Psalms 150:2
Praise him for his mighty acts: praise him according to his excellent greatness.
Original Language Analysis
Cross References
Historical Context
The emphasis on God's 'mighty acts' (gibborot, literally 'mighty deeds') connects to the narrative tradition of Israel's history: deliverance from Egypt, conquest, restoration from exile. These historical works of God provided the content of liturgical praise. The Psalms frequently recount these acts as grounds for worship (Psalm 77:11-12, 105:1-7). In the tradition of the Hallel Psalms (Psalms 113-118, sung at Passover and festivals), recounting God's mighty acts was integral to the liturgy. The phrase 'according to his excellent greatness' implies that praise should be proportional - the more one understands God's character, the more enthusiastically one should praise. In medieval Jewish thought, philosophers attempted to balance rational understanding of God's greatness with emotional worship, using verses like this to argue that both intellectual and emotional dimensions of praise are necessary. The verse provides biblical support for worship that combines intellectual content (knowledge of God's mighty acts) with emotional expression (praise proportional to greatness).
Questions for Reflection
- What is the relationship between knowing God's mighty acts and offering authentic praise?
- How does understanding God's 'excellent greatness' affect the character and quality of our praise?
- Why should praise be 'according to' God's greatness rather than simply as much as we feel capable of offering?
- In what ways does grounding praise in God's mighty acts prevent worship from becoming disconnected from reality?
- How should contemporary believers identify and celebrate God's mighty acts as grounds for praise?
Analysis & Commentary
This verse begins the enumeration of instruments and reasons for praise: 'Praise him for his mighty acts: praise him according to his excellent greatness.' The command 'Praise him for his mighty acts' (be-gibrot-o) specifies the content of praise: God's powerful deeds and demonstrations of strength. This is not abstract praise but praise grounded in God's actions in history and creation. 'Praise him according to his excellent greatness' (ke-rov gudul-o) establishes the measure of praise: it should match the magnitude of God's greatness. The parallel structure emphasizes both God's demonstrable acts and His incomparable character. The verse establishes that praise should be informed by knowledge: we praise because of what God has done (mighty acts) and what God is (excellent greatness). This verse counters purely emotional worship - praise should correspond to understanding of God's actual character and works. The phrase 'according to his excellent greatness' suggests that our praise, however enthusiastic, will always be inadequate to the reality it attempts to express.