119:46 I will speak 1 about your regulations before kings
and not be ashamed.
119:172 May my tongue sing about your instructions, 2
for all your commands are just.
34:11 Come children! Listen to me!
I will teach you what it means to fear the Lord. 3
37:30 The godly speak wise words
and promote justice. 4
40:9 I have told the great assembly 5 about your justice. 6
Look! I spare no words! 7
O Lord, you know this is true.
40:10 I have not failed to tell about your justice; 8
I spoke about your reliability and deliverance;
I have not neglected to tell the great assembly about your loyal love and faithfulness. 9
71:15 I will tell about your justice,
and all day long proclaim your salvation, 10
though I cannot fathom its full extent. 11
71:16 I will come and tell about 12 the mighty acts of the sovereign Lord.
I will proclaim your justice – yours alone.
71:17 O God, you have taught me since I was young,
and I am still declaring 13 your amazing deeds.
71:18 Even when I am old and gray, 14
O God, do not abandon me,
until I tell the next generation about your strength,
and those coming after me about your power. 15
118:17 I will not die, but live,
and I will proclaim what the Lord has done. 16
1 tn The series of four cohortatives with prefixed vav (ו) conjunctive in vv. 46-48 list further consequences of the anticipated positive divine response to the request made in v. 43.
2 tn Heb “your word.”
3 tn Heb “the fear of the
4 tn Heb “The mouth of the godly [one] utters wisdom, and his tongue speaks justice.” The singular form is used in a representative sense; the typical godly individual is in view. The imperfect verbal forms draw attention to the characteristic behavior of the godly.
5 sn The great assembly is also mentioned in Pss 22:25 and 35:18.
6 tn Heb “I proclaim justice in the great assembly.” Though “justice” appears without a pronoun here, the
7 tn Heb “Look! My lips I do not restrain.”
8 tn Heb “your justice I have not hidden in the midst of my heart.”
9 tn Heb “I have not hidden your loyal love and reliability.”
10 tn Heb “my mouth declares your vindication, all the day your deliverance.”
11 tn Heb “though I do not know [the] numbers,” that is, the tally of God’s just and saving acts. HALOT 768 s.v. סְפֹרוֹת understands the plural noun to mean “the art of writing.”
12 tn Heb “I will come with.”
13 tn Heb “and until now I am declaring.”
14 tn Heb “and even unto old age and gray hair.”
15 tn Heb “until I declare your arm to a generation, to everyone who comes your power.” God’s “arm” here is an anthropomorphism that symbolizes his great strength.
16 tn Heb “the works of the
17 tn Grk “what you hear in the ear,” an idiom.
18 tn The expression “proclaim from the housetops” is an idiom for proclaiming something publicly (L&N 7.51). Roofs of many first century Jewish houses in Judea and Galilee were flat and had access either from outside or from within the house. Something shouted from atop a house would be heard by everyone in the street below.
19 tn Grk “for we are not able not to speak about what we have seen and heard,” but the double negative, which cancels out in English, is emphatic in Greek. The force is captured somewhat by the English translation “it is impossible for us not to speak…” although this is slightly awkward.