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Psalms 128
A short blessing-poem for the ordinary household: the one who fears the LORD eats the bread his own hands earned, with a wife like a fruitful vine and children like olive shoots around the table (vv. 1-3). Domestic peace, not battlefield victory, is the reward in view. Watch how the camera widens at verse 5: the personal blessing pours "out of Zion" and ends on the whole nation, "Peace be upon Israel." The pilgrim's own kitchen is tied to the good of Jerusalem.
- 1
Blessed is everyone who fears the LORD, who walks in his ways.
- 2
For you will eat the labor of your hands. You will be happy, and it will be well with you.
- 3
Your wife will be as a fruitful vine in the innermost parts of your house, your children like olive shoots around your table.
- 4
Behold, this is how the man who fears the LORD is blessed.
- 5
May the LORD bless you out of Zion, and may you see the good of Jerusalem all the days of your life.
- 6
Yes, may you see your children’s children. Peace be upon Israel.
- 1
Bem-aventurado é todo aquele que teme ao SENHOR, que anda nos seus caminhos.
- 2
Pois você comerá do trabalho das suas mãos. Você será feliz, e tudo lhe irá bem.
- 3
Sua esposa será como uma videira frutífera no interior da sua casa, seus filhos como brotos de oliveira ao redor da sua mesa.
- 4
Eis que assim será abençoado o homem que teme ao SENHOR.
- 5
Que o SENHOR o abençoe desde Sião, e que você veja o bem de Jerusalém todos os dias da sua vida.
- 6
Sim, que você veja os filhos dos seus filhos. Paz seja sobre Israel.
Work that finally tastes sweet
Verse 2's promise — "you will eat the labor of your hands" — quietly reverses the curses of frustrated toil where others reap what you sow. Here the laborer keeps his own harvest, and that is named happiness.
The wish to "see your children's children" (v. 6) stretches the blessing across three generations, binding one settled home to the long survival of the people.
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