SwordBible
Psalms 145 · ESV
Study →
← Books

Psalms145

English Standard Version

1A Song of . Of . I will you, my and , and your and .

2 I will you and your and .

3 is the Lord, and to be , and his is .

4One shall your to , and shall your .

5On the of your , and on your , I will .

6They shall of the of your , and I will your .

7They shall the of your and shall of your .

8The Lord is and , to and in .

9The Lord is to , and his is that he has .

10 your shall to you, O Lord, and all your shall you!

11They shall of the of your and of your ,

12to make to the of your , and the of your .

13Your is an , and your endures throughout . [The Lord is faithful in all his words and kind in all his works.]

14The Lord who are and who are .

15The of to you, and you them their in due .

16You your ; you the of .

17The Lord is in his and in his .

18The Lord is to who on him, to on him in .

19He the of those who him; he also their and them.

20The Lord who him, but the he will .

21My will the of the Lord, and let his and .

Cross References

Psalms 145
v8Exodus 34:6allusion

Direct verbal echo of the classic self-revelation of God's grace, mercy, and patience.

Supported by Matthew Henry, Matthew Poole, John Calvin, JFB

v9Acts 14:17thematic

Paul's proof of God's universal goodness to all nations, giving them food and gladness.

Supported by Matthew Poole

v15Psalms 104:27thematic

Identical imagery of all creatures looking to God to receive their food in season.

Supported by Matthew Poole, JFB

v3Psalms 48:1thematic

Identical liturgical formulation: 'Great is the Lord, and greatly to be praised.'

Supported by JFB

v8Psalms 103:8thematic

Identical phrasing regarding the Lord being merciful, gracious, and slow to anger.

Supported by JFB

v13Daniel 4:3thematic

Parallel declaration of God's everlasting kingdom and dominion enduring through all generations.

Supported by JFB

v15Psalms 147:9thematic

Parallel showing God providing sustenance to the beasts and to the young ravens.

Supported by Matthew Poole

v16Psalms 104:28thematic

Matches the specific language of God opening His hand to satisfy His creatures' desires.

Supported by JFB

v1Psalms 30:1thematic

Uses the same Hebrew term for extolling God as King and Deliverer.

Supported by JFB

v14Psalms 37:24thematic

Thematic match showing that though a righteous man falls, the Lord upholds him.

Supported by Matthew Henry

v14Psalms 146:8thematic

Parallel praise of God raising up those who are bowed down.

Supported by Matthew Poole

v18John 4:24thematic

Clarifies the meaning of calling upon or worshipping God 'in truth' (sincerity).

Supported by Matthew Poole

v8Psalms 111:4thematic

Associates the memory of His wonderful works with being gracious and full of compassion.

Supported by JFB

v18Deuteronomy 4:7thematic

God's unique proximity to His covenant people whenever they call upon Him.

Supported by Matthew Henry

SwordBible

Want this kind of study for every chapter you read?

Grammatical-historical hermeneutics. Sola Scriptura. Refuses to allegorize. Free Bible reading + 5 AI questions a day, no sign-in required.