psalm 137 message - Axtarish в Google
Alongside Babylon's rivers we sat on the banks; we cried and cried, remembering the good old days in Zion. Alongside the quaking aspens we stacked.
Those that are glad at calamities, especially at the calamities of Jerusalem, shall not go unpunished. We cannot pray for promised success to the church of God ...
Psalm 137 was an encouragement and comfort to God's despondent people since their city of Jerusalem and the temple were in ruins. YHWH was going to help them to ...
It is a mournful psalm, a lamentation; and the Septuagint makes it one of the lamentations of Jeremiah, naming him for the author of it.
David Guzik commentary on Psalm 137, which is a mournful song of the exiles remembering the nations and Babylon, who will be judged.
A curse was a weapon (a way to fight) in war. It stopped other people attacking you. Christians do not need to curse people. Jesus will give them help, and stop ...
The Mourning of the Exiles in Babylon. 137 Alongside Babylon's rivers we sat on the banks; we cried and cried, remembering the good old days in Zion.
Psalm 137 is a text of dramatic lament and longing. Its lines convey a sense of the deep sorrow, traumatically recalling the horror caused when others ...
Alongside Babylon's rivers we sat on the banks; we cried and cried, remembering the good old days in Zion. Alongside the quaking aspens we stacked.
2 сент. 2009 г. · The words of psalm 137 remind us of the gruesome nature of sin, the hatred of God against it, and of the kind of awful judgment that is to come ...
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