Psalm 81

Sing for Joy to God Our Strength

For the choirmaster. According to Gittith.1 Of Asaph.

¹ Sing for joy to God our strength; make a joyful noise to the God of Jacob.

² Lift up a song, strike the tambourine, play the sweet-sounding harp and lyre.

³ Sound the ram’s horn at the New Moon, and at the full moon on the day of our Feast.

For this is a statute for Israel, an ordinance of the God of Jacob.

He ordained it as a testimony for Joseph 2 when he went out over the land of Egypt, where I heard an unfamiliar language:

“I relieved his shoulder of the burden; his hands were freed from the basket.

You called out in distress, and I rescued you; I answered you from the cloud of thunder; I tested you at the waters of Meribah.3 Selah

Hear, O My people, and I will warn you: O Israel, if only you would listen to Me!

There must be no strange god among you, nor shall you bow to a foreign god.

¹⁰ I am the LORD your God, who brought you up out of Egypt. Open wide your mouth, and I will fill it.

¹¹ But My people would not listen to Me, and Israel would not obey Me.

¹² So I gave them up to their stubborn hearts to follow their own devices.

¹³ If only My people would listen to Me, if Israel would follow My ways,

¹⁴ how soon I would subdue their enemies and turn My hand against their foes!

¹⁵ Those who hate the LORD would feign obedience, and their doom would last forever.

¹⁶ But I would feed you the finest wheat; with honey from the rock I would satisfy you.”


  1. 81:0 Gittith is probably a musical or liturgical term; here and in Psalms 8 and 84. ↩︎

  2. 81:5 Or in Joseph ↩︎

  3. 81:7 Meribah means quarreling; see Exodus 17:7. ↩︎