Psalm 137

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Psalms • תהילים (Tehilim)

Psalm 23Psalm 51Psalm 67
Psalm 69Psalm 89Psalm 91
Psalm 95Psalm 96Psalm 98
Psalm 100Psalm 103Psalm 104
Psalm 109Psalms 113-118Psalm 119
Psalm 130Psalm 137Psalm 143
Psalm 151Psalms 152–155


Complete Psalms 1–150

King James version
American Standard version
World English version
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Psalm 137 (Greek numbering: Psalm 136) is one of the best known of the Biblical psalms. Its opening lines ("By the rivers of Babylon...") have been set to music on several occasions.

The psalm is a hymn expressing the yearnings of the Jewish people in exile following the Babylonian conquest of Jerusalem in 586 BC. The rivers of Babylon are the Euphrates river, its tributaries, and the Chebar river. In its whole form, the psalm reflects the yearning for Jerusalem as well as hatred for the Holy City's enemies with sometimes violent imagery. Rabbinical sources attributed the poem to the prophet Jeremiah.[1]

The early lines of the poem are very well known, as they describe the sadness of the Israelites, asked to "sing the Lord's song in a foreign land". This they refuse to do, leaving their harps hanging on trees. The poem then turns into self-exhortation to remember Jerusalem. It ends with violent fantasies of revenge, delighting in the thought of smashing the heads of Babylonian children against rocks.

Many musical settings censor the last verse.

The hymn is included in the Anglican Book of Common Prayer, where the opening words are translated as "by the waters of Babylon". In William Walton's oratorio Belshazzar's Feast this version of the opening section is set to music, as if sung by the Israelite captives in Babylon.

Brent Dowe and Trevor McNaughton of The Melodians wrote a version of the psalm set to the music of Jamaica entitled "Rivers of Babylon." Another version of the psalm was used in the Broadway musical Godspell.

Psalm 137 is the source of the title of Stephen Vincent Benet's short story By the Waters of Babylon.

The most famous musical rendition of this psalm was by Boney M in the 1970s

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ James L. Kugel, "Psalm 137," in In Potiphar's House (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1994)

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