WEB
Psalms 133
Three verses, one image stacked on another. The poet praises kindred living together in unity and reaches for two pictures to say what that feels like: oil running down Aaron's beard onto his robes, and the dew of Hermon falling on Zion's hills. Watch how the comparisons move downward — oil descending, dew descending — and land on the last word, a blessing the LORD commands there: life forever.
- 1
See how good and how pleasant it is for brothers to live together in unity!
- 2
It is like the precious oil on the head, that ran down on the beard, even Aaron’s beard, that came down on the edge of his robes,
- 3
like the dew of Hermon, that comes down on the hills of Zion; for there the LORD gives the blessing, even life forever more.
- 1
Vejam como é bom e como é agradável que os irmãos vivam juntos em união!
- 2
É como o óleo precioso sobre a cabeça, que escorreu pela barba, a barba de Arão, que desceu até a orla de suas vestes,
- 3
como o orvalho do Hermom, que desce sobre os montes de Sião; pois ali o SENHOR concede a bênção, a vida para todo o sempre.
Why oil and dew
Both images are about something poured from above that spreads and saturates. The anointing oil ties unity to the priesthood of Aaron; Hermon's dew, carried south to dry Zion, makes it a gift no one manufactures. One of the Songs of Ascents, sung by pilgrims gathering at the temple, it fits a crowd arriving together.
Context layers
Keep these closed by default and open them only when you want more context.
Share a small range via:
/en/web/psalms/133/16-18
Or use the Passage link builder.