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Upon the Son of Man, whom Thou
Strong for thyself hast made.

18 So shall we not go back from thee
To ways of sin and shame:
Quicken us thou; then gladly we
Shall call upon thy Name.

19 Return us, and thy grace divine,
Lord God of Hosts, vouchsafe:
Cause thou thy face on us to shine,
And then we shall be safe.

PSALM LXXXI.

1 To God our strength sing loud and clear;
Sing loud to God our King;

To Jacob's God, that all may hear,
Loud acclamations ring.

2 Prepare a hymn, prepare a song;
The timbrel hither bring;
The cheerful psaltery bring along,
And harp with pleasant string.

3 Blow, as is wont, in the new moon,
With trumpets' lofty sound,

The appointed time, the day whereon
Our solemn feast comes round.

4 This was a statute given of old
For Israel to observe,

A law of Jacob's God to hold,

From whence they might not swerve.

5 This he a testimony ordained

In Joseph, not to change,

When as he passed through Egypt-land;
The tongue I heard was strange.

6 From burden, and from slavish toil,
I set his shoulder free;

His hands from pots, and miry soil,
Delivered were by me.

7 When trouble did thee sore assail,
On me then didst thou call,
And I to free thee did not fail,

And led thee out of thrall.

I answered thee in thunder deep,
With clouds encompassed round;
I tried thee at the water steep
Of Meriba renowned.

8 Hear, O my people, hearken well:
I testify to thee,

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Thou ancient stock of Israel,
If thou wilt list to me :

9 Throughout the land of thy abode
No alien God shall be,

Nor shalt thou to a foreign god

In honour bend thy knee.

10 I am the Lord thy God, which brought
Thee out of Egypt-land;

Ask large enough, and I, besought,
Will grant thy full demand.

11 And yet my people would not hear,
Nor hearken to my voice;

And Israel, whom I loved so dear,
Misliked me for his choice.

12 Then did I leave them to their will,
And to their wandering mind;

Their own conceits they followed still
Their own devices blind.

13 Oh that my people would be wise,
To serve me all their days!

And oh that Israel would advise
To walk my righteous ways!

14 Then would I soon bring down their foes,
That now so proudly rise,

And turn my hand against all those
That are their enemies.

15 Who hate the Lord should then be fain
To bow to him and bend;

But they, his people, should remain;

Their time should have no end.

16 And he would feed them from the shock
With flour of finest wheat,

And satisfy them from the rock
With honey for their meat.

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1 Bagnadath-el.

2 Bekerev.

PSALM LXXXII.

I GOD in the 'great' assembly stands

2

Of kings and lordly states;

Among the gods on both his hands
He judges and debates.

3 Tishphetu 2 How long will ye3 pervert the right

gnavel.

With 3 judgment false and wrong,
Favouring the wicked by your might,
Who thence grow bold and strong?

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3 Regard the weak and fatherless;
Despatch the poor man's cause;
And raise the man in deep distress
By just and equal laws.

4 Defend the poor and desolate,
And rescue from the hands
Of wicked men the low estate
Of him that help demands.

5 They know not, nor will understand;
In darkness they walk on;

The earth's foundations all are moved,
And out of order gone.

6 I said that ye were gods, yea all
The sons of God Most High;

7 But ye shall die like men, and fall

As other princes die.

8 Rise, God; judge thou the earth in might;

This wicked earth' redress;

For thou art he who shalt by right

The nations all possess.

4 Shiphtudal.

II

5 Hatzdiku.

6 Jimmotu.

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7 Shiphta.

PSALM LXXXIII.

1 BE not thou silent now at length;
O God, hold not thy peace :
Sit not thou still, O God of strength;
We cry and do not cease.

2 For lo! thy furious foes now 1swell,
And storm outrageously;

1

And they that hate thee, proud and fell,
Exalt their heads full high.

2

3 Against thy people they contrive

Their plots and counsels deep;

4 Them to ensnare they chiefly strive 5 Whom thou dost hide and keep.

4 "Come, let us cut them off," say they,
"Till they no nation be;

That Israel's name for ever may
Be lost in memory."

For they consult with all their might,
And all as one in mind

Themselves against thee they unite,
And in firm union bind.

5 The tents of Edom, and the brood
Of scornful Ishmael,

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Moab, with them of Hagar's blood,
That in the desert dwell,

7 Gebal and Ammon there conspire,
And hateful Amalec,

The Philistines, and they of Tyre,
Whose bounds the sea doth check.
8 With them great Ashur also bands,
And doth confirm the knot;

All these have lent their armed hands

To aid the sons of Lot.

9 Do to them as to Midian bold,
That wasted all the coast;

To Sisera, and as is told

Thou didst to Jabin's host,

When at the brook of Kishon old
They were repulsed and slain,

10 At Endor quite cut off, and rolled
As dung upon the plain.

II As Zeb and Oreb evil sped,
So let their princes speed;
As Zeba and Zalmunna bled,
So let their princes bleed.

12 For they amidst their pride have said,
"By right now shall we seize

God's houses, and will now invade
7 Their stately palaces."

13 My God, oh make them as a wheel;
No quiet let them find;

Giddy and restless let them reel,

Like stubble from the wind.

14 As, when an aged wood takes fire

Which on a sudden strays,

The greedy flame runs higher and higher,
Till all the mountains blaze;

15 So with thy whirlwind them pursue,

And with thy tempest chase;

168 And till theys yield thee honour due,
Lord, fill with shame their face.

17 Ashamed and troubled let them be,
Troubled and shamed for ever,
Ever confounded, and so die

With shame, and scape it never.

18 Then shall they know that thou, whose name
Jehovah is, alone

Art the Most High, and thou the same

O'er all the earth art One.

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60

PSALM LXXXIV.

■ How lovely are thy dwellings fair! O Lord of Hosts, how dear

The pleasant tabernacles are

Where thou dost dwell so near!
2 My soul doth long and almost die
Thy courts, O Lord, to see ;
My heart and flesh aloud do cry,

O living God, for thee.

3 There even the sparrow, freed from wrong,

Hath found a house of rest;

The swallow there, to lay her young,

Hath built her brooding nest;

Even by thy altars, Lord of Hosts,

They find their safe abode;

And home they fly from round the coasts
Toward thee, my King, my God

4 Happy who in thy house reside,

Where thee they ever praise !

5 Happy whose strength in thee doth bide, And in their hearts thy ways!

6 They pass through Baca's thirsty vale, That dry and barren ground,

As through a fruitful watery dale

Where springs and showers abound.

7 They journey on from strength to strength With joy and gladsome cheer,

Till all before our God at length

In Sion do appear.

8 Lord God of Hosts, hear now my prayer, O Jacob's God, give ear:

9 Thou, God, our shield, look on the face Of thy anointed dear.

10 For one day in thy courts to be

Is better and more blest

Than in the joys of vanity
A thousand days at best.
I in the temple of my God
Had rather keep a door

Than dwell in tents and rich abode

With sin for evermore.

11 For God, the Lord, both sun and shield,

Gives grace and glory bright;

No good from them shall be withheld

Whose ways are just and right.

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