psalm 137 commentary

psalm 137 commentary 1 By the rivers of Babylon there we sat down yea we wept when we remembered Zion 2 We hanged our harps upon the willows in the midst thereof 3 For there they that carried us away captive required of us a song and they that wasted us required of us mirth saying Sing us one of the songs of Zion 4 How shall we sing the Lord s song in a s

Jesus said You have heard that people used to say An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth But I say to you Do not fight against evil If someone hits you on the right side of your face let him hit you on the other side also Matthew 5 38 39 Evil means something that is very very bad Psalm 137 The Mournful Song of the Exiles Because this psalm is a remembrance of Babylon many commentators believe it was written after the return from exile It may also have been written many years into the exile

psalm 137 commentary

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psalm 137 commentary
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Psalm 137 9 Happy Shall He Be That Takes And Dashes Your Little Ones
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1 They were posted by the rivers of Babylon in a strange land a great way from their own country whence they were brought as prisoners of war The land of Babylon was now a house of bondage to that people as Egypt had been in their beginning The psalm is fully self explanatory The first three verses describe the situation The chosen people are suffering the captivity in Babylon enduring the sporting taunts of their enemies and weeping over their sorrows as they contrasted their status with what it

The Mournful Song of the Exiles Psalm 137 is a mournful song of the Jewish exiles remembering prior glories and the present distress of Babylon Verse Psalms 137 1 By the rivers of Babylon These might have been the Tigris and Euphrates or their branches or streams that flowed into them In their captivity and dispersion it was customary for the Jews to hold their religious meetings on the banks of rivers

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Study Psalm 137 using Matthew Henry s Bible Commentary concise to better understand Scripture with full outline and verse meaning Happy is the man who shall help in the overthrow of the spiritual Babylon which despite its riches and power is to be destroyed Happier still shall he be who shall see it sink like a millstone in the flood never to rise again What that spiritual Babylon is none need enquire

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