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A Prayer against Israel's Enemies

129 Israel, tell us how your enemies have persecuted you
    ever since you were young.

“Ever since I was young,
    my enemies have persecuted me cruelly,
    but they have not overcome me.
They cut deep wounds in my back
    and made it like a plowed field.
But the Lord, the righteous one,
    has freed me from slavery.”

May everyone who hates Zion
    be defeated and driven back.
May they all be like grass growing on the housetops,
    which dries up before it can grow;
    no one gathers it up
    or carries it away in bundles.
No one who passes by will say,
    “May the Lord bless you!
    We bless you in the name of the Lord.”

Psalm 129

Prayer for the Downfall of Israel’s Enemies

A Song of Ascents.

Often have they attacked me from my youth
    —let Israel now say—(A)
often have they attacked me from my youth,
    yet they have not prevailed against me.(B)
The plowers plowed on my back;
    they made their furrows long.
The Lord is righteous;
    he has cut the cords of the wicked.(C)
May all who hate Zion
    be put to shame and turned backward.(D)
Let them be like the grass on the housetops
    that withers before it grows up,(E)
with which reapers do not fill their hands
    or binders of sheaves their arms,
while those who pass by do not say,
    “The blessing of the Lord be upon you!
    We bless you in the name of the Lord!”(F)

Psalm 129[a]

Against Israel’s Enemies

A song of ascents.

I

Viciously have they attacked me from my youth,
    let Israel say now.(A)
Viciously have they attacked me from my youth,(B)
    yet they have not prevailed against me.
Upon my back the plowers plowed,
    as they traced their long furrows.(C)
But the just Lord cut me free
    from the ropes of the wicked.[b]

II

May they recoil in disgrace,
    all who hate Zion.
May they be like grass on the rooftops[c]
    withered in early growth,(D)
Never to fill the reaper’s hands,
    nor the arms of the binders of sheaves,
And with none passing by to call out:
    “The blessing of the Lord be upon you![d]
    We bless you in the name of the Lord!”(E)

Footnotes

  1. Psalm 129 A Psalm giving thanks for God’s many rescues of Israel over the long course of their history (Ps 129:1–4); the people pray that their oppressors never know the joy of harvest (Ps 129:5–8).
  2. 129:4 The ropes of the wicked: usually understood as the rope for yoking animals to the plow. If it is severed, the plowing (cf. Ps 129:3) comes to a halt.
  3. 129:6 Like grass on the rooftops: after the spring rains, grass would sprout from the coat of mud with which the flat roofs of simple houses were covered, but when the dry summer began there was no moisture in the thin roof-covering to sustain the grass.
  4. 129:8 The blessing of the Lord be upon you: harvesters greeted one another with such blessings, cf. Ru 2:4.

Psalm 129

A pilgrimage song.

129 From youth, people have constantly attacked me—
    let Israel now repeat!—
    from youth people have constantly attacked me—
    but they haven’t beaten me!
They plowed my back like farmers;
    they made their furrows deep.
But the Lord is righteous—
    God cut me free from the ropes of the wicked!

Let everyone who hates Zion be ashamed, thoroughly frustrated.
    Let them be like grass on a roof
    that dies before it can be pulled up,
    which won’t fill the reaper’s hand
        or fill the harvester’s arms.
Let no one who passes by say to them:
    “May the Lord’s blessing be on you!
        We bless you in the Lord’s name!”