forked from WycliffeAssociates/en_tn_condensed
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1.1 KiB
General Information:
Parallelism is common in Hebrew poetry. (See: rc://en/ta/man/jit/writing-poetry and rc://en/ta/man/jit/figs-parallelism)
For the chief musician. A psalm of David, the servant of Yahweh, when he sang to Yahweh the words of this song on the day that Yahweh rescued him from the hand of all his enemies and from the hand of Saul. He sang:
This is a superscription that tells about the psalm. Some scholars say that this is part of the scripture and some say that it is not. (See "What are Superscriptions in Psalms" in Introduction to Psalms.)
For the chief musician
"This is for the director of music to use in worship."
A psalm of David
Possible meanings are 1) David wrote the psalm or 2) the psalm is about David or 3) the psalm is in the style of David's psalms.
he sang to Yahweh the words of this song
"he sang this song to Yahweh"
on the day that Yahweh rescued him
"after Yahweh had rescued him"
from the hand of Saul
Here "hand" stands for the power of Saul. Alternate translation: "from Saul's power" (See: rc://en/ta/man/jit/figs-metonymy)