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祈求 神使仇敌蒙羞退后

朝圣之歌(原文作“往上行之歌”)。

129 愿以色列说:

“从我幼年以来,敌人就多次苦害我。(本节在《马索拉文本》包括细字标题)

从我幼年以来,敌人虽然多次苦害我,

却没有胜过我。

他们好象犁田的人犁在我的背上,

所犁的沟甚长。

但耶和华是公义的,

他砍断了恶人的绳索。”

愿所有恨恶锡安的,

都蒙羞退后。

愿他们像屋顶上的草,

尚未长大,就枯干了;

收割的不够一把,

捆禾的不够满怀。

过路的人也不说:

“愿耶和华所赐的福临到你们;

我们奉耶和华的名祝福你们。”

Psalm 129[a]

A song of ascents.[b]

129 “Since my youth they have often attacked me,”
let Israel say.
“Since my youth they have often attacked me,
but they have not defeated me.
The plowers plowed my back;
they made their furrows long.
The Lord is just;
he cut the ropes of the wicked.”[c]
May all who hate Zion
be humiliated and turned back.
May they be like the grass on the rooftops,
which withers before one can even pull it up,[d]
which cannot fill the reaper’s hand,
or the lap of the one who gathers the grain.
Those who pass by will not say,[e]
“May you experience the Lord’s blessing!
We pronounce a blessing on you in the name of the Lord.”

Footnotes

  1. Psalm 129:1 sn Psalm 129. Israel affirms God’s justice and asks him to destroy the enemies of Zion.
  2. Psalm 129:1 sn The precise significance of this title, which appears in Pss 120-134, is unclear. Perhaps worshipers recited these psalms when they ascended the road to Jerusalem to celebrate annual religious festivals. For a discussion of their background see L. C. Allen, Psalms 101-150 (WBC), 219-21.
  3. Psalm 129:4 tn The background of the metaphor is not entirely clear. Perhaps the “ropes” are those used to harness the ox for plowing (see Job 39:10). Verse 3 pictures the wicked plowing God’s people as if they were a field. But when God “cut the ropes” of their ox, as it were, they could no longer plow. The point of the metaphor seems to be that God took away the enemies’ ability to oppress his people. See L. C. Allen, Psalms 101-150 (WBC), 187.
  4. Psalm 129:6 tn The Hebrew verb שָׁלַף (shalaf) normally means “to draw [a sword]” or “to pull.” BDB 1025 s.v. suggests the meaning “to shoot up” here, but it is more likely that the verb here means “to pluck; to pull up,” a nuance attested for this word in later Hebrew and Aramaic (see Jastrow 1587 s.v. שָׁלַף).
  5. Psalm 129:8 tn The perfect verbal form is used for rhetorical effect; it describes an anticipated development as if it were already reality.