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PARALLEL BIBLE - Psalms 103:5


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King James Bible - Psalms 103:5

Who satisfieth thy mouth with good things; so that thy youth is renewed like the eagle's.

World English Bible

who satisfies your desire with good things, so that your youth is renewed like the eagle's.

Douay-Rheims - Psalms 103:5

Who satisfieth thy desire with good things: thy youth shall be renewed like the eagle's.

Webster's Bible Translation

Who satisfieth thy mouth with good things; so that thy youth is renewed like the eagle's.

Original Hebrew

המשׂביע
7646 בטוב 2896 עדיך 5716 תתחדשׁ 2318 כנשׁר 5404 נעוריכי׃ 5271

Treasury of Scriptural Knowledge

VERSE (5) -
Ps 23:5; 63:5; 65:4; 104:28; 107:9; 115:15,16 1Ti 6:17

SEV Biblia, Chapter 103:5

el que sacia de bien tu boca de modo que te rejuvenezcas como el įguila.

Clarke's Bible Commentary - Psalms 102:5

Verse 5. Who satisfieth thy mouth ] 6. For continual communications of
spiritual and temporal good; so that the vigour of his mind was constantly supported and increased.

Thy youth is renewed like the eagle's. ] There is such a vast variety of the eagle, or genus Falco, that it is not easy to determine which is meant here.

The Hebrew rn neser is a general name for such as were known in the land of Judea; which were probably such as belong to the genus Aquila, comprehending forty-one species and seven varieties.

There are as many legends of the eagle among the ancient writers, as there are of some saints in the calendar; and all equally true. Even among modern divines, Bible Dictionary men, and such like, the most ridiculous tales concerning this bird continue to be propagated; and no small portion of them have been crowded into comments on this very verse. One specimen my old Psalter affords, which, for its curiosity, I shall lay before the reader: - Trans. "Newed sal be als of aeren thi youthed." Par. The arne when he is greved with grete elde, his neb waxis so gretely, that he may nogt open his mouth and take mete: bot then he smytes his neb to the stane, and has away the solgh, and than he gaes til mete, and be commes yong a gayne. Swa Criste duse a way fra us oure elde of syn and mortalite, that settes us to ete oure brede in hevene, and newes us in hym.

The plain English of all this is: ] "When the arne [eagle, from the Anglo-Saxon [A.S.], a word which Dr. Jamieson has not entered in his dictionary - is oppressed with old age, his bill grows so much that he cannot open his mouth in order to take meat. He then smites his bill against a stone, and breaks off the slough-the excrescence that prevented him from eating; and then he goes to his ordinary food, and becomes young again. So Christ takes away from us our old age of sin and death, and gives us to eat of that bread which comes down from heaven: and thus gives us a new life in himself." I believe the meaning of the psalmist is much more simple: he refers to the moulting of birds, which, in most, takes place annually, in which they cast their old feathers and get a new plumage. To express this, he might as well have chosen any bird, as this is common to all the feathered race; but he chose the king of the birds, because of his bulk, his strength, and vivacity.

The long life of the eagle might have induced the psalmist to give it the preference. An eagle was nine years in the possession of Owen Holland, Esq., of Conway, in Wales, and had lived thirty-two years in the possession of the gentleman who made it a present to him: but of its previous age, for it came from Ireland, we are not informed. Keysler relates that an eagle died at Vienna, after a confinement of one hundred and four years! The eagle can subsist a long time without food. That first mentioned above, through the neglect of a servant, was twenty-one days without food, and yet survived this long fast.

The meaning and moral of the psalmist are not difficult of comprehension.

The Israelites, when redeemed from their captivity, should be so blessed by their God that they should reacquire their political strength and vigour; and should be so quickened by the Divine Spirit, that old things should be passed away, and all things become new.


Matthew Henry Commentary

Verses 1-5 - By the pardon of sin, that is taken away which kept good things from us, and we are restored to the favor of God, who bestows good things of us. Think of the provocation; it was sin, and yet pardoned: how man the provocations, yet all pardoned! God is still forgiving, as we ar still sinning and repenting. The body finds the melancholy consequence of Adam's offence, it is subject to many infirmities, and the sou also. Christ alone forgives all our sins; it is he alone who heals all our infirmities. And the person who finds his sin cured, has well-grounded assurance that it is forgiven. When God, by the grace and comforts of his Spirit, recovers his people from their decays, an fills them with new life and joy, which is to them an earnest of eternal life and joy, they may then be said to return to the days of their youth, Job 33:25.


Original Hebrew

המשׂביע 7646 בטוב 2896 עדיך 5716 תתחדשׁ 2318 כנשׁר 5404 נעוריכי׃ 5271


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