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Psalm 9

I Will Give Thanks to the LORD

For the choirmaster. To the tune of “The Death of the Son.” A Psalm of David. a 

1I will give thanks to the LORD with all my heart;

I will recount all Your wonders.

2 I will be glad and rejoice in You;

I will sing praise to Your name, O Most High.

3 When my enemies retreat,

they stumble and perish before You.

4 For You have upheld my just cause;

You sit on Your throne judging righteously.

5 You have rebuked the nations;

You have destroyed the wicked;

You have erased their name forever and ever.

6 The enemy has come to eternal ruin,

and You have uprooted their cities;

the very memory of them has vanished.

7 But the LORD abides forever;

He has established His throne for judgment.

8 He judges the world with justice;

He governs the people with equity.

9 The LORD is a refuge for the oppressed,

a stronghold in times of trouble.

10 Those who know Your name trust in You,

for You, O LORD, have not forsaken those who seek You.

11 Sing praises to the LORD, who dwells in Zion;

proclaim His deeds among the nations.

12 For the Avenger of bloodshed remembers;

He does not ignore the cry of the afflicted.

13 Be merciful to me, O LORD;

see how my enemies afflict me!

Lift me up from the gates of death,

14 that I may declare all Your praises—

that within the gates of Daughter Zion

I may rejoice in Your salvation.

15 The nations have fallen into a pit of their making;

their feet are caught in the net they have hidden.

16 The LORD is known by the justice He brings;

the wicked are ensnared by the work of their hands.

Higgaion Selah b 

17 The wicked will return to Sheol—

all the nations who forget God.

18 For the needy will not always be forgotten;

nor the hope of the oppressed forever dashed.

19 Rise up, O LORD, do not let man prevail;

let the nations be judged in Your presence.

20 Lay terror upon them, O LORD;

let the nations know they are but men.

Selah

 

Footnotes:

1 a Psalms 9 and 10 together follow an acrostic pattern, each stanza beginning with the successive letters of the Hebrew alphabet. In the LXX they form one psalm.
16 b Higgaion Selah or quiet interlude is probably a musical or liturgical term.

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