know when, but he will come. We are so certain that we say "he is coming"!

What Psalm 98 means

Study this psalm in two parts:
  ·   verses 1 - 3 tell us that God has made his people (the *Jews) safe.
  ·   verses 4 - 9 tell us that God will not only rule Judah, but the whole world.

The word "safe" is in verses 1, 2 and 3. The *LORD has "made his people safe". He has brought them home from Babylon to Judah. The LORD is a special name that God’s people use. His people, the *Jews, promised to love God and to obey him after the *exile. But Christians also try to love and to obey God. And he will make them safe. But not safe as he made the *Jews safe, bringing them home from *exile. He will make Christians safe after they die. They will go to live with God after they die. This is what we call "salvation". We could translate "made his people safe" as "given his people salvation". It means that he has made them safe from the results of the bad things that they have done. This is one of the wonderful (or very special) things that God does.

"His right hand" and "his holy arm" tell us that God does these wonderful things on earth. We cannot see his hand or his arm, but we know that God has done *wonderful things. He is still doing them. The words "holy" and "righteous" tell us that:
  ·   God is very, very good (or, God is righteous).
  ·   He has never done bad things (or, God is holy).

When we read the story of Jesus, we can see in our minds God’s holy arm. The things that Jesus did were really the things that God did. God’s hand and arm are very powerful and strong.

Verses 4 - 9 tell people on earth, Christians, *Jews and everybody else, to make music to the *LORD. Even the rivers and the sea, the earth and its mountains must all make a loud noise to *praise the *LORD. "Praise the *LORD" means "tell the *LORD that he is great and *wonderful". We do not know how a river or a mountain can praise the *LORD. Rivers do not have hands, so they cannot "clap", or "hit their hands together". It must mean "make a river noise!" But the psalm tells the *LORD's people what to do when they *praise him. Some people must use harps, trumpets and horns to play music, while other people must sing. Harps, trumpets and horns are "instruments of music". This means that they are things that make music. Why must we do this?
  ·   Because God has done great and *wonderful things.
  ·   Because God will rule the world in a very fair (or *righteous) way.

Verse 9 says that "he will be a very fair judge". A judge is someone that decides who is good and who is bad.

Something to do

1. Everybody must *praise the *LORD. But he is only *LORD if we promise to love and obey him.

Before we do this, we must ask God to forgive us. "Forgive us" means "take away the bad things we have done". Then God will be our *LORD. He will give us the help that we need to love him and obey him.

2. If you play a musical *instrument, learn to play music for the *LORD. Get your friends to help. If you cannot find words and music to play, write some yourself. It will then be "a new song", (verse 1)!

You can make music to any of the psalms.

3. Pray that God will come soon to rule over the earth. He will do it much better than any government!

God ... He Is *Holy!

Psalm 99

(The sixth and last *royal psalm)

Jesus prayed (to God), "*Holy Father". (John 17:11)

Psalm 99

v1   The *LORD is king!
   People on earth will be afraid!
   (The *LORD) is sitting between the *cherubim!
   The earth (itself) will *shake!

v2   The *LORD is great in *Zion.
   And he is king over all the (other) people (in the world).

v3   They must (all) *praise your great name.
   (It is a name) that makes people afraid.
   Because he is *holy.

v4   (He is) a strong king and he loves what is right.
   You have made everything fair.
   You have done what is right and fair in *Jacob.

v5   *Praise the *LORD our God!
   *Kneel *before him. He is *holy.

v6   Moses and Aaron were among his *priests
   and Samuel was among those that prayed to him.
   They prayed to the *LORD and he answered them.

v7   He spoke to them from the *column of cloud.
   They obeyed his rules and they did what he told them to do.

v8   *LORD our God, you answered them.
   You were a God that *forgave Israel.
   Even if you *punished them when they did not obey you.

v9   *Praise the *LORD our God and *kneel before him.
   Because the *LORD our God, he is *holy!

The Story of Psalm 99

This is the last of the 6 *royal psalms. The word "royal" means "as a king". We call the psalms royal because they call God king. The *royal psalms (93 and 95-99) tell us that he is ruling over all the world. Psalms 94 and 100 are sometimes included with the *royal psalms, but they are not really *royal psalms.

Jews are people who were born from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their children. The Jews spoke Hebrew, and they wrote the psalms in Hebrew. But 200 years before Jesus was born, they translated them into the Greek language. This was because many of the *Jews that lived in Egypt spoke Greek. Now the Hebrew Bible does not say who wrote the *royal psalms. But the Greek Bible does! It says that David wrote all the *royal psalms. But Bible students think that what really happened was this. The exile was when the Babylonians beat the *Jews and took them to Babylon. When the *Jews came home from the exile, they found that the Babylonians had destroyed their *temple. So, they built it again. Then they made the book of psalms to sing in it. The temple was the house of God in Jerusalem. They took some old psalms of David, and changed them a bit. This was because they wanted psalms that said this: God is greater than any other king is! He is greater than the king of Babylon, who had made them live away from their own land. God used another king, Cyrus of Persia, to destroy Babylon. Then the Persian king sent the *Jews home.

For Christians, the *royal psalms tell us that God is still king. He is still ruling over the whole world. When things seem bad, we must still love and obey him. He is king and, in the end, everyone will have to obey him. Even those that do not love him. But many Bible students think that the psalms tell us more than this. They tell us that God himself will come back to the earth and rule as king. Then everyone will see that God is the King!

What Psalm 99 means

Study the psalm in 2 parts:
  ·   verses 1 - 5, the *LORD is king over everyone, but over Israel in a special way.
  ·   verses 6 - 9, why the *LORD is special to Israel.

Some Bible students translate verse 1 as: "The *LORD, the One Sitting on the Cherubim, is king! People will be afraid and the earth itself will *shake!" This makes "One Sitting on the Cherubim" another name for the *LORD. The LORD is a special name for God. His servants that love and obey him use it. Once this was only the *Jews but now it is anyone that loves and obeys him. Cherubim are not people. They are special servants of God that live with him. They are very powerful. When people see that God really is king, they will be afraid. Even the earth itself will *shake. (Something shakes when it cannot keep still.) Zion, in verse 2, is another name for Jerusalem. Really, Zion was the hill in Jerusalem where they built the *temple.

Verses 3, 5 and 9 tell us that he is *holy. Who is *holy? The *LORD our God. Really, we can translate verse 3 better as "they must *praise your name ... because it is *holy". But the name of God means everything about God: his love, his power, his anger (when he is angry) and that he does what he has promised. He does not forget his people. But most important, God is *holy and *righteous. These are difficult words to understand. We say that holy means "never does anything wrong" and righteous means "always does what is right". But both words mean much more than this. Because God is *holy, he makes us feel afraid. This is because we are only people. But he is so much greater; he is God! That is part of what being *holy means. Even when we love and obey him, we feel a bit afraid. There is a special word for this. It is "awe". We feel awe when we remember that God is *holy. And so, we want to praise him (tell him that he is a great God). Also, we want to worship him. To worship him means to *kneel in front of him. And tell him that we love him. "Kneel" means "get down on our knees".

"Kneel before him" in verse 5 means "get down on our knees in front of him". But where is he? In the psalm, "him" is really "at his footstool". A footstool is something that you rest your feet on. To the *Jews it was a special place in the *temple in Jerusalem. Sometimes the *Jews said that the whole earth was God's footstool! Isaiah 66:1 says "Heaven (the sky) is my seat and the earth is my footstool". So where is God? Everywhere, because the whole earth is his footstool. Also, the *temple in Jerusalem has gone. In verses 1-5, the *Jews (called "Jacob" in verse 4) are special to the *LORD, but we can all learn from these verses.

We can also learn from the last part of the psalm. It says that Moses was a priest. This is the only place in the Bible where it says this. So some Bible students translate verse 6 as: Moses (a great leader), Aaron among his priests, and Samuel, were among those that prayed to him. Priests were God’s special servants in the *temple at Jerusalem. They all came from the family of Aaron, who was Moses' brother. The column of cloud, verse 7, led Moses and Aaron from Egypt to Israel. A column of cloud is tall and thin. Perhaps there was a small column of cloud in the *temple at Shiloh when Samuel lived there. The important thing about these great men was this. "They prayed to the *LORD and he answered them", (verse 6).

Verse 8 is perhaps the most important verse in Psalm 99. Even when God *forgave his people, he still punished them! "Punished" means "hurt them because they did not obey him". This is still true today. We may take something that is not ours. God will forgive us, but we may still have to go to prison. When God forgives us, it means this. We may have done bad things. But that will not stop us going to heaven (God’s home) when we die. When God forgives us, he gives the bad things that we do to Jesus. Jesus took them away when he died. But we must ask God to forgive us, and promise to try to obey him in the future.

When God has forgiven us, then verse 9 becomes the most important verse in the psalm! ‘*Praise the *LORD our God and *kneel before him, because the *LORD our God, he is *holy.

Something to do

Read Psalms 93 to 100. Try to understand why 93 and 100 are not really *royal psalms.

*Thank-you, God!

Psalm 100

Jesus said, "*Thank-you, Father". (Matthew 11:25)

Psalm 100

(This is) a "*thank-you" psalm.

v1   Everyone on earth, shout to the *LORD!

v2   Do something for the *LORD to show that you are happy.
   Come to him with songs of *joy.

v3   Know that the *LORD really is God.
   He made us and we are his people.
   (We are as his) sheep in his fields.

v4   Say "*thank-you" when you are walking through his gates.
   Stand in front of his *temple and say good things about him.

v5   (Do all this) because the *LORD is good.
   He is always loving and kind.
   He will always do what he has promised to us.

The Story of Psalm 100

We do not know who wrote Psalm 100 or when. Perhaps It was when they built the *temple again 80 years after the King of Babylon destroyed it. The temple was a special house for God in Jerusalem. The *temple had a wall all round it. Verse 4 tells people to say "thanks!" to God as they walk through the gates in this wall. The psalm tells everybody to come to the *temple and tell God how great he is.

What Psalm 100 means

Verse 1: Here "everyone" does not only mean the *Jews. Jews are people who were born from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their children. Bible students believe that it means everybody in the whole world. The word "shout" here means "make a loud noise". The *Hebrew word in this verse does not mean "sing". The *Jews wrote the psalms in the Hebrew language, which they spoke. Maybe the shout is as at a football game, when you shout for your group to win! The LORD is a special name for God. It is a name that his people use. His people are the people that love him and obey him.

Verse 2: The *Hebrew word that we translate "do something for" means "work for" or "become the servant of". In the psalm, it means that we praise God (tell God that he is great) because he makes us so happy. There is no *temple now so we praise him in our churches or our homes. Jesus taught us that the church is now God’s *temple. Really, we can praise God anywhere! "Joy" is when you feel very happy deep down inside you.

Verse 3: Some Bibles translate "we are his people" as "we did not make ourselves". This is because they sound the same in *Hebrew! It does not matter because both translations tell us what is true. Sheep are animals that live in fields. God's people are often said to be as sheep. This means that God takes care of them just as a farmer takes care of his sheep. "Takes care of" here means "feed and give help to". In the New Testament (the second part of the Bible) Jesus said, "I am the good shepherd" (John 10:11). A shepherd is a sheep farmer.

Verse 4: The psalm tells everyone to come to the *temple and *praise God. The *temple was small, so most people stood outside it. Only the priests and Levites went inside. The priests and Levites were special servants of God. They worked in and round the *temple. "Thank-you" is a polite way to say "thanks". The *Hebrew of "say good things about him" is "bless his name". "Bless" is a special *Jewish and Christian word.

Verse 5: Another way to say "he will do what he has promised" is "he is faithful". When we do what we promise then we are faithful. God will always be faithful to us. We must also be faithful to him.

Something to do

The psalm tells us to do 7 things:

1.  Shout to the *LORD! Even if we cannot sing, we can all make a loud noise. We can shout, sing aloud, or make music!

2.  Do something for the *LORD. We do this because God gives us *joy. He makes us happy. In the psalm, it meant that they did it in the *temple. There is no *temple now. We must be God’s servants everywhere.

3.  We must come where the *LORD is. We can sing to him, or just talk to him. He is always very near to us. He will always hear everything that we say or sing. We call "talking to God" by the name "prayer".

4.  We must know who the *LORD is. "*LORD" is another name for God. God is so important that he has many names. In this psalm, there are two. One is God. In *Hebrew, this means that he is more powerful than anyone else is. The other is *LORD. This is a name that his servants use. It is a special name that means many things. Two are:
  ·   God will be *faithful to his servants;
  ·   and his servants will be *faithful to God.

5.  We must walk through the *LORD’s gates and go into his house. There is no *temple now in Jerusalem. His *temple is the church. For Christians verse 4 means, "Go where God's people are. Worship God with them". "Worship God" means "tell God that you love him and that he is very great".

6.  Say *thank-you to the *LORD for everything. We must thank him always, because he is always loving and kind to us.

7.  The *LORD likes us to say good things about him. When we say good things about the *LORD, or bless his name, it makes him very happy.

Why must we do these 7 things? Verse 5 tells us, "Do all this because the *LORD is good. He is always loving and kind. He will always do what he has promised to us". THE *LORD IS A GREAT GOD!

The King’s Song

Psalm 101

Jesus said, "First look for the place where God is king. Do the good things that he does". (Matthew 6:33)

Psalm 101

(This is) a psalm of David.

v1   I will sing to you, *LORD.
   I will sing about your kind love and *justice.

v2   I will be careful.
   Then nobody can say that I have done wrong.
   When will you (*LORD) come to me?
   Where I rule, I will do nothing that is wrong.

v3   I will not let any *wicked people be with me.
   I really do not like what *wicked people do.
   They will not come near to me.

v4   People with *wicked ideas will be far from me.
   I will not mix with them.

v5   I will destroy anyone that says bad things about people *in secret.
   I will send away people that have *proud eyes and hearts.

v6   My eyes will look at people who obey (the *LORD).
   They will be with me (in my work).
   My servants will be people that do nothing wrong.

v7   People that are not honest will not stay with me.
   People that do not say what is true will not remain with me.

v8   Every morning I will destroy people that are *wicked in (my) country.
   Nobody that is *wicked will remain in the city of the *LORD.

The Story of Psalm 101

Psalms 93 and 95-99 are royal psalms. "Royal" means "as a king", and in these psalms it is God that is the king. But there are other psalms about the kings of Israel and Judah. They include Psalms 2, 18, 20 and 21, 45, 71 and 101. We could also call these "royal psalms". Each of these psalms is about something different. For example:
  ·   Psalm 2 is about the king (of Israel) ruling over his enemies.
  ·   Psalms 20 and 21 are about the king going to war and coming home.
  ·   Psalm 45 is about the king getting married.

Psalm 101 is about the king ruling in his own country. Many Bible students think that it is what the king said when he became king. It was a promise that he made to God and his people. We do not know which king wrote the psalm. Maybe it was David. Maybe it was a king that ruled after David. He called himself "David" because he was David's son, grandson, or grandson's son, and so on. In other words, he was someone in David's family.

In the psalm, the king says two things:
  ·   he will sing about God, and God’s kind love and justice (God is kind and fair);
  ·   he himself will try to be as kind and fair as God is. He will not let bad men work with him.

What Psalm 101 means

There are two important *Hebrew words in this psalm. Hebrew is the language that the king spoke. He wrote the psalm in Hebrew. The words are:
  ·   tam (or tamim) in verse 2 (twice) and again in verse 6. I have translated it "do nothing wrong", or words that mean the same.
  ·   aynaim in verses 3, 5, 6 and 7. It means "eyes". In verse 3, I have translated it "with me", because it means "I will not let wicked (very bad) people be before my eyes". Also, in verse 7, "remain with me" is "stay before my eyes". The word "before" means "in front of".

Why are these two words important? Because David (or any other king) wanted to be as kind and fair as God is, (verse 1). In other words, he wanted nobody to say that he (the king) had done wrong. To use another word, nobody could blame him for doing anything bad. In the psalm, the name of God is always LORD. This is a special name that his servants used. They agreed that they would love and obey him. Then he would protect them (stop people hurting them).

David wanted to be kind and fair. But he wanted the people in his government to be kind and fair also. So *wicked people could not be in that government. They could not be "in his eyes", or where he could see them.

Other notes:

Verse 1: "Kind love" is a special Bible word. It is the love that God has for his people. It means that he will not stop loving them. "Justice" is a word that means "being fair".

Verse 5: "In secret" means "in a secret place", so few people know about it. The people David (or the king) did not like had *wicked ideas. They talked about these ideas where only a few people could hear them. Also, they had proud eyes and hearts. "Proud" means that you "think that you are more important than you really are". A proud heart thought this. Proud eyes looked at other people as if only the proud eyes were important.

Verse 8: "Every morning" suggests that each day David judged bad people. Judged means "decided whether they were bad or not". If they were bad, David destroyed them. The word "destroy" in verses 5 and 9 in *Hebrew really means "made quiet". This may mean that he asked his servants to kill them. Or just to stop them talking. We do not know. But they did not stay "in the city of the *LORD", which was Jerusalem.

Something to do

1.  Pray for your government, that it will be honest. Pray that it will do what God wants it to do.

If you think that this is not possible, read Psalms 93, and 95-99 again. God was king then, and he is still king! One day, he will answer what you pray.

2.  Be as David. Do not have bad people as your friends.

3.  Learn to say Psalm 101:1 by heart. This means that you can say it without looking at the words.

A Young Man With Trouble

Psalm 102

Jesus said, "Do not let trouble stay in your mind. *Believe in God and believe in me also". (John 14:1) "Destroy this *temple and in three days I will raise it up again". (John 2:19)

Psalm 102
  (This is) the *prayer of a man that is weak and in trouble.
   He pours out to the *LORD this sad song.

v1   *LORD, hear my *prayer
   and listen when I cry to you for help.

v2   Do not hide your face from me when I am in trouble.
   Turn your ear to me.
   Answer me soon, now that I am praying to you.

v3   Because my life is *disappearing *like smoke (*disappears).
   Also, my bones are burning as a fire burns.

v4   I am so ill that I am as dried grass.
   I (even) forget to eat my food.

v5   Because of my loud *groans,
   I am just skin and bone.

v6   I am as a (wild) bird in a lonely place.
   I am as a (night) bird in a broken building.

v7   I lie awake and feel *like a (small) bird
   by itself on the roof of a house.

v8   All day my enemies say bad things about me.
   People that are angry with me use my name as a *curse.

v9 - v10   Because you are so angry with me:
   ·   I eat ashes as my food;
   ·   I mix my drink with my *tears.
   Because you picked me up and then you threw me away.

v11   My days are as an evening shadow.
   I am dying as grass (soon dies).

v12   But you, *LORD, will always be king.
   You will always be famous,
   everybody that will live (will know about you.)

v13   You will stand up and be kind to *Zion,
   because it is time to show her that you love her.
   The time has come when this should happen.

v14   Because her stones are valuable to your servants.
   (Her) broken stones make them very sad.

v15   The *nations will be afraid of the name of the *LORD.
   And all the kings of the earth will *kneel before your *glory.

v16   Because the *LORD will build *Zion again
   and appear in his *glory.

v17   He will answer the *prayers of people that have nothing
   and he will not laugh at what they ask.

v18   Write this down for people that will be alive in future (times).
   Then people (that God has) not yet *created will *praise the *LORD.

v19   The *LORD looked down from his home in the *heavens,
   from the skies he saw the earth.

v20   He heard the *groans of people in prison.
   The people that were going to die he made free.

v21   So people will shout the *LORD’s name in *Zion
   and they will *praise him in Jerusalem.

v22   (This will happen) when peoples and *kingdoms
   meet together to *worship the *LORD.

v23   He has made me ill in the middle (of my life).
   He will make my life short.

v24   So I said, "My God, do not let me die in the middle of my life.
   You will always be alive.

v25   At the beginning (of time) you built the earth so that it was strong.
   Also, your hands *created the *heavens.

v26   They will not always remain, but you (*LORD) will.
   They will *wear out as clothes do.
   *Like clothes, you will change them and throw them away.

v27   But you (*LORD) will always be the same
   and your life will never end.

v28   (We are) your servants and our children will live always live here.
   And their children will be safe where you are.

The Story of Psalm 102

Psalm 102 has 2 stories! The first was when a young man who was dying wrote the psalm. The other was when, 300 years later, the *Jews in Egypt translated the psalm into Greek. (Jews are people who were born from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their children.) They changed the end. They did not change it very much. But then the young man who was dying meant Jesus!

The first young man lived about 540 B.C. B.C. means years Before Christ came to the earth. The young man was a *Jew. But he did not live in Judah. The Babylonian army had beaten Judah and taken many of the people to live in Babylon. We call this the exile. It started in 606 B.C. and ended 70 years later. The *prophet Jeremiah had said the *exile would go on for 70 years. A prophet is someone who speaks or writes God’s words. He wrote "After you have lived 70 years in Babylon, I (the *LORD) will come to you. I will do what I said I would do. I will cause you to come back to this place (Judah)" (Jeremiah 29:10). Now the young man that wrote the psalm must have known this. He wrote in verse 13, "The time has come when this should happen". He knew that God would do what he had promised. LORD is a special name for God. It is a special name that his servants used. They agreed that they would love and obey him. Then he would protect them (stop people hurting them).

We do not know why the young man was ill. We know that he was young because he wrote in verse 23 "He (God) has made me ill in the middle of my life". So, he was not an old man. He did not remember Judah. But he wanted to live long enough to go with them when the *Jews returned home. So he prayed in verse 24, "Do not let me die in the middle of my life". We pray when we talk to God. We call what we say to him a prayer.

Christians thought of the young man dying as Jesus. But why did the *Jews change the end of the psalm when they translated it from *Hebrew into Greek? Hebrew was the language that the *Jews spoke in 540 B.C., but later they spoke either Aramaic or Greek. Now there were no vowels in the *Hebrew language when they wrote it down. Vowels are the letters a, e, i, o and u. In 250 B.C., when they translated it into Greek, the *Jews used one set of vowels. Later, when they wrote the *Hebrew down many years later, they used another set of vowels. Most of the psalm is the same in both *Hebrew and Greek, but the end is different. Here is the end translated from the Greek Bible:

v23   He answered him in his strong way.
   Tell me how short my life is.

v24   Do not let me die in the middle of my life.
   You will always be alive,
   as long as there are people living (on the earth).

v25   At the beginning (of time) you built the earth so it was strong.
   Also, your hands *created the *heavens.

v26   They will not always remain, but you (*LORD) will.
   They will wear out as clothes do.
   *Like clothes, you will roll them up,
   and you will change them.

v27   But you (*LORD) will always be the same
   and your life will never end.

When Paul (or another Christian) wrote the Letter to the Hebrews (in the *New Testament), he repeated these words from the Greek Bible. He said that they were about Jesus! Here is what he wrote in Hebrews 1.

v8  But to the Son (God said) ...

v10 ... You, *Lord, at the beginning (of time), you built the earth so that it was strong. Also, your hands *created the *heavens.

v11  They will not always remain, but you (*Lord) will. They will wear out as clothes do.

v12  *Like clothes, you will roll them up, and you will change them. But you (*Lord) will always be the same and your life will never end.

The word *LORD is not in the New Testament (second part of the Bible). "Lord" is now the name for Jesus. The important change is in verse 23. Hebrews 1:10 makes God say these words to Jesus. In the *Hebrew psalm the young man in trouble said them.

So, there are two stories for Psalm 102! That is why there are two verses from the *New Testament at the top of this psalm. There is one for each story. "Believe in God" is more than "think about God". It is also "hope that God will give help". The temple was God’s house in Jerusalem.

What Psalm 102 means

Study the psalm in parts:
  ·   Verses 1 - 11: the young man describes his illness.
  ·   Verses 12 - 22: the young man says that God will build Jerusalem again.
  ·   Verses 23 - 28: the young man says that he will soon die, but God will never die.

Remember that Hebrews 1:8-12 tells us that Psalm 102 is a prophecy. A prophecy says what God will do. Just as God will build the *temple again after the young man dies, so he will build it again after Jesus dies. But the two *temples are not the same! One is the *temple in Jerusalem, God’s house that Solomon built. The other *temple is the body of Christ that we call the Church.

The young man’s illness

This is a *prayer for help. A prayer is the words we say when we pray. In verse 2, "hide your face" means "look away and not listen". "Turn your ear" means "listen". The young man is "in trouble". This means that he has trouble. We do not know what it was. He says that his "life is disappearing like smoke" in verse 3. "Like" is another word for "as".

"Disappear" means the opposite of "appear". He means that as smoke *disappears into the air, so his life is *disappearing. This is a poetic way of saying "I am dying". Poetry is a special way to use words. All the psalms are *Hebrew poetry. "All my bones" is a *Hebrew way to say "all my body". His illness makes him feel hot. We call this illness "a fever". There are many different fevers. It made him look *like dried grass. He could not eat anything and he was just "skin and bone", (verses 4 and 5). "Skin and bone" is a way to say "very, very thin". Also, he feels lonely, as a bird by itself, (verses 6 and 7). The wild bird may be a vulture, the night bird an owl and the small bird a sparrow. But not only is the young man ill with a fever and lonely. People are saying bad things about him, verse 8. They even use his name as a curse. A curse is when you say bad things will happen to people. In verse 10, "tears" are the water that drops from your eyes when you cry. *Poetry often uses different words that mean the same thing. "As" and "like" is another example. In verse 11, an evening shadow is one that will soon be gone. It will *disappear into the night.

God will build *Zion again

In verse 13, "it is time to show that you love her" makes us remember Isaiah. Isaiah said that God would build Jerusalem again after the *exile. This is in chapters 40-66 of his *prophecy. When God did build her again, it would "show that you love her". "Her" means Jerusalem. In this psalm, Zion is another name for Jerusalem. "The time has come" means the time in Jeremiah 29:10. The stones in verse 14 mean the buildings that the Babylonian army destroyed. Now (about 540 B.C.) they were just stones lying on the ground. But the

*Jews still loved them, even when broken to small bits or dust. It may be easier to understand the next three verses in the order 17, 16 and 15. Verse 17 tells us that God will answer his people's *prayers. Verse 16 says that the *LORD will build *Zion again and show everyone his glory (his bright light). "Appear in his glory" means that "he will shine and be bright as the sun". Then, in verse 15, all the nations (countries with governments) and kings (leaders of the people) will kneel before God. "Kneel" means "fall to your knees". In verses 18-22, there are several important words:
  ·   created means "made by God".
  ·   praise the *LORD means "tell the *LORD that he is very great".
  ·   worship the *LORD means "tell the *LORD that you love him and believe that he is very great".
  ·   the heavens means "the skies".
  ·   kingdoms are "countries that have a king".
  ·   groans are the "noises that people make when they are hurting".

So, verses 18 - 22 tell us that God will always be famous. People will learn that he did what he promised. This will give them help to believe that he will still do what he has promised.

God will never die

Verses 23 - 27 tell us that God will always be alive. At the beginning of time, he *created the earth and the skies above it. "Your hands" in verse 25 is another way to say "you". But the earth and skies will not remain for ever. *Like clothes, they will wear out. This means that they will become old. Then people cannot use them. Then they will throw them away.

God will do the same with the *heavens and the earth! When they are old, he will throw them away. Both Psalm 102 and Hebrews 1 make the earth and the skies sound *like God's clothes! But the good news is this. Just as people put on new clothes, so God will make a new *heaven and a new earth. Isaiah 65:17 says, "Look; I will *create new *heavens and a new earth. (People will) not remember the old earth, or bring it to their minds". In verse 28, "live here" means live in Jerusalem; and "where you are" is where God is ... Jerusalem.

It is important to know that Jerusalem for *Jews was the capital city of Judah. For Christians it is not a place on earth, but where all the people of God live.

Something to do

1.  The young man prayed for himself, but also for his people. Do the same! When you pray for yourself, remember your own people, and God’s people, the Church.

2.  If you have a Bible, study Hebrews 1. Find these verses from the psalms repeated in Hebrews 1; Psalms 2:7-8; 45:6-7; 102:25-27; 103:20-21; 104:4; 110:1.

The Love of God

Psalm 103

Jesus said, "Your Father in heaven knows everything that you need". (Matthew 6:32)

(Heaven is the home of God.)

Psalm 103
  (This is a psalm) of David.

v1   I say to myself, "*Praise the *LORD!
   Everything that is in me, *praise his *holy name!’

v2   I say to myself, "*Praise the *LORD!
   And never forget any of the good things that he has given you!’

v3   (I say to myself) He *forgives all your *sins.
   He makes you well again when you are ill.

v4   He *redeems you from the *Pit.
   His kind love and *mercy are special things that he gives to you.

v5   He gives you the good things that you want.
   So, you become strong again as a young *eagle.

v6   The *LORD does *righteous and fair things
   for all *oppressed people.

v7   He showed Moses his plans
   and (he showed) the *Israelites what he was going to do.

v8   The *LORD likes (people) and is very kind.
   He is slow to get angry and has a lot of kind love.

v9   He will not always say that we are wrong.
   He will not always be angry.

v10   We do wrong things.
   He does not *punish us for them as much as he should.

v11   The sky is high above the earth.
   So his kind love is great to those people that love him.

v12   As far as the east is from the west,
   so far has he taken our *sins from us.

v13   As a father is kind to his children,
   so the *LORD is kind to people that are afraid of him.

v14   Because he knows (how he) made us,
   he remembers that we are only *dust.

v15   The life of a man is as short as (the life of) grass!
   He lives as short a time as the (wild) flowers in a field!

v16   The wind blows over it and it dies!
   Nothing remembers it any more.

v17   But the kind love of the *LORD
   will always be with those that are afraid of him.
   And his *righteousness will be with their children’s children.

v18   (They will be) with those (people) that do what they have agreed (to do).
   (They will be with those people) that remember to obey his rules.

v19   The *LORD has built his *throne in *heaven.
   He is king over everything.

v20   *Praise the *LORD, you (who are) his *angels.
   You are strong and powerful.
   You do what he tells you (to do) and you obey his word.

v21   *Praise the *LORD, all (you) his armies (in *heaven).
   (You are) his servants that do what he wants you (to do).

v22   Everything that he has made
   and (everything) that he rules over, *praise the *LORD!
   I say to myself, *praise the *LORD!

The Story of Psalm 103

Bible students believe that David wrote this psalm when he was an old man. It tells us 7 times to praise the *LORD, (tell him that he is very great). The *LORD is the *covenant name for God. A covenant is when two groups of people agree. Verses 17 and 18 of the psalm tell us about the covenant, or what God and his people have agreed to do.

What Psalm 103 means

Study the psalm in three parts:
  ·   Verses 1 – 5: David must *praise the *LORD.
  ·   Verses 6 – 18: the love of the *LORD to his *covenant people.
  ·   Verses 19 – 22: the *angels must *praise the *LORD.

In the first part, David tells himself to *praise the *LORD. The *Hebrew words mean "my *soul, *praise the *LORD". (Hebrew is the language that David spoke.) Our soul is the part of us that lives after our bodies die. It is "everything that is in us", (verse 1). We are to *praise the *LORD's holy name. The *LORD's name means the *LORD himself. He is holy because he has never done anything that is wrong. Read the notes on "he is holy" in Psalm 99 in this set of psalms.

In verse 3 David wrote "He (the *LORD) *forgives all your *sins". As he is talking to himself, he means "the *LORD *forgives all my *sins". Our sins are the wrong things that we do when we do not obey God’s rules. When we ask him, God will always forgive our *sins. That means he will not punish (hurt) us because we have broken his rules.

As verse 4 says, "He *redeems you from the Pit". The Pit was a place in Sheol. Sheol was where the *Jews believed that dead people went. (Jews are people who were born from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their children.) The Pit was the worst bit of Sheol. It was a very bad place. But David believed that when God *forgives us, "he redeems us from the Pit". This means that he stops us going there! Instead of going to a bad place when we die, we go to where God is. That is a very good place. We call it *heaven. God does this because of his mercy. This means that he is kind to us when he should punish (hurt) us.

When David knew all this, he felt strong again. He felt as a young eagle feels. An eagle is a large bird. It flies high in the sky, and feels strong and free. When God *forgives us, we will feel as David felt!

In verses 6 - 18, David talks about the *covenant people. These people have agreed to love and obey him because he has agreed to be their God. He is a righteous God, verse 6. This means that he always does what is right. He took his oppressed people from Egypt to the land of Israel. The Egyptians had oppressed the *Jews. This means they were cruel to them, they were not kind. They made them work very hard and gave them very little. But the *LORD told Moses his plan, (verse 7). He took the Israelites (the *Jews) away from Egypt.

The *LORD did this because:
  ·   he is kind, verses 8 - 12,
  ·   and is as a father to his people, verses 13 - 16.

God made us, (verse 14), and he knows that he made us from dust. Dust is the small bits of the ground that we live on. To God, our lives are very short, just as the life of a flower seems short to us, (verse 15).

Verses 15 and 16 tell us about the *covenant. God’s righteousness (the good things that he does) will always be with his people. They will always obey him.

The psalm ends by telling the *angels to *praise God in *heaven. The angels are his servants in *heaven. Heaven is the home of God. His throne is the special seat that he sits on. All kings have a throne, and God is king over everything, (verse 19). "Built his throne in *heaven" means that God is king in *heaven. In verse 22 David says what he said in verse 1. I say to myself, *praise the *LORD!

Something to do

1.  Read verses 1 - 5 with "me, my and I" instead of "you and your".

2.  Learn to say verse 2 by heart. (By heart means without looking at the words.)

3.  Here are some lines from a famous Christian song. They use ideas from Psalm 103. Can you find which verses they use? The meanings of some of the words are in brackets ( ).

*Praise, my *soul, the King of *Heaven,
 To his feet your tribute (*praises) bring,
 Ransomed (*redeemed), healed (made well), restored (God’s friend again), *forgiven,
 Who like you his *praise should sing?

Father-like he tends (helps) and spares (is kind to) us,
 Well our feeble (weak) frame (body) he knows,
 In his hands he gently bears (carries) us,
 Rescues us (makes us safe) from all our foes (enemies).

*Angels, help us to adore (love) him,
 You behold (can see) him face to face,
 Sun and moon bow down before him,
 Dwellers (people who live) all in time and space.

*Creator God, Keeping Everything Alive!

Psalm 104

Jesus said, "Are not two *sparrows sold for a farthing? But not one of them falls to the ground without your Father (knowing)". (Matthew 10:29) (A sparrow is a small bird. A farthing is a small coin.)

Psalm 104: 1 - 9

v1 - v2   I say to myself, "*Praise the *LORD!"
   *LORD, my God, you are very great!
   (As a person wears clothes), you wear *honour and *majesty and light.
   You have put the skies as a roof (over the earth).

v3   You have built your home above the waters that are over the skies.
   The clouds carry you and you ride on the wind.

v4   The winds carry your messages
   and burning fires are your servants.

v5   (The *LORD) built the earth on its *foundations.
   Nobody will ever move it.

v6   You covered it with the deep (sea) as clothes (cover a person).
   The waters were higher than the mountains.

v7   When you shouted (the waters) ran away.
   At the sound of your *thunder they *fled.

v8   (The waters) moved over the mountains.
   They went down into the valleys.
   They went to the place that you had made for them.

v9   You made a mark that they could not cross.
   Never again will (the waters) cover the earth.

The Story of Psalm 104

Many Bible students think that David wrote Psalm 104. But it does not say that he did. It is about God as the Creator. "Creator" means "someone who makes something". The Bible always uses the word "creator" in a special way. It means that the person that makes something is God, or the LORD. LORD is a special name for God that his servants use.

What Psalm 104: 1 - 9 means

This is a long psalm, so it is easier to study it in parts. Verses 1-9 are about God creating (making) the earth and the sky. Because God did this, the psalm starts, "*Praise the *LORD". "Praise" means "say that someone is great". Then the psalmist (the person that wrote the psalm) says three things about God. He is:
 ·   someone with honour. This means someone that is famous because they are honest. You can believe that they will always do what is right. They will always say what is true. They will always be fair to people.
  ·   someone with majesty. Majesty is what a king or a queen has. It describes their power and how great they are.
  ·   someone with light. The easy way to understand this is that God is as the sun. He shines with a very great light. But remember ... he is not the sun! He created (made) the sun, so he is greater than the sun!

God wears all this as people wear their clothes. We do not see people, only their clothes. We do not see God. We only see his clothes … his *honour and his *majesty, which make him shine as the sun shines.

This part of the psalm then describes what God did when he created (made) everything.

The skies are as a roof over the earth, (verse 2). The skies seem to rest on the mountains! God’s home is heaven. He built it "above the waters that are over the skies", (verse 3). He "built the earth on its *foundations", (verse 5). When you want to build something, you start with the foundations. The building is on top of the foundations. The foundations were strong, so nobody would ever move the earth. Then the waters above the skies came down on the mountains. They became rivers and seas when God shouted at them, (verses 7-9). The burning fires in verse 4 maybe lightning, that lights up the sky in a great storm. In verse 7 there is a good example of *Hebrew *poetry. Poetry is a special way to use words. The *psalmist wrote in the Hebrew language. The first part and the second part of verse 7 mean the same thing. Thunder is the loud noise we hear in the sky in a great storm. The *Jews thought that it was the voice of God. (Jews are people who were born from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their children.) "Fled" is another word for "ran away". So, "when you shouted they ran away" and "at the sound of your thunder they fled" both mean the same!

We do not speak about the earth and sky as the *psalmist did. But we still believe that God *created the earth, the sky and everything else. We do not know where heaven, the home of God, really is. But we believe that it is somewhere. Sheol was where *Jews believed that they went when they died. Most Christians believe that God’s people go to be with him in heaven (his home) when they die.

In verse 9, we read "never again will the waters cover the earth". Some Bible students think that this is about Noah's Flood, when waters covered the earth. They did cover the earth when they came from above the skies. They are not there any more, but in the rivers and seas. There will never be another flood as Noah’s Flood. This is good news when many people are afraid of "global warming". This means that the earth (a ball or globe) is getting hotter, so the ice will become water and flood (cover with water) the earth. The *psalmist said that this would not happen. He knew what God had told Noah in Genesis 9:11: "There will never be another flood to destroy the earth".

Psalm 104: 10 - 23

v10   You make water come out of the ground into the valleys.
   (You make the rivers) go between the hills.

v11   They give water to every wild animal.
   The wild *donkeys drink from them.

v12   The birds of the air make their homes (by the streams)
   and they sing from the trees near (the streams).

v13   You pour water on to the mountains from your home above the sky.
   The earth is happy with the results of what you do.

v14 - v15   You make grass to grow for the cows and sheep.
   And (you make) plants (grow) that people can use.
   This is how people get food from the earth:
   ·   wine (alcohol) that makes people happy,
   ·   oil that makes people’s faces shine, and
   ·   bread that makes people strong.

v16   The trees of the *LORD get plenty of rain.
   (They are) the cedar trees in Lebanon, which he planted.

v17   The birds make their *nests in them.
   The *stork makes its home in fir trees.

v18   The wild goats live in the high hills
   and the *rabbits hide in the rocks.

v19   The moon shows (us) which season (it is).
   The sun knows when to go down.

v20   You *created night.
   When it is dark, all the wild animals come out (of their *dens).

v21   The young *lions *roar while they *hunt.
   They look for the food that God gives to them.

v22   When the sun shines again, they go back to their *dens.
   There they lie down.

v23   This is when people go out to work.
   They work until it is evening.

What Psalm 104: 10 - 23 means

The first part of the psalm tells us that God *created the earth and the sky. But he did not go away and leave it. The next part of the psalm, verses 10-23, tells us that he stayed with it. He still makes sure that everything happens as he wants it to. In other words, he takes care of everything. As Paul wrote, "By him everything continues to stay alive", (Colossians 1:17). Water comes out of the ground (springs) and goes into streams and rivers. These give water to wild animals and birds, verses 10-12. The donkeys in verse 11 are like small horses. "Like" is another word for "as". Many people have them to carry things but, in verse 11, they are wild donkeys. Verse 13 goes back to the picture of the world that God made. He is still pouring water on to the mountains from above the skies! Now we know that rain comes from the sea.

It is God that makes the plants to grow. Men and animals use these plants for food, (verses 14-15). The oil in verse 15 is not the oil we use in cars. It is from a fruit called the olive. It helps people to have good health, so that their faces shine. He makes the tree to grow. Birds make their homes (or nests) in them. The stork is a big bird with long legs, long neck and long beak. The beak is a bird’s mouth. The mountains, hills and rocks near them are homes for other animals, such as wild goats and rabbits, (verses 16-18). A rabbit is a small animal with long ears. Its hair (called fur) is very soft. The rabbits in verse 18 live in places where there are many rocks. Another name for them is coneys.

Verses 19 - 23 are about time. The seasons in verse 19 are not spring, summer, autumn and winter; or wet and dry seasons. They are the months. For the *Jews, each month started with a new moon. This is the 28-day lunar (moon) month. The sun goes down each evening, starting a new day for the *Jews. Their day started at 6 o’clock each evening.

God made the night. That was when night-animals come out from their dens (their homes). As an example, the *psalmist writes about the lion. This large animal eats other animals. It even eats people! It roars (makes a loud noise) while it hunts (looks for) its food. God made the smaller animals for them to eat! When the sun shines again in the morning, these night animals go back to their *dens. That is when people go out to their work. The important thing about this part of the psalm is that God still does all these things. He did not just *create the world and go away. He stayed with it, and he is still with it. As a man called Minos of Crete wrote, "In him we live and move and have our being". Paul repeated these words in Acts 17:28. These words mean that God *created us, and gives us help to stay alive. He does this for all the animals and plants as well. As Jesus said, God even knows what happens to small birds like *sparrows!

Psalm 104: 24 - 30

v24   *LORD, you have made so many things!
   The earth is full of the *creatures that you have made.
   You were very *wise when you made them all.

v25   There is the sea. It is so big and so wide.
   It is full of *creatures, more than anyone can count.
   (In it) there are small and large animals and plants.

v26   Ships sail on it. *Leviathan, that you made, plays in it.

v27   All of them hope that you will give them food when they need it.

v28   (When) you give it to them they pick it up.
   (When) you open your hand they have plenty of good things.

v29   (When) you hide your face they become very frightened.
   When you take away their *breath, they die and return to the *dust.

v30   (Then) you send out your *breath and make new *creatures.
   You make everything on earth new.

What Psalm 104: 24 - 30 means

The word "creatures" means "things that God *created". Usually we use it to mean animals. God was "very wise" when he made them, (verse 24). A wise person knows a lot, and uses what he knows well. God knows more than anybody else, and uses what he knows better than anybody else does. In verses 10 - 23, the *psalmist wrote about birds and land animals, including man. In verses 25 - 26, he writes about animals in the sea. He only names one, Leviathan. We do not know what Leviathan was. Bible students think that it was a very large sea-animal, perhaps a whale or even a crocodile.

Verses 27 - 30 are about all the animals, on land, in the sea or in the air. We do not know how animals hope in God … but he does feed them! Verse 28 paints a picture of God opening his hand and the animals finding plenty of good things to eat in it! But when God takes away their breath (the air that goes in and out of their mouths), then they die. They become dust again, part of the ground. Some *Hebrew Bibles have "your *breath", not "their *breath", in verse 29. It is God that breathes into (puts air into) animals and people so that they become alive. So verse 30 has "your *breath" in all *Hebrew Bibles. When one *creature dies, God makes another. He makes everything on earth new by *breathing into new animals and people so that they become alive.

Psalm 104: 31 - 35

v31   I want the *glory of the *LORD to continue for ever!
   I want the *LORD to be very happy with everything that he has made!

v32   (When the *LORD) looks at the earth it becomes frightened.
   When he touches the mountains, they give out smoke.

v33   I will sing to the *LORD all my life.
   I will always sing *praises to my God.

v34   I hope that my thoughts make him happy,
   because the *LORD makes me happy.

v35   I want (the *LORD) to destroy bad people from the earth.
   I do not want very bad people to live any more.
   I say to myself, "*Praise the *LORD! *Hallelujah!"

What Psalm 104: 31 - 35 means

These few verses end the psalm.

Verse 31 - Glory is the bright light that shines from God because he is great. Verse 32 makes us remember that God is very powerful. The last verse tells us that the *psalmist does not want bad or very bad people to live on the earth. If they did not, it would make the earth much better! The last word, hallelujah, is *Hebrew for "*praise the *LORD!" People now use it all over the world.

Something to do

1. Study verses 3-9. Can you see why they are examples of *Hebrew *poetry? Can you find more examples in the psalm?

2. Remember to be kind to animals, because God made them. Read Psalm 8 and think about being kind to animals.

3. Learn to say verses 33 and 34 by heart. (By heart means without looking at the words.)

Israel in Egypt

Psalm 105

Jesus lived in Egypt until Herod died. So, what the *Lord said to the *prophet really happened. He said, "I have brought my son out of Egypt". (Matthew 2:15)

Psalm 105: 1 - 6

v1   Say "thank-you!" to the *LORD.
   Tell (everybody) his name.
   Tell people in every country what he has done.

v2   Sing songs to him, make music for him.
   Speak about all the great things that he has done.

v3   Be *proud of his *holy name.
   Everybody that goes to the *LORD (in his house), be very happy!

v4   Visit the *LORD, who is so powerful.
   Always go to him (in his house).

v5   Remember the great things that he has done.
   (Remember) his *miracles and what he said (to Pharaoh).

v6   Abraham your *father was (the *LORD’s) servant.
   (The *LORD) chose Jacob and you are (Jacob’s) *sons.

The Story of Psalm 105

Some Bible students think this was once a shorter psalm. Perhaps it started at verse 5. Then people made it longer. They put Isaiah 12:4 as a new beginning to the psalm. Then they put verses 3 and 4 to tell people to go to the house of the *LORD. This house was the temple in Jerusalem. They believed that the *LORD lived in it, when he was not in heaven (his home). Then the psalm started at verse 5, telling the people to remember their story. It started with Abraham, and ended (in this psalm) when they came to their own country.

What Psalm 105: 1 - 6 means

LORD is a special name for God. His people use it. They are the people who love and obey him. They are his servants, as Abraham was, verse 6. He was their father, or forefather. This means that he lived long before them. But they were part of his family, even hundreds of years later! The *Hebrew words for "Abraham your father" mean "seed of Abraham". This gives us a picture. The seed that Abraham planted became the country of Israel! Jacob was Abraham’s grandson. The *LORD chose Jacob, but did not choose his brother Esau. The 12 sons of Jacob, and their children, and grandchildren, and so on, became the people we call Israel. Israel was another name for Jacob. The Bible often calls them "sons of Jacob", but they lived long after Jacob did. Today we call them Jews, because Judah (say it "Jewdar") was the last name for their country in the Bible. The word "Lord" in the verse at the start is a different word but it means the same. It means God.

"Proud" in verse 3 has a good meaning and a bad meaning. The bad meaning is this. Proud people think that they are more important than they really are. The good meaning is this. We are proud (or happy) when something good has happened. When our football team (group) wins a game, we are proud of them! The psalm tells us to be proud of God’s *holy name. His name means everything about God. This includes the fact that he is holy. This means that he has never done anything bad. He is so good that we all feel a bit afraid of him.

In verse 5, "his miracles" are the things that he did. They were things that only God the *LORD could do. Men could not do them. Jesus did many miracles, as when he made the storm quiet and when he gave life to the dead man Lazarus. Jesus could do this because he is God. But the miracles in Psalm 105 are the things that God did in Egypt and later. They include the things that he did to Pharaoh. Pharaoh was the king of Egypt. We call these things the ten "plagues" or "bad things". Psalm 78 includes 6 of the plagues, but Psalm 105 has 8 of them. They are in verses 29-36.

Psalm 105: 6 – 11

v7   He, the *LORD, is our God.
   What he says is to everyone (that lives) on the earth.

v8   He will always remember his *covenant.
   He will never, never forget his promises.

v9   (He will remember) the *covenant that he made with Abraham
   and the special promises that he made to Isaac.

v10   He made it sure to Jacob with a *law
   and to (the people of) Israel with a *covenant
   that will never have an end.

v11   He said, "I will give to you (Jacob) the land of Canaan.
   It will belong to you, (people of Israel).

What Psalm 105: 7 - 11 means

"What he said" in verse 5 and "what he says" in verse 7 is the same word in *Hebrew. The person that wrote the psalm (the psalmist) wrote it in Hebrew, the language of the *Jews. Bible students translate it with the word "judgments". These are words that God says. People must obey them.

The covenant in verses 8, 9 and 10 is what God and his people agreed. God agreed to protect them if they agreed to love and obey him. "Protect them" means "stop people hurting them". This covenant was so special that God made it a law, or rule, (verse 10). You will find the promises to:
  ·   Abraham in Genesis 12:7 and 17:8;
  ·   his son Isaac in Genesis 26:3-4;
  ·   Isaac’s son Jacob in Genesis 28:13-14.

Israel is another name for Jacob but, in verse 10, it means all the *Jewish people that agreed with God. Sometimes Isaac and Jacob are names for all the people, but here they are the people themselves.

The land of Canaan was where the *Jews came to live. It belonged to them until 70 A.D. A.D. means "years after Jesus came to the earth". The war in Israel now is because of this promise. Some Bible students think that the promise is still true. Other students think that the Promised Land (of Canaan) means *heaven, where they will go when they die. You must decide for yourself what to believe. When you have decided, do not argue with other Christians about it! We will know who is right when we go to *heaven ourselves!

Psalm 105: 12 - 22

v12   Once, there was only a small number of them (the people of Israel).
   (There were) only a few of them and they were *nomads (in Canaan).

v13   They moved from country to country, from one *kingdom to another.

v14   (The *LORD) did not let anyone hurt them.
   He was angry with kings and gave help to (his people).

v15   He said, "Do not hurt my special servants.
   Do not *harm my *prophets".

v16   (The *LORD) sent a *famine to the land (of Canaan).
   He destroyed all the food that they were storing.

v17   But he sent a man (into Egypt) before them.
   (He was) Joseph, (that his brothers) sold as a slave.

v18   (In Egypt) they put his feet into *fetters and his neck into *irons.

v19   (They did this) until what he *prophesied really happened.
   Until the word of the *LORD showed that he (Joseph) was right.

v20   The king sent (someone) to let him out (of prison).
   The ruler of the peoples made him free.

v21   He (the king) made him (Joseph) master of his house.
   He made him ruler of all that he had.

v22   He gave him power over his *princes
   and authority over the leaders of the country.

What Psalm 105: 12 - 22 means

This part of the psalm tells bits of the story of the people of Israel from Abraham to Joseph. At the start, there were only a few of them, (verse 12). They were nomads in Canaan. Nomads move from place to place. They do not have a place of their own. There were many countries in Canaan, some of them kingdoms. This means that kings ruled over them. But they did not only move round Canaan. They also went to Egypt. One king that God was angry with was one of the Pharaohs of Egypt. Another was Abimelech, king of Gerar in South Canaan. The stories are in Genesis 12:17 and 20:1-8.

The "special servants" in verse 15 is "my messiahs" in *Hebrew. Here it means the leaders of the people, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and Joseph. "Harm" is another word for "hurt". These leaders were also prophets. Prophets told people what God would do. A man put Joseph in prison until what he said would happen (prophesied) really did happen, (verse 19). What the *LORD said is in Genesis 37:5-10, and 41:1-36. "Fetters" are what they fixed people’s feet in so they could not walk in the prison, (verse 18). They did the same with their necks in irons, or collars (circles) of iron. A famine, verse 16, is when there is no food to eat. The story of the famine is in Genesis 41:53-57.

Then the king of Egypt (the Pharaoh) understood that Joseph was right. Joseph had prophesied (said there would be) a long *famine. So, the king took Joseph out of prison, (verse 20). He made him an important man. "His house" in verse 21 means "his government". "All that he had" is the country of Egypt and the other countries that Pharaoh ruled. "Princes" are the sons of kings, but here they mean "important people in the government". Some Bible students translate "power" and "authority" with words meaning "to teach the best thing to do".

Psalm 105: 23 - 25

v23   Then (all) Israel came into Egypt
   and Jacob lived in the land of Ham.

v24   (The *LORD) gave many children to his people.
   He made them more powerful than their enemies.

v25   He made the Egyptians *hate his people (Israel).
   They thought of bad things to do against (the *LORD’s) servants.

What Psalm 105: 23 - 25 means

"Then", in verse 23, means after Joseph became leader of the government. The story is in Genesis 46:1-27. In this verse, Jacob now means "all the people of Israel". (Not the man Jacob as in verse 10.) They lived for 430 years in the land of Ham. This is another name for Egypt. This part of the story is in Exodus 1:7-2:25. Exodus 1:7 tells us "the people of Israel had many children, their numbers grew and they became very powerful". Verse 24 repeats some of this. The enemies were the Egyptians. They were not enemies at the start, but they became enemies. This was because the Egyptians were not kind to the Israelites. They were very cruel to them after Joseph died. Verse 25 tells us that the *LORD made the Egyptians hate (or not like) the Israelites. This was because God wanted his people Israel to go home. He wanted the Egyptians to send Israel away. But the Egyptians did bad things to Israel instead!

Psalm 105: 26 - 36

v26   (The *LORD) sent his servant Moses (to Egypt).
   (Also), he chose Aaron.

v27   (Moses and Aaron) told everybody the things that (the *LORD) would do.
   (He would do) *miracles in the land of Ham.

v28   He sent *darkness so that it was dark (everywhere in the day-time).
   But (the Egyptians) did not obey him.

v29   He changed their rivers into blood and killed their fish.

v30   Then *frogs filled their land;
   they even went into the bedrooms of their rulers!

v31   (The *LORD) spoke and there came millions of flies.
   Insects called lice were everywhere in their country.

v32   He changed their rain into *hail
   and there was *lightning over all their land.

v33   He attacked their *vines and *fig trees
   and he destroyed the trees (everywhere) in their country.

v34   (The *LORD) spoke and there came *locusts.
   There were too many *locusts to count!

v35   They ate all the plants in their country,
   they ate all their *crops.

v36   Then (the *LORD) killed all the oldest (sons) in the land (of Egypt).
   (He killed) all the *firstborn sons.

What Psalm 105: 26 - 36 means

The *LORD sent Moses and his brother Aaron to Pharaoh. They told Pharaoh what God would do if Pharaoh did not obey God. He would do miracles (things that only God could do). These were the plagues, or the bad things that happened in Egypt. They did not happen to God’s people. They only happened to the Egyptians. Here is a list of the ten plagues.

*Plague

Name

Where to Find in Exodus and Psalms

1

water to blood

Exodus 7:17-21; Psalm 105:29; Psalm 78:44

2

*frogs

Exodus 8:1-7; Psalm 105:30; Psalm 78:45

3

*lice (insects)

Exodus 8:16-19; Psalm 105:31

4

Flies

Exodus 8:20-24; Psalm 105:31; Psalm 78:45

5

cows died

Exodus 9:1-7

6

*boils

Exodus 9:8-12

7

*hail and storm

Exodus 9:18-26; Psalm 105:32; Psalm 78:47

8

*locusts

Exodus 10:1-20; Psalm 105:34; Psalm 78:46

9

darkness
 (when there is no light)

Exodus 10:21-29; Psalm 105:28

10

death of first sons

Exodus 11 and 12; Psalm 105:36; Psalm 78:51

Psalm 78 includes 6 of the *plagues; Psalm 105 has 8 of them. Neither includes the death of their animals, or the boils. Boils are big red places on your skin that hurt you. Both *psalmists use some of the *plagues to show that God is very powerful. The frogs in verse 30 are small animals that can live on land or in water. *Hail and lightning in verse 32 come in storms. Hail is small bits of ice that fall as rain falls; lightning lights up the sky. The vines and fig trees in verse 33 gave them food and drink. The vines gave grapes that make a drink called wine. It has alcohol in it. People still eat figs. Locusts, (verses 33-34), are large insects. They eat all the green parts of plants. These plants were the crops that the Egyptians used to make food.

The last *plague was the worst. The *LORD killed all the oldest male children in Egypt, including animals. The terrible (very, very bad) story is in Exodus 11 and 12. But it made Pharaoh let Israel go back to their own country. Sometimes God lets bad things happen to make people do what is right.

Psalm 105: 37 - 41

v37   So (the *LORD) led Israel out (from Egypt).
   They took (valuable things made of) *silver and gold.
   And nobody among the Israelites had any trouble.

v38   The Egyptians were happy when they went,
   because they were afraid of the Israelites.

v39   (The *LORD) made a cloud to cover them
   and a fire to give them light at night.

v40   They asked, and he sent (birds called) quails.
   Also, he fed them with bread from the skies.

v41   He opened the rock, and water poured out (from it).
   It moved as a river through the dry places.

What Psalm 105: 37 - 41 means

The Egyptian people were so happy when the Israelites went that they gave them gifts! These gifts were valuable things made from silver and gold. Silver is a valuable metal as gold is. We call these valuable things "jewellery". The Egyptians were afraid of the Israelites because of what the *LORD had done.

Verses 39 - 41 tell us what God did after his people left Egypt. He led them through a desert (very dry place) called Sinai. He kept them safe with a cloud (in the day) and a fire at night, (verse 39). The story is in Exodus 13:21-22. He gave them food to eat, (verse 40). He gave them water to drink, (verse 41). He gave them bread. They called it manna. "Manna" is a *Hebrew word that means "what is this?" God gave it to them, but they did now know what it was! It fell from the sky every morning, so they called it "bread from *heaven". Heaven is either the sky, or the place where God lives. The story is in Exodus 16. The story of water from the rock is in Exodus 17.

Psalm 105: 42 - 45

v42   (This happened) because (the *LORD) remembered his *holy promise.
   He gave it to his servant Abraham.

v43   So, he led the people that he had chosen out (from Egypt).
   They were so happy that they sang and they shouted!

v44   (The *LORD) gave them the land of the people (that lived in Canaan.)
   They enjoyed the results of their work.

v45   So his people could obey his rules and do what he told them (to do).
   *Hallelujah!

What Psalm 105: 42 - 45 means

These verses end the psalm. They tell us what happened:
  ·   verse 42: the *LORD did what he promised in verses 7-11;
  ·   verse 43: the *LORD took his people from Egypt, (verses 26-38);
  ·   verse 44: the *LORD led them to the land of Canaan, (verses 39-41).

So now, God's people can obey his rules. Pharaoh cannot stop them! Hallelujah! This is a special word that Christians in every country still use. It means, "Praise the *LORD", or "tell the *LORD that he is very great!"

Something to do

1. Study Psalm 78 in this set of psalms.

2. If you have a Bible, read the story of the *plagues and the exodus (going-out) in the Book of Exodus 1-17.

The *LORD is Good!

Psalm 106

Jesus said, "Father, *forgive them. Because they do not know what they are doing". (Luke 23:34)

Psalm 106: 1 - 5

v1   *Hallelujah! Say "*thank-you" to the *LORD, because he is good.
   His kind love will always (remain).

v2   (Nobody) can tell about all the great things that the *LORD has done.
   (Nobody) can *praise him enough.

v3   (The people) that obey his rules are very happy.
   They always do what is right.

v4   *LORD, do not forget me when you do something good for your people.
   Give me help (also) when you make them safe.

v5   Then I will:
   ·   enjoy the good things that you do for your people,
   ·   be happy together with them,
   ·   *praise you with the people that belong to you.

The Story of Psalm 106

There is nothing in the psalm to tell us who the *psalmist was. The psalmist is the person that wrote the psalm. But Bible students think that it was the psalmist that wrote Psalm 105. Psalm 105 tells some of the story of God's people from Abraham to Moses. Psalm 106 tells us some of the story of Moses leading the people to Canaan. It also tells us some of the things that they did later in Canaan. Canaan was the country where God’s people lived. North Canaan became Israel and south Canaan became Judah.

Nearly everything in Psalm 106 tells us that God’s people did not obey him. So, God let powerful kings beat his people in war. The King of Assyria beat Israel and the King of Babylon beat Judah. He took the people from Judah to Babylon. The *psalmist may have lived in Babylon. He knew about what happened there. He prayed that God would not forget him, (verse 4), when he took the *Jews back to Judah, (verse 5). That is what Bible students think verse 5 means. Jews are people who were born from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their children.

So, Psalm 106 is the second part of Psalm 105. It is a prayer that God will forgive all the bad things that his people have done. We talk to God. A prayer is the words that we pray. "Forgive" means "not remember the bad things that we have done". This is possible because of what Jesus did. He died to take away those bad things, or sins. He said those words, "Father, forgive them", while the Roman soldiers were crucifying (killing) him. Father is one of the names that Christians call God. It was not usually a *Jewish name for God. God promised to David, "I will be his (Solomon’s) father, and he will be my son", (2 Samuel 7:14). But there are not many examples in the Old Testament (first part of the Bible).

What Psalm 106: 1 - 5 means

The *Jews spoke Hebrew. "Hallelujah" in verse 1 is a Hebrew word. Many people do not translate it. They use the Hebrew word, even if they are not *Jewish. It means "*Praise the *LORD". This means "tell the *LORD that he is very great". "LORD" is a special name for God that his servants use. It means that God will love them and give them help. They will love and serve (work for) him. "Thank-you" is a polite way to say "thanks!" The "kind love" in verse 1 is a special Bible word. It translates the Hebrew word "chesed". This means the love of God that does not stop. It does not stop even when people do not obey him. This psalm tells of many times when the *Jews did not obey God. But he still loved them! Even at the end, when they went to Babylon, he still loved them. After 70 years, he brought them home again. In verses 4 and 5, the *psalmist prays that he will be among those that go home. The "something good" in verse 4 is the going home to Judah from Babylon.

The People of Israel at the Sea of *Reeds

Psalm 106: 6 - 12

v6   We have *sinned as our fathers (before us) did.
   We have done wrong things; we have been very, very bad.

v7   When our fathers were in Egypt, they did not understand your *miracles.
   They forgot the kind love that you often (gave to them).
   They did not obey (the *LORD) by the sea, the *Sea of Reeds.

v8   But he saved them because of his name.
   He showed (everybody) that he was very powerful.

v9   He shouted at the Sea of *Reeds and it became dry.
   He led (his people) through the deep parts of it.
   It was as if they went through a *desert!

v10   He saved them from the hand of the enemy.
   He *redeemed them from the hand of the *foe.

v11   The waters covered their enemies.
   Not one of them remained alive.

v12   Then (God’s people) believed his promises
   and they all sang and *praised him.

What Psalm 106: 6 - 12 means

The word "sinned" means "not obeyed God" and "not obeyed God’s rules". The *psalmist says this three times. "Sinned", "done wrong", and "been very bad" all mean the same. "Our fathers" does not only mean fathers, but grandfathers and their fathers and grandfathers and so on. Some lived 900 years before, when Israel came out of Egypt. But the *psalmist says that the people are still sinning! He says "We have sinned as they did", (verse 6).

The *miracles in Egypt were the plagues (bad things), (verse 7). Miracles are great things that only God can do. You can read about the plagues in Psalm 78, Psalm 105 and Exodus 7-12. The Sea of *Reeds was a place near Egypt. The people of Israel had to cross over it to get away from Egypt. We are not sure where it is. Bible students think it is somewhere north of the Gulf of Suez. Reeds are plants that grow near water. Here God saved his people from the Egyptians. The Egyptians were following the people of Israel. God saved his people because he was so powerful. He made everybody know that he was powerful. He did this because his name meant that he was powerful, (verse 8). (His name "elohim", usually translated "God", means "very powerful".) God was angry, so he shouted at the Sea of Reeds. It became dry, as a *desert is dry, verse 9. A desert is a place full of sand, where there is no water.

Both parts of verse 10 mean the same. It is a good example of *Hebrew poetry. Poetry is a special way to use words. This means that "redeemed" means "saved" and that "foe" means "enemy". "The hand" means "the power". The word "redeem" really means "buy back". By his power, God bought his people back from the Egyptians. This is why we call Jesus "the redeemer". Jesus bought us back from Satan when Jesus died. Satan is the name of God’s great enemy. When the people of Israel had passed through the Sea of *Reeds, the water came back. But the Egyptians were still passing through. Every one of them drowned, (verse 11)! This made the people of Israel believe that God was with them. They sang his *praise, verse 12. But they soon forgot, as the next part of the psalm tells us. The story of the people of Israel crossing the Sea of *Reeds is in Exodus 14.

The People of Israel Go From the Sea of *Reeds to Canaan

Psalm 106: 13 - 33

v13   But they soon forgot what (the *LORD) had done.
   They did not wait for (him to tell them) his plan.

v14   In the *wilderness they wanted food very much.
   And they *tested God in the *desert.

v15   So he gave them what they asked for.
   But he (also) sent an illness that made them die.

v16   Then they became *jealous of Moses
   when they were staying in the *desert.
   (They were also *jealous of) Aaron,
   who was a special servant of God.

v17   (God made) a hole in the ground and Dathan fell into it.
   (God) buried Abiram and all his family.

v18   Then (God) sent a fire to their group (of people).
   The fire destroyed those very bad people.

v19   They made a *calf (out of gold) at Horeb and they *worshipped it.

v20   They stopped *worshipping God, who is great.
   Instead, they *worshipped the *image of an animal that eats grass!

v21   They forgot the God that had saved them
   and all the great things that he had done in Egypt.

v22   (They forgot) the *miracles that he had done in the land of Ham.
   (They forgot) the things that surprised them so much by the Sea of *Reeds.

v23   So (God) said that he would destroy them.
   But Moses stood up and argued with (God).
   He prayed that an angry (God) would not destroy them.

v24   (Later they said that) they were afraid to go into the good land (of Canaan).
   They did not believe the promise (of God).

v25   They said bad things (about God) in their *tents.
   They did not obey the *LORD.

v26   So he lifted up his hand and said that they would die in the *desert.

v27   (He said that) their children would die in other countries.
   (This was after) he had moved them all over the world.

v28   Then they agreed to be the servants of the (false god called) Baal of Peor.
   They ate the food given to gods that were never alive.

v29   These things made (the *LORD) angry.
   (He sent) a *plague against them.

v30   But Phinehas stood up and *punished some bad people.
   Then (God) stopped the *plague.

v31   (The *LORD said) that Phinehas had done a very good thing.
   (People) will always remember it.

v32   They made (the *LORD) angry at the waters of Meribah.
   So, trouble came to Moses because of what they did.

v33   (They) made Moses angry and he spoke without thinking.

What Psalm 106: 13 - 33 means

While they travelled from Israel to Canaan, the people often made God angry. But he still loved them! This part of the psalm talks about some of the bad things that they did. The *psalmist gives examples as he thinks of them. He was not there when they happened.

After they passed the Sea of *Reeds, the people of Israel came to the *desert. Wilderness is another word for *desert. There was no food there. So, God gave them manna. Manna is as dry sweet bread. Later, they wanted fresh food as they had eaten in Egypt. They wanted meat and vegetables, not just dry manna. So they tested God, verses 13-15. This means that they asked him to show them that he was God. It was as if they gave God an exam! So, God gave them what they wanted. But then he sent a *plague and many of them died. The story is in Numbers 11.

"Jealous of Moses", verse 16, means that they did not like what God did. God seemed to love Moses and Aaron more than he loved them! This was not true, so God destroyed the jealous people. Some of them fell into a great hole and the ground covered them. A fire destroyed Korah and his family. The stories are in Numbers 16. Aaron was a special servant of God. He was a *priest, and his family were *priests for many centuries. Priests worked for God in the tabernacle or temple (God's house on earth).

In verses 19 - 23, we have the story of the *calf that they made out of gold. The story is in Exodus 32. Horeb is another name for Mount Sinai, a mountain between Egypt and Canaan. There Moses spoke with God on the mountain. While they were talking, the people asked Aaron to make a *calf. A calf is a young cow. Aaron made one out of gold. They *worshipped the calf that Aaron made instead of God. "Worship" means love someone and say how great they are. Really, they *worshipped an *image. An image is not alive. It looks as something that is alive looks. This image looked as a calf looks, but they made it out of gold. God was very angry and wanted to destroy the people. But Moses asked him not to, and God agreed.

In verses 24 - 27, we have the story of their refusing to go into the Promised Land. They gave this name to Canaan, because God promised it to them. The full story is in Numbers 13 - 14. When they heard that there were strong people to fight in Canaan, they hid in their tents. These were the homes made from animal skins that they lived in. They grumbled, or said bad things, about God in their tents. So, God was angry again. He lifted up his hand to show that he really would do what he said. We call a promise made with lifted hands an oath.

In verses 28 - 31, we have the story of the Baal of Peor. Baal means ‘master’ and it is the name of a false god. People thought that he lived in a mountain called Peor. The story is in Numbers 25. The *LORD punished (hurt them for doing wrong) with a *plague. It was an illness, but we do not know what it was. Phinehas killed a man and a woman who were not obeying God’s rules. Then the *plague stopped.

In verses 32 - 33, we have the story of why Moses did not go into the land of Canaan. It is in Numbers 20:1-13. Because Moses was angry, he spoke too soon!

The People of Israel in Canaan

Psalm 106: 34 - 47

v34   The *LORD told (his people) to destroy the peoples (of Canaan),
   but they did not.

v35   They mixed with the peoples (of Canaan) and learned to do as they did.

v36   They *worshipped their *idols and became caught in a *trap.

v37   They killed their sons and their daughters for these *idols!

v38   Their sons and their daughters had done nothing wrong,
   but they killed them (for these *idols).
   (The *idols) were the false gods of Canaan
   and these murders made the land dirty.

v39   (The *LORD’s people) made themselves dirty by what they did.
   They became as *prostitutes!

v40   So the *LORD became very angry with his people
   and he really did not like them.

v41   He gave them into the hand of (other) countries
   and their enemies ruled over them.

v42   Their enemies *oppressed them
   and made them do whatever they wanted (Israel) to do.

v43   Often (the *LORD) would save them (from these enemies).
   But again and again, they decided not to obey him
   and they did more and more things that were wrong.

v44   Yet (the *LORD) heard them when they prayed to him.
   He saw that they had trouble.

v45   He remembered what he had agreed.
   Because of his kind love, he changed his mind.

v46   He made all the people that *oppressed them feel sorry for them!

v47   Save us, our *LORD and God. Bring us back from other countries.
   Then we will be very happy to thank you and to *praise your *holy name.

What Psalm 106: 34 - 47 means

In Exodus 34:11-16, the *LORD told the people of Israel what to do in Canaan. They must kill the people and not marry them. This was to stop the people of Israel *worshipping the *idols in Canaan. An idol is an *image of a false god, perhaps made of wood, stone or metal. But the people of Israel did not obey the *LORD. They did not kill the Canaanites, verse 34. The Canaanites were the people that lived in Canaan. They did mix (or perhaps marry them), (verse 35). They did learn to do the bad things that the Canaanites did, (verse 35). They did *worship their false gods, (verse 36). So, they were in a trap, as an animal or bird is in a trap. They could not get out of it. A trap is something that catches you so that you cannot get away.

But there was something worse! To *worship these false gods, they had to kill their children, (verse 37). This made the land dirty, or desecrated. This meant that they could not *worship the *LORD in it. He would not listen to their *prayers and *praises, (verse 38). The *LORD's people became as *prostitutes, (verse 39). A prostitute is a woman who has sex with any man that pays her. The Bible says God is married to his people. If they *worship false gods, they become as prostitutes.

So, God was angry, (verse 40), and he gave his people into the hand of foreign governments. As in verse 10, "hand" means "power", (verse 41). "Oppressed" in verse 42 means that their enemies were not kind, they were cruel to Israel and hurt them. But because God loved them, he saved them many times, (verses 43 - 46). The stories are in the Book of Judges. "Changed his mind" in verse 45 means that instead of punishing (hurting) them he saved them.

In verse 47, the *psalmist again prays that God will take his people home to Judah from Babylon and other places. When that happens, the *LORD's people will be very happy to thank him and *praise him. "Holy" means that God has never done anything bad. He is so good that we all feel a bit afraid of him.

Psalm 106: 48

v48   *Praise the *LORD, the God of Israel!
   *Praise him now and always! Let everybody say, "*Amen!"
   *Hallelujah!

What Psalm 106: 48 means

Verse 48 is not really part of Psalm 106. It is an end to Book 4 of the Psalms, Psalms 90-106. "Amen" means "we all agree".

Something to do

Study the verses from Exodus and Numbers given above, and read some of the Book of Judges.

Word list
Adonai ~ *Lord or master (or better, my *Lord or my master) in *Hebrew.
Almighty ~ has the power to beat all his enemies; is better than everyone else; the *Lord of everything.
amen ~ we agree.
angels ~ *spirits that live in *heaven with God.
arrows ~ pointed sticks that you shoot with a bow.
before ~ in front of.
birdcatcher ~ a person that catches birds.
boil ~ a big red place on your skin that hurts.
breath ~ the air that goes in and out of the mouth.
calf ~ a young cow.
castle ~ a strong building where you are safe from your enemies.
cedar ~ a tree with leaves that do not fall off in winter.
cherubim ~ special *angels that live with God in *heaven.
Church ~ all those people that believe all about Jesus.
clap ~ hit your hands together to make a noise.
cobra ~ a snake.
column ~ something tall and thin.
complaining ~ saying that something is wrong.
covenant ~ what God and his people agreed.
create ~ make something from nothing; only God can create.
Creator ~ name for God that means that he *creates.
creature ~ an animal that God *created (made).
crops ~ plants used for food.
curse ~ a promise or *prayer that something bad will happen to someone.
darkness ~ when there is no light.
den ~ the home of a wild animal.
desert ~ a dry place with much sand.
disappear ~ the opposite of "appear".
donkey ~ an animal *like a small horse.
dust ~ very small bits of the ground.
eagle ~ a very large bird that eats other birds and small animals.
exile ~ away from your own country.
faith ~ to believe in someone or something; to agree with God and do the things that God teaches.
faithful ~ to be full of *faith and not moving from what you think is true.
famine ~ a time when there is nothing to eat.
father ~ often means grandfather, and so on.
feathers ~ what a bird has instead of hair.
fetters ~ something that stops your feet moving.
fig ~ a fruit that many people eat.
firstborn son ~ oldest son.
fled ~ ran away.
foe ~ enemy.
for ~ sometimes means "because", as in Psalm 102:10.
forgive ~ take away the results of *sin. (But look in the notes on Psalm 85:2.).
foundations ~ what people build houses on.
frogs ~ small animals that live in water and on land.
glorious ~ shining very much.
glory ~ something that shines very much, maybe *heaven: God has glory because his *righteousness shines from inside him.
golden ~ made from gold, or shining as gold.
Gospel ~ one of the four books at the beginning of the New Testament [see New Testament].
grape ~ a fruit that men make a drink from.
groan ~ a sad noise that people make, *like an animal.
hail ~ ice in rain.
hallelujah ~ *praise the *LORD.
harm ~ hurt much.
harp ~ a *musical instrument.
hate ~ the opposite of love.
heaven ~ the home of God.
heavens ~ the skies or the home of God.
Hebrew ~ the language that the *Jews spoke when they wrote the Psalms of David.
holy ~ very, very good; only God is really holy, the land where he lives with his people is also holy because he is there.
holy angels ~ they live with God in *heaven.
holy land ~ the land of Israel.
honour ~ someone with honour is famous because they are honest.
horn ~ a *musical instrument.
hunt ~ looking for food.
idol ~ a false god made of wood or stone or metal.
image ~ a picture of an *idol, or an *idol itself.
in secret ~ in a secret place, so few people know about it.
irons ~ in Psalm 105:18, something to keep your neck in prison.
Israelites ~ the same as Hebrews and *Jews. They are the people of Israel.
Jacob ~ another name for Israel, both the people and the land. (Jacob was Abraham’s grandson.).
jealous ~ how you feel when someone else loves the person that you love.
jealousy ~ what you feel when you are *jealous.
Jehovah ~ how some languages say *Yahweh, one of the names of God in *Hebrew.
Jew ~ someone who was born from Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their children.
Jewish ~ a word that describes a *Jew or anything to do with a *Jew.
Joseph ~ another name for the people Israel. (Joseph was Jacob’s son.)
joy ~ when you feel happy deep inside you.
judge ~ say who is right and who is wrong; or, the person that says who is right and who is wrong.
justice ~ when the government is fair to everybody.
kingdom ~ the country that has a king.
kneel ~ get down on your knees.
laws ~ the rules in a country. God’s law(s) (Psalm 94,105) are in the Bible.
Leviathan ~ a sea-*monster.
lice ~ small insects that can carry illnesses to people.
lightning ~ narrow lines of light in the sky during a storm.
like ~ as.
lion ~ a large wild animal that eats smaller animals and even people.
locust ~ an insect that eats all the green parts of plants.
Lord ~ a name for God; it means he has authority, or "master"; *Adonai in *Hebrew. Look also at *LORD below.
LORD ~ a special name for God that his people use. It is the *covenant name of God. In *Hebrew it is *Yahweh or *Jehovah. Look after Psalm 25 in Book 1 of the Psalms of David for more about the names of God.
lute ~ a *musical instrument.
lyre ~ a *musical instrument.
majesty ~ how a king walks or stands.
Massah ~ place where the people of Israel *tested God.
melt ~ when a rock becomes as water.
mercy ~ being kind when you do not have to be kind.
Meribah ~ place where the people of Israel *tested God.
miracles ~ great things that only God can do.
monster ~ a very large animal.
Most High ~ a name for God.
murder ~ kill.
musical instrument ~ something that makes music when you hit it (cymbals, drum), blow in it (flute, trumpet, horn, shofar) or touch it in a quiet way (harp, lute, lyre). Many of these are in Psalm 150 in Book 5 of The Psalms of David.
musicians ~ people that make music. They sing, or play *musical instruments.
nation ~ a country with a government.
nest ~ the home of a bird.
New Testament ~ the last part of the Bible, which the writers wrote after the life of Jesus. It is about the things that Jesus did and taught and about the *church.
nomad ~ people with no home, that move from place to place.
oppressed ~ not been kind to, or people that the enemy have not been kind to and hurt.
palm-tree ~ a tree that grows fruit (dates) that people can eat.
Pit ~ the worst bit of *Sheol. (A pit is a hole in the ground.)
plague ~ something very bad, often an illness.
plans ~ thoughts about what to do.
poetry ~ using words in a special (often very beautiful) way.
praise ~ words that say how great someone is; or, to say how great somebody is.
prayer ~ words that you say when you pray.
prey ~ what an animal catches to eat.
pride ~ what you feel when you think you are important.
priest ~ a servant of God in his *temple.
princes ~ sons of kings.
prisoners ~ people caught and kept by the enemy.
prophecy ~ words from God that tell of things before they happen.
prophesy ~ tell people what God thinks and will do.
prophet ~ someone that says what God thinks and will do.
prostitute ~ a woman who sells her body to men for pleasure.
protect ~ stop people hurting and destroying (someone or something).
proud ~ when someone thinks that he is better than other people.
psalmist ~ the person that wrote a psalm (or psalms).
punish ~ hurt someone because they have not obeyed the rules.
rabbit ~ a small animal with long ears and soft hair.
redeem ~ buy back again, or save.
reed ~ a plant that grows near water.
righteous ~ very good (only God is really *righteous). God says that the people that love and obey him are *righteous. Sometimes we say that they are "the *righteous", meaning "*righteous people". Look after Psalm 5 in Book 1 of the Psalms of David for more about the word "*righteous".
righteousness ~ what you have when you are *righteous.
roar ~ make a very loud noise.
Rock ~ a name for God.
royal ~ a word that describes a king.
Satan ~ the leader of the bad *spirits. His other names are the Devil and Lucifer.
serpent ~ a snake.
shake ~ move from one side to another and back again very fast many times.
Sheol ~ where *Jews said that you went when you died.
shield ~ what a soldier holds over himself to stop things hitting him.
silver ~ a metal of great value, *like gold.
sin ~ not obeying God, or what you do when you do not obey God.
son ~ often means grandson, and so on.
soul ~ the part of a person that we cannot see that is in us during our life, and lives after we die.
sparrow ~ a bird.
spirits ~ they are alive, but we cannot see them. Good spirits are usually called *angels. Bad spirits do not live in *heaven now, but in the air round us. *Satan is their leader. They are the same as evil spirits, or demons.
stork ~ a bird with a long neck.
tears ~ water coming from our eyes when we cry.
temple ~ a place where people meet to *worship God.
tent ~ house made from animal skins.
tested (me) (God) ~ made (me) (God) show what I can do.
tested ~ saw if someone was good or bad.
testing ~ trying to see what someone can do.
thank-you ~ a polite way to say ‘thanks’.
throne ~ a special chair that a king sits on.
thunder ~ the noise in the sky in a storm.
trap ~ something that catches animals or birds.
trumpet ~ a *musical instrument.
trust ~ believe that someone (usually God in the psalms) will be good to you.
trusting in you ~ looking to you for help.
vines ~ plants that grow *grapes (to make *wine).
wear out ~ clothes wear out. This means that they become old. Then people cannot use them. Then they will throw them away.
wicked ~ very, very bad.
widow ~ woman whose husband is dead.
wilderness ~ a wild place where people did not grow food.
wine ~ a drink with alcohol in it. People make it from *grapes.
wings ~ birds use them to fly.
wise ~ very clever, always deciding to do what is right.
wonder ~ another word for *miracle.
wonderful ~ making people feel surprised.
worship ~ tell someone that they are very great and that you love them.
Yahweh ~ the *covenant name for God. Most Bibles translate it *LORD with 4 capital letters. It means something *like "I am" or "always alive".
Zion ~ Jerusalem, the City of God.

© 2001-2002, Wycliffe Associates (UK)
This publication is written in EasyEnglish Level A (1200 words).
July 2002
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