| Scripture | Additional Comments | 
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| 1 [[To the Chief Musician. On "the Gittith." Asaph's.]] Shout ye for joy, unto God our strength, Sound the note of triumph, to the God of Jacob; |  | 
| 2 Raise a melody, and strike the timbrel, The lyre so sweet, with the harp: |  | 
| 3 Blow, at the new moon, the horn, At the full moon, for the day of our sacred festival: |  | 
| 4 For, a statute to Israel, it is, A regulation, by the God of Jacob; |  | 
| 5 A testimony in Joseph, he appointed it, When he went forth over the land of Egypt: A language I liked not, used I to hear; |  | 
| 6 I took away, from the burden, his shoulder, his hands, from the clay, were set free. |  | 
| 7 In distress, thou didst cry, and I delivered thee,–I answered thee, within a hiding-place of thunder, I proved thee by the waters of Meribah. [Selah.] |  | 
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| 8 Hear, O my people, and I will adjure thee, O Israel, if thou wilt hearken unto me! |  | 
| 9 There shall not be, within thee, a foreign GOD,–Neither shalt thou bow down to a strange GOD: |  | 
| 10 I, Yahweh, am thy God, Who brought thee up out of the land of Egypt,–Open wide thy mouth, that I may fill it. |  | 
| 11 But my people, hearkened not, unto my voice, Even, Israel, inclined not unto me. |  | 
| 12 So then I let them go on in the stubbornness of their own heart, They might walk in their own counsels! |  | 
| 13 If, my people, were hearkening unto me, [If,] Israel, in my ways, would walk, |  | 
| 14 Right soon, their foes, would I subdue, And, against their adversaries, would I turn my hand: |  | 
| 15 The haters of Yahweh, should come cringing unto him, Then let their own good time be age-abiding! |  | 
| 16 Then would he feed them from the marrow of the wheat, Yea, out of the rock–with honey, would I satisfy thee. |  |