Genesis 1:20-25

Let the waters.

22; 2:19; 8:17; Ps 104:24,25; 148:10; Ac 17:25

moving. or, creeping.

1Ki 4:33

life. Heb. a living soul.

30; Ec 2:21

fowl that may fly. Heb. let fowl fly.This marginal reading is more conformable to the original, and reconciles this passage with ch. 2:19. The word fowl, from the Saxon {fleon,} to fly, exactly corresponds to the original, which denotes every thing that flies, whether bird or insect.

open firmament. Heb. face of the firmament.

7,14

great.

6:20; 7:14; 8:19; Job 7:12; 26:5; Ps 104:24-26; Eze 32:2; Jon 1:17

Jon 2:10; Mt 12:40

brought.

8:17; 9:7; Ex 1:7; 8:3

God saw.

18,25,31

28; 8:17; 9:1; 30:27,30; 35:11; Le 26:9; Job 40:15; 42:12; Ps 107:31,38

Ps 128:3; 144:13,14; Pr 10:22

23

Let.

6:20; 7:14; 8:19; Job 38:39,40; 39:1,5,9,19; 40:15; Ps 50:9,10

Ps 104:18,23; 148:10Cattle, denotes domestic animals living on vegetables;--Beasts of the earth, wild animals; especially such as live on flesh; and--Creeping things, reptiles; or all the different genera of serpents, worms, and such animals as have no feet.

2:19,20; Job 12:8-10; 26:13

Psalms 50:10-11

every.

8:6-8; 104:24,25; Ge 1:24,25; 2:19; 8:17; 9:2,3; 1Ch 29:14-16

Job 40:15-24; Jer 27:5,6; Da 2:38

cattle.

104:14; Ge 31:9; Jon 4:11

know.

104:12; 147:9; Ge 1:20-22; Job 38:41; 39:13-18,26-30; Mt 6:26

Mt 10:29-31; Lu 12:24

wild.

Isa 56:9; Eze 14:15,16

mine. Heb. with me.

Psalms 103:22

all his works.

145:10; 148:3-12; 150:6; Isa 42:10-12; 43:20; 44:23; 49:13

Re 5:12-14

bless the Lord.

1; 104:1,35; 146:1

Psalms 150:6

Let every thing.

103:22; 145:10; 148:7-11; Re 5:13 CONCLUDING REMARKS ON THE BOOK OF PSALMS. The Psalms have been the general song of the universal Church; and in their praise, all the Fathers have been unanimously eloquent. Men of all nations find in these compositions a language at once suitable to their feelings, and expressive of their highest joys and deepest sorrows, as well as of all the endlessly varied wishes and desires of their hearts. Whether the pious believer is disposed to indulge the exalted sentiments of praise and thanksgiving towards the ALMIGHTY FATHER of his being; to pour out his soul in penitence or prayer; to bewail, with tears of contrition, past offences; to magnify the goodness and mercy of GOD; to dwell with ecstacy on the divine attributes of wisdom and omnipotence; or to rejoice in the coming of the MESSIAH, the Psalms afford him the most perfect models for expressing all his feelings.
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