Hebrew Word Study – Then Sings My Soul Ki ‘Azamarah Nepheshi כי אזמרה נפשי Kap Yod Aleph Zayin Mem Resh Hei Nun Pei Shin Yod
Psalms 71:23: “My lips shall greatly rejoice when I sing unto thee; and my soul, which thou hast redeemed.”
A few months ago I read about the origin of the beloved hymn “How Great Thou Art.” It was originally a poem written by a Swedish poet Carl Boberg who lived from 1859-1940, It was matched to an old Swedish folk song in the late 1800s and was sung by the underground church when Baptists and other evangelicals were under persecution. The song found its way into Ukraine and was translated by the Ukrainians into their language. The song was virtually unknown by the world until an English missionary, Stuart K. Hine on a mission trip shortly after World War II was traveling through Ukraine. As he stopped to admire that majestic scene of the Carpathian mountains, he heard a group of hikers hiking through the Carpathian Mountains singing “Then sings my soul, my Savior God to Thee, How great Thou Art.” I have never been to Ukraine but I viewed a number of pictures of the Carpathian Mountains and even in the pictures I could imagine these Ukrainian Christians hiking through that glorious scene and being awed by the greatness of God bursting out in song of the greatness of God. Stuart Hines said to himself, “That is one song I am going to translate and bring to the Western World.” That is exactly what he did and thanks to Billy Graham this song was introduced to the Western World during the Toronto crusade in 1957 where it was sung a hundred times during that crusade and became a worldwide favorite.
Oddly, for me, it is the words “Then sings my soul” that really capture my attention. Do you ever understand something but can’t explain it? That is what those words do for me. I fully understand what it means for my soul to sing to God, yet, I cannot explain it. Still, I know exactly what those Ukrainian hikers and Stuart Hines felt when they burst out in singing “How Great Thou Art.”
Would you like Chaim Bentorah as your personal Hebrew teacher?
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The moment I sense the awesomeness of God, His greatness, and His power. When I look up at a cloudless sky at night I know my soul is singing. I am not speaking words from my lips, but there is a nonverbal communication going on between God and me as I just “Bow in humble adoration and there proclaim, my God how great Thou Art.”
Psalms 71:23: “My lips shall greatly rejoice when I sing unto thee; and my soul, which thou hast redeemed.” When I examine this in the Hebrew the syntax seems a little ambiguous. On the one hand, it seems that David is singing with his lips and his soul. There are two separate parts to his being and both are singing to God. Then this could also be rendered as “Then by lips sing my soul to Thee.” I tend to think both renderings mean the same thing.
I grew up in the church and I heard a lot of choirs, duets, trios, quartets and soloist sing. I know one should not be judgmental but I am just sharing what I felt. I heard a lot of show boaters. These are talented individuals. They know how to sing, they can take a breath in the right spot, they can sing on key and do all the right things and what comes out is beautiful. And they know they sound beautiful. Yet, it feels like something is missing, something is just not right.
Then I listen to someone sing, the person does not have the greatest voice, cannot really hit that high note, and is maybe a bit off-key. Yet, I am mesmerized, I am moved and I can see tears in the eyes of people around me.
There is the story of a great artist who sat all day in an art museum where his work was on display. Nobody recognized him as an artist. He just quietly sat in front of his favorite paintings anxious to hear the wonderful comments that people would make. After a day of sitting and watching people pass by his work he went to the curator and demanded that the painting be removed. The curator asked why and he said: “I sat all day watching hundreds of people view my painting and not one had a comment. I wished they would have hated it and expressed their hatred, then at least I know my painting stirred something within someone. Yet, not one person had a comment, they just looked and walked by. That painting, my painting is not art and it must be removed from the gallery. It does not stir the soul.”
That is why David says his lips and soul will sing. The word song that is used here in Hebrew is zamar which is a song of praise. So are other words for a song in Hebrew. This word is unique in that it is also a word for pruning and energizing. Zamar is not a song of entertainment, not a song telling a story, it is a form of art, it is a song that is often wordless but creates a sense of energy. The word good, tov, means to be in harmony. When God created the world He saw that it was good, and in harmony with Him. It was in harmony with Him because just before creation we learn the Spirit of God hovered over the earth. Some translations say fluttered, and some say brooded but the word in Hebrew is rachaph which means to move back and forth very quickly. Today we would use the word vibrate.
Now, what is a musical song, but vibrations? So when your soul sings or vibrates to God, it is joined with God’s vibrations, in harmony with His vibrations and when musical vibrations are in total synchronization, you have something very beautiful and pleasing to the ear. No matter how perfect your musical voice may be and how great it may sound, it does not mean that it is in harmony if your soul is not singing it to God.
If you can describe what it means for the soul to sing to God, I would love to hear from you for I cannot describe it, but I know when it is both the lips and the soul in harmony with God. I know it but I just can’t explain it. My first year in Bible College was at a small Bible College in Missouri. It had about 300 students. One of the founders of the college was still alive and would visit the college often. He had to be in his 90’s. He loved the students, we loved him and he was the most spiritually-minded man I ever met. One day he spoke in chapel. He concluded his message by singing an old hymn. His voice broke, he wasn’t on key. Maybe in his day, he had a fine musical voice, but age had obviously robbed him of it. Yet, there was dead silence as he sang, tears were in the eyes of many students and even my roommate who was usually rather cynical leaned over and whispered to me: “You know where that song came from.” His soul was singing not only to the God that he loved with all his heart but to the students that he also loved.
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Thanks & Blessings, it means a lot to me!
So then ‘better felt than telt’ my pastor said this often. God bless you Chaim and all that help you in this awesome endeavour. I guess you also love your students …Darlene
Sing, O daughter of Zion! Shout, O Israel! Be glad and rejoice with all your heart, O daughter of Jerusalem! Yahuwah has taken away your judgments, He has cast out your enemy. The King of Israel, Yahuwah, is in your midst; you shall see disaster no more. In that day it shall be said to Jerusalem: “Do not fear; Zion, let not your hands be weak. Yahuwah your Elohim in your midst, the Mighty One, will save; He will rejoice over you with gladness, He will quiet you with His love, He will rejoice over you with singing.” Zephaniah 3:14-17. HalleluYah!
Thank you so very, very much for sharing the deep mystery of the interaction between Song and Spirit. I believe some things can’t be expressed in mere words and that is why we have the gift of music.
Words are a direct symbolic system for communication, based mainly on thought (cognition). You say a word, I have a shared, learned understanding of almost exactly what that word means, so I understand you. Music, on the other hand, is an *indirect* symbolic system for communication, mainly based upon emotion. I may not understand exactly what is meant by a sequence of notes, but I have a tremendous amount of understanding of how the composer *felt* when he or she wrote and/or performed it.
When music and words combine in song, there is an interaction that goes on between the thoughts expressed by the lyrics and the emotion conveyed by the music. The result amplifies the felt meaningfulness of the lyric and provides deeper understanding of the emotion expressed the through the music. The gifts of speech and music together in song is, indeed, among the most precious of gifts with which we’ve been blessed.
As a gifted holy man observed in his sermon in the late 1400s (I’m sorry, I can’t find my copy of it and have forgotten whether he was a monk, pastor, or priest…) , there are only two things worthy of study in this life: religion and music. For they are the only two things that we are assured exist both on earth and in heaven (he cited witness of angels singing as proof!).
There’s obviously far more to this blessed intertwining of thought and emotion, but I’ve already rambled long enough.
Again, thank you for sharing your extraordinary love of God and your gift of scriptural understanding with us. I have learned so much and my faith grows deeper each day through your insights.
Thank you for the whole teaching. perfect. Interesting also how it adds to the understanding of Jesus’ words to the Laodacian church.
Your Hebrew studies about the Lord stir my soul so much my heart flutters and my breathing is deeper. I understand now God fluttering over the deep. My singing to Him ends many times in uncontrolled breathing, tears and a heavy heart (which is a mess) because it sounds like a high pitched moan similar to a dove’s call.
Beautiful, thank you so very much for this teaching :)
Yes.
And as Our wholeness, heart, lips, and soul sing unto The Lord God Almighty, it becomes what is known in heaven as Worship to The One who is over all, and He begins Singing Over Us as joy overflows from his heart,lips, and Soul.
Zephaniah 3:17
The Lord your God is with you, he is mighty to save. He will take great delight in you, he will quiet you with his love, he will rejoice over you with singing.”
Blessings upon you.
Amen and amen