Psalms 147

God’s Love and Power (The 2nd Hallelujah Psalm)

1 Hallelujah!

It is good to sing praises to our God.

And it is pleasant and right to praise him.

2The LORD is building Jerusalem again.

He is bringing home the exiles to Israel.

3He makes people well again that have broken hearts.

And he puts bandages on their injuries.
147:3 Verses 2 and 3 tell us that God is powerful among the countries of the world. God let the Babylonians beat his people that lived near Jerusalem. This happened about 600 years before Jesus came to the earth. The Babylonians destroyed the city and took the people away to Babylon. Babylon was a country east of Jerusalem. They made them live there for 70 years. They were exiles, (they lived away from their own country). This happened because God’s people did not love him nor obey him. So God punished (or hurt) them. But after 70 years, God destroyed Babylon and brought his people home. He built Jerusalem again and made his people feel happy again. Some of them had broken hearts. This is a way to say that they felt very, very sad (or depressed). Other people had injuries. Perhaps someone had hit them, or cut them with a knife. A bandage is a piece of cloth. We put bandages on injuries to keep them clean. Really, God did not do these things himself. The psalm means that he made them happen through other people.

4He decided how many stars to make

and he even gave them all a name.

5Our Lord is great and very powerful.

He understands everything!

6The LORD gives help to poor people

but he throws wicked people to the ground.
147:6 Verse 6 tells us about poor people and wicked people. ‘Wicked’ means ‘very, very bad.’ Perhaps the psalmist (the person that wrote the psalm) meant the people of Babylon. God threw them to the ground. This means that he destroyed them. He did this when he sent the Persian army to fight the Babylonian army. But God lifted up the poor people. Perhaps they were the Jewish people. He gave them help to go home from Babylon.

7Sing to the LORD and thank him for what he has done.

Make music to our God with a harp.
147:7 Verse 7 starts the next part of the psalm. The harp usually makes quiet music, but it can be loud.

8He puts clouds into the sky.

He sends rain to the earth.

He makes the grass grow on the hills.
147:8 Verse 8: In the Greek Bible, there is a bit more in this verse. At the end, it says ‘He gives plants for men to use.’ Many English translations put this extra bit in.

9He gives food for the animals.

He feeds the young ravens when they cry.
147:9 Verse 9: A raven is a big, black bird. In this verse, God makes sure that other people, animals or birds feed themselves or their young. God does not do it himself. The psalmist says that God really did it! This is because it is part of God’s great plan. The psalmist is the person that wrote the psalm.

10He has no pleasure because a horse is so strong,

nor in the legs of a man who is riding the horse.

11Instead the LORD becomes pleased by people who are in awe of him.

They trust in his kind love.
147:11 Verse 11: ‘In awe’ means that you love somebody that you are a bit afraid of! People that are ‘in awe’ of God obey him. Also, they trust him, (or believe that he will do what he has promised to do).

12Jerusalem – praise the LORD!

Zion – praise your God!

13Praise him because he makes your gates strong.

And he is kind to the people inside your city.

14He makes your borders safe from an enemy attacking you.

He fills you with the best food.
147:14 Verses 12-14 start the last part of the psalm. God gives his people a city to live in, Jerusalem. Jerusalem is also called Zion. He gives them a safe country to live in. That is what safe borders means. He gives his people good food. All this happened after the exile. Psalm 149 in this set of psalms explains what the exile was. Bible students think that the psalmist wrote Psalm 147 after the exile. It was a psalm for the new temple. The temple in Jerusalem was the house of God. Again, God does not do all these things himself. He makes sure that somebody else does them. They are part of his plan.

15He tells the earth what to do.

What he says soon reaches it.

16He covers the earth with snow like a white blanket.

He puts frost everywhere like ashes that the wind blows.

17He sends hail like small stones.

Nobody can stand up in his icy wind.

18Then he sends his word and the ice changes into water.

He makes the wind blow and the water moves.
147:18 Verses 15-18 tell us that God rules the earth as well as the people in it. ‘Frost’ is very little bits of ice. It falls on plants and buildings in very cold weather. Hail is larger bits of ice. It falls like rain or snow. ‘Icy’ means ‘very, very cold.’ In verse 18, the weather becomes warm again. Ice becomes water, and the water runs away. Again, God does not do all these things himself. He made the rules that the weather must obey. When it is cold, water changes to ice. When it gets warm, ice changes to water. God made this rule. So, when it happens, we say ‘God did it!’

19He showed his word to Jacob.

He showed his rules and laws to Israel.

20He has done this for no other country.

They do not know his laws.

Hallelujah!
147:20 Verses 19-20 end the psalm. They tell us that only the Jewish people knew his rules and laws. ‘Laws’ is another word for ‘rules.’ This is not true now, because everybody with a Bible knows God’s rules and laws. These rules and laws are not only about what is right and wrong. They are also about what happens in the world.
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