PSALM 147*
God’s Word Restores Jerusalem
I
How good to sing praise to our God;
how pleasant to give fitting praise.a
and gathers the dispersed of Israel,b
and binding up their wounds.c
and gives to all of them their names.d
with wisdom beyond measure.e
but casts the wicked to the ground.f
II
with the lyre make music to our God,g
provides rain for the earth,
makes grass sprout on the mountains,h
and young ravens what they cry for.i
no pleasure in the runner’s stride.j
those who put their hope in his mercy.
III
Zion, offer praise to your God,
blessed your children within you.k
and satisfies you with finest wheat.l
his word runs swiftly!m
and spreads the frost like ash;n
Who can withstand his cold?
he raises his winds and the waters flow.
his statutes and laws to Israel.o
of such laws they know nothing.
Hallelujah!
* [Psalm 147] The hymn is divided into three sections by the calls to praise in Ps 147:1, 7, 12. The first section praises the powerful creator who restores exiled Judah (Ps 147:1–6); the second section, the creator who provides food to animals and human beings; the third and climactic section exhorts the holy city to recognize it has been re-created and made the place of disclosure for God’s word, a word as life-giving as water.
* [147:8–9] God clothes the fields and feeds the birds, cf. Mt 6:26, 30.
* [147:10–11] Acknowledging one’s dependence upon God rather than claiming self-sufficiency pleases God, cf. Ps 20:8; 33:16–19.
* [147:15–19] God speaks through the thunder of nature and the word of revealed law, cf. Is 55:10–11. The weather phenomena are well known in Jerusalem: a blizzard of snow and hail followed by a thunderstorm that melts the ice.
b. [147:2] Is 11:12; 56:8; Jer 31:10.
c. [147:3] Jb 5:18; Is 30:26; 61:1; Jer 33:6.
e. [147:5] Jdt 16:13; Jer 51:15.
f. [147:6] Ps 146:9; 1 Sm 2:7–8.
h. [147:8] Ps 104:13f; Jb 5:10; Jer 14:22; Jl 2:23.
j. [147:10] Ps 20:8; 33:16–18.
Copyright 2019-2025 USCCB, please review our Privacy Policy