4 Praise Him with the timbrel
and dance: praise Him with stringed instruments
and organs.
and dance: praise Him with stringed instruments
and organs.
Childrens - Psalm-Book
5 Happy is he that hath the God of Jacob for
his help, whose hope is in the Lord his God:
6 Which made heaven, and earth, the sea, and
all that therein is: Which keepeth truth for
ever: 7 Which executeth judgment for the op-
pressed: Which giveth food to the hungry. The
Lord looseth the prisoners: 8 The Lord openeth
the eyes of the blind: the Lord raiseth them that are
bowed down : the Lord loveth the righteous r 9 The
Lord preserveth the strangers; He relieveth the
fatherless and widow: but the way of the wicked He
turneth upside down. 10 The Lord shall reign for
ever, even thy God, O Zion, unto all generations
Praise ye the Lord.
Ittote on When we are unhappy we should turn for
I>s. CXLVI. comfort to God, rather than to any mortal being.
For He has infinite pity for us in all our trials.
"For with Thee is the fountain of life, in Thy light
shall we see light. " *
If we are in misery, or in grief, or in danger,
prayer to God, in Whose hands are life and death,
brings us courage and comfort. And the comfort of
prayer is ten-fold if we have the habit of prayer, if
every day of our lives we bring before ourselves the
thought of the Goodness of God. If we start our
day by calling to mind that Highest ideal of goodness,
all day long we are more quickly conscious when we
* Psalm xxxvi. 9.
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? THE CHILDREN'S PSALM-BOOK
Heta 5 :vniheto nix tfinn ova ina-t^S>><<. cxlvi.
**: ~ i t i : v ': t - '~ at:-:
inby6 :vnSx nin^y Hair hroa aby* Sn^
jV v. t. . - ^-j- v -: t v; /t" V I V t t t
nirv trns nps i rfjn* 8 :dhidk Tno niri*
nil riS n'x thSk DSiyS 1 nirv "nta if
t <: I -i v: t ': t: l<< : ?
depart from it, and let ourselves do what we know mote on
to be wrong. And so prayer both helps us to bear CXLVI.
trouble bravely, and to strive to be good.
God's lovingkindness and wisdom are so great
that we cannot really understand all about them.
But, like the Psalmist in this Psalm, we can try to
think of God's wonderful works, of His perfect justice,
His everlasting mercy, and His infinite wisdom.
And then we feel that something passes into our own
soul which helps us to try to be good and brave and
wise. Whenever we pray to God, we must think far
more of God, and of His goodness, His strength and
His wisdom, than of ourselves; and our very prayer,
by bringing these thoughts into our minds, helps us
to try to be good, and to do right.
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? THE CHILDREN'S PSALM-BOOK
PSALM CXLVII.
Praise ye the Lord: for it is good to sing praises
unto our God; for it is pleasant; and praise is
comely. 2 The Lord doth build up Jerusalem:
He gathereth together the outcasts of Israel. 3 He
healeth the broken in heart, and bindeth up their
wounds. 4 He telleth the number of the stars; He
calleth them all by their names. 5 Great is our
Lord, and of great power: His understanding is
infinite. 6 The Lord lifteth up the meek: He
casteth the wicked down to the ground.
7 Sing unto the Lord with thanksgiving; sing
praise upon the harp unto our God: 8 Who covereth
the heaven with clouds, Who prepareth rain for the
earth, Who maketh grass to grow upon the mountains.
9 He giveth to the beast his food, and to the young
ravens which cry. 10 He delighteth not in the
strength of the horse: He taketh not pleasure in
the legs of a man. 11 The Lord taketh pleasure in
them that fear Him, in those that hope in His mercy.
12 Praise the Lord, O Jerusalem; praise thy God,
O Zion. 13 For He hath strengthened the bars of
thy gates; He hath blessed thy children within
thee. 14 He maketh peace in thy borders, and
filleth thee with the finest of the wheat. 15 He
sendeth forth his commandment upon earth: His
word runneth very swiftly. 16 He giveth snow like
wool: He scattereth the hoar frost like ashes.
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? THE CHILDREN'S PSALM-BOOK
CXLVII. tap
*T t ? t |* a" V; jt ; ~ i t :|~
:d-D1 ^nn nirv DSeto* njrta2 :nVnn
j" jt lt|: ? / ? ? t ? . : a- t 1 - t : -i
nirr tfiajf mtya 6 nana px irfoanS' na-ani
at: ^? t-e* j**r: it ; ? I j" t i :? - a -;
rrrtna Din*S 7 :p^-nu D'sen fvsete
at: t :r iv: | vit ? *-; ? t: j* : -
rnia 9 . ^xn onn rvaxsn ntoo pxS . "pan
|j" J>> t j't T>>; att I Vjtt | j- ? ? -
nS 10 nanp* neto any *jaS nanS nanaS
< (t|; ? jv -; /? ? : ? at ; - *t :?
nxin" :nx-): $03-^ pair didd n^a^a
*natr 12 :v^onS o^nwnw VN*v-nx nirv
j. . _ i :-: /? -:r: l- v at ? ? : v t:
ptn-*a 13 ^nSx ^Sn njrnx
isssafdfj 14 qaipa ^a "pa *nna'
pi* irna nStpn 15 :^a^i D^n aSn Di^
lisa nasfa jnjin i6 n-p^ pn; nina-ns
273 T
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? THE CHILDREN'S PSALM-BOOK
>>8. 17 He casteth forth His ice like morsels: who
r yrr'
"* 'can stand before His cold? 18 He sendeth out
His word, and melteth them: He causeth His wind
to blow, and the waters flow. 19 He sheweth His
word unto Jacob, His statutes and His judgments
unto Israel. 20 He hath not dealt so with any
nation: and as for His judgments, they have not
known them. Praise ye the Lord.
IRote on This Psalm calls on us all to give thanks
JP8j to God for the blessings He has showered on us;
'and to learn by the marvels of Nature around us
how great is the Divine love that orders the world,
with all its wonders and its beauties.
The Psalmist reminds the Israelites that they are
the Messengers of God, to tell and teach His laws
to the whole world. "He sheweth his word unto
Jacob, His statutes and His judgments unto Israel. "
The Israelites are the Messengers, but God's
Message is to every human being. It tells all man-
PSALM CXLVIII.
Praise ye the Lord. Praise ye the Lord from
the heavens: praise Him in the heights. 2 Praise
ye Him, all His angels: praise ye Him, all His
hosts. 3 Praise ye Him, sun and moon: praise
Him, all ye stars of light. 4 Praise Him, ye
heavens of heavens, and ye waters that be above
the heavens. 5 Let them praise the name of
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? THE CHILDREN'S PSALM-BOOK
irn? ysfr D\nsp in-p 17 H^! "WcxLvh.
-bp inn tsatm nyi nW* w :w
: btrterh van npy^ hn tso 19 j dns
i"t: t t: ? Ijt\ |ar:r: jtt: ~ *it
t; - ,i? t: ? t; I" t jt
it :l-
kind that the Lord taketh pleasure in all who try mote on
their utmost to obey His laws, and who humbly Ps*
hope for His mercy. For He is infinitely merciful, CXLVI1-
and infinitely powerful. The Psalmist expresses and
reiterates the thought in the series of beautiful word-
pictures beginning: "The Lord doth build up Jeru-
salem," and continuing to the end of the 18th verse.
In joy and in sorrow whatever may happen to us,
let us always turn to Him, "Who taketh pleasure in
those that fear Him, in those that hope for His
mercy. "
CXLVIII. iT2p
vtffch Dwn-p nirrnx bbn I vr^hn
- :- <<v t - I ? t :t v j : - t :>>~
itt: t :- att:~ t 0 : 1- i*:
1 **; >> t ;- -a? ? t; vjv ;i
: Dwn Sya I nata D*sm' d<<cbti vrW? n 4
*it t - - ** v ? ~ ~: 'att - j": :l
it: *: jt ? 1 at: j" v ;* ;i
275
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? THE CHILDREN'S PSALM-BOOK
is. the Lord: for He commanded, and they were
XLVIII
'created. 6 He hath also stablished them for ever
and ever: He hath made a decree which shall not
pass. 7 Praise the Lord from the earth, ye
dragons, and all deeps. 8 Fire, and hail; snow,
and vapours; stormy wind fulfilling His word:
9 Mountains, and all hills; fruitful trees, and all
cedars: io Beasts, and all cattle; creeping things,
and flying fowl: n Kings of the earth, and all
people; princes, and all judges of the earth: 12
Both young men, and maidens; old men, and
children: 13 Let them praise the name of the
Lord: for His name alone is excellent; His glory
is above the earth and heaven. 14 He also exalteth
the horn of his people, the praise of all His saints;
even of the children of Israel, a people near unto
Him. Praise ye the Lord.
flore on The 148th Psalm is a song of praise, which, like
CXLVIII manY others, has a more beautiful sound in Hebrew
'than even in English.
The writer (like our English poet Coleridge) feels
how " Earth with her thousand voices praises God,"
and pours out a glowing expression of the thought,
which leads him to realize the high privilege of
Israel, the people to whom was given the sacred
task of teaching the world through all time the great
truth that God is the Almighty Creator of all.
Note for Older Children. --The vividness with
which the Psalmist realized this great truth seems in
itself little short of a miracle, if we consider how far
ahead he was of all contemporary ideas about the
origin of all the wonders of nature. The phenomena
276
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? THE CHILDREN'S PSALM-BOOK
<<h) ferpn qSiy1? nyS dt^a 6<*Lvm.
iniphsrSp] D^yjci nxn-jp nirrnx 7
imi raw rnyD nn nto'pi ^ tim e>x 8
it: it* tt: -/ a r: "'? tn j?
?
n'nn 10 :dtw^ji ns ry nta-Spi onnn o
. *t-|- i-t-: t; ) *" 'at: t: t'ttw
-hp) yynfas 11 nisx] pan nton^-^i.
dnm 14 :D^atri px-Sy inin nn^> aab>r^
v<t-- 'Itt; I vv - a*-: j: jt: ? r*
Dy bxiW ^nS vTDn-^aS rtann \kvh 1 pp
/- ? ? x: h ? t ? t: <t ? : -: lv|v
of the heavens had been an object of human study 3? ote on
from the remotest ages*--for light and darkness are cxlVIII.
the primeval time-keepers, and the luminaries are, as
it were, the hands of the clock of Nature. But the
study of the heavens got mixed up with the occult
imaginings of astrology, and was only disentangled
and brought into the realms of exact science in the
fifteenth, sixteenth and seventeenth centuriesf--while
the scientific study of the earth's surface is a growth
* There are Chinese astronomical records which date back
approximately to the time of Abraham, and the temples of Egypt
give evidence of accurate astronomical observations thousands
of years earlier still.
T Copernicus, Galileo, Kepler, and Newton may be looked on
as the fathers of the science of Astronomy. Copernicus was boi n
in 1473, and Newton, the latest of the four, was born in 1642.
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? THE CHILDREN'S PSALM-BOOK
mote on of the last two hundred years. When the revelations
CXLVIII of these sciences of Nature burst on the world, men's
'minds were at first startled by the destruction of some
time-honoured grooves of thought, but gradually these
revelations led to an ever-truer and wider perception
PSALM CL.
Praise ye the Lord. Praise God in His sanc-
tuary: praise Him in the firmament of His power.
2 Praise Him for His mighty acts: praise Him
according to His excellent greatness. 3 Praise Him
with the sound of the trumpet: praise Him with the
psaltery and harp.
4 Praise Him with the timbrel
and dance: praise Him with stringed instruments
and organs. 5 Praise Him upon the loud cymbals:
praise. Him upon the high sounding cymbals. 6 Let
every thing that hath breath praise the Lord.
Praise ye the Lord.
mote on Here we are told to praise God, not only in
J>8. CL- every way, but in every place; to praise Him
in the sanctuary, in the synagogue, and in the
"firmament of His power," which means the whole
world.
"Everything that hath breath," every living
creature, does praise the Lord, for the perfection of
the work praises the Great Worker, and Maker of
all. The fast galloping horse, the strong lion, the
huge elephant, the tiny mouse, the birds flying
through the air, the fish living under the sea, every
insect with the powers of life and movement in its
wee body--God made them all.
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? THE CHILDREN'S PSALM-BOOK
of the vastness of the Divine wisdom manifest in mote on
Nature heralded as it was thousands of years before JxLviII
by the Psalmist, who perceived the truth by reason of
his true understanding of the infinite power of God--
though he could not prove it scientifically.
CL. 2p
: \w yjria vrfc^rj iEfjfta I n;fo>n
vnf^n 3 :taa ana vfl&n vrtaa in^n 2
: -* 1 :-. :- at :?
t)ha in^n 4 nipi ^aja in^n nsitr ypna
iw'an Va e :nyvin ^^sa ^niSSn w
it :1- t *>>? -;
prPl
When we think of this, we know the wonder of mote on
His work, and how perfect it all is. IPs,
This Psalm, like many others, ends with the
words, "Praise ye the Lord," iTl^n (Halleluiah),
reminding us that every one of us should praise our
Maker, by always trying our utmost to please Him.
With the closing words of the Psalms in our
minds let us ever be striving to praise (which means
to do honour to) God by seeking in all our thoughts
and acts to be just and kind, and to mirror in our
hearts and in our lives the goodness and the loving-
kindness of God.
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? DAILY, SABBATH, AND FESTIVAL
PRAYERS FOR HOME USE
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? DAILY MORNING PRAYERS
Almighty God! we humbly thank Thee for Thy
never-ceasing care of us.
We pray Thee to grant us Thy help and guidance
and Thy merciful forgiveness of our sins. Strengthen
us, O God! to resist bad thoughts and bad wishes,
and to keep ourselves from doing what we know to
be wrong. Help us, O Lord! to try always to do
our duty, to be obedient to our Parents and our
Teachers, and to be industrious in all our work.
Grant Thy blessings, O God! to us and to our
dear Parents and Relations and Friends. Join us
all together in love and kindness to each other, and
teach us, O God! how to help and cheer all those
who are in trouble. Amen!
Note. --The prayer for those we love is not only for the living.
We pray also for the blessing of God--Who delivers "their
soul from death "--on the loved ones who are no longer with us
in this life.
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? DAILY MORNING PRAYERS
Blessed art Thou, O Lord our God, King of the
universe, who removest sleep from mine eyes, and
slumber from mine eyelids.
Blessed art Thou, O Lord our God, King of the
universe, who hast given us the Law of truth, and
hast planted everlasting life in our midst.
Moses commanded us the Law as an inheritance
of the congregation of Jacob.
O my God, guard my tongue from evil, and my
lips from speaking guile.
Open my heart to thy Law, and let my soul
pursue Thy commandments.
Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of
my heart be acceptable before Thee, O Lord, my
Rock and my Redeemer.
Hear, O Israel: the Lord our God, the Lord is One.
(Blessed be His name, whose glorious kingdom is
for ever and ever. )
And thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy
heart and with all thy soul and with all thy might.
And these words which I command thee this day
shall be in thy heart. And thou shalt teach them
diligently unto thy children. And thou shalt speak
of them when thou sittest in thy house, and when
thou walkest by the way, when thou liest down and
when thou risest up. And thou shalt bind them for
a sign upon thy hands and they shall be as frontlets
between thine eyes, and thou shalt write them on
the doorposts of thy house and upon thy gates.
284
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? DAILY MORNING PRAYERS
: *sysy0 nwani ^ya natf
t - : -- t : - is n t. .
: upina yau D^iy *'m ? nax min uS
: - t t --: u: - t
I -:- - ? I: t t V t t- t
: nana naia *nsbn yna ^tpS 'vita
j; . sp#f? jvarji nas jta^ vrr.
t im << wrfot ** bxnb>> yatr
t v t; ? ? . v: t; ? ? t ; ? -:
-Sy Dvn sp? n^n nWn onyp vm
^3^3 D3 rn:3-n sp^1? upjiHpj :^33^
:^pai ^33t? 31 wfep 'PTO
: ^w':n sjn/3 nina Sy onnn^ :y^S?
285
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? DAILY MORNING PSALMS
{It is suggested that one of these Psalms should be read
daily after Morning Prayers)
PAGE
PAGE
PSALM
I.
2
PSALM XCIV. .
134
tt
IV. .
4
XCV. .
138
>>
VIII .
6
XCVI.
140
ft
XV. .
8
XCVII.
144
ft
XXIII.
18
XCVIII.
146
ft
XXV. .
22
XCIX. .
148
M
XXXII.
28
c. . .
152
M
XLII. .
46
? cm. .
154
M
XLIII. .
48
CIV. .
158
ft
XLVI. .
50
CVIII. .
76
M
XLVII.
54
? cxixw'yn
212
tl
L.
60
? Rest of Psalm
214
>l
LX. .
74
cxx. .
? ? 242
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? DAILY MORNING PSALMS
Zhc 3nfant psalter
Tlie twelve simplest Psalms, arranged in order of
simplicity.
PAGE PAGE PAGE
CXVII. . 204 XCIII. . . 134 XCVIII. . 146
C. . . i52] VIII. . . 61 CXXXIII. . 258
CXXXIV. . 2601 XCVI. . . i401 CXXVI. . 252
XXIII.
