Psalm 150 (Vulgate)


Psalm 150 (Vulgate / Hebrew)
Laudate Dominum in sanctis ejus

By GRAHAM JOHN

The final psalm abandons petition, argument, and narrative. What remains is praise alone — sound answering being, breath answering gift.

6 verses total


VERSUS 1–6 (LATIN + LITERAL ENGLISH + WORD NOTES)

1

Laudate Dominum in sanctis ejus: laudate eum in firmamento virtutis ejus.
Praise the Lord in his holy place; praise him in the firmament of his power.

Word Notes

  • laudō, laudāre, laudāvī, laudātum — to praise
  • sanctum, sanctī (n.) — holy place
  • firmāmentum, firmāmentī (n.) — firmament
  • virtūs, virtūtis (f.) — power

2

Laudate eum in virtutibus ejus: laudate eum secundum multitudinem magnitudinis ejus.
Praise him for his mighty deeds; praise him according to the abundance of his greatness.

Word Notes

  • secundum — according to
  • multitūdō, multitūdinis (f.) — abundance
  • magnitūdō, magnitūdinis (f.) — greatness

3

Laudate eum in sono tubæ: laudate eum in psalterio et cithara.
Praise him with the sound of the trumpet; praise him with harp and lyre.

Word Notes

  • sonus, sonī (m.) — sound
  • tuba, tubæ (f.) — trumpet
  • psalterium, psalteriī (n.) — harp
  • cithara, citharae (f.) — lyre

4

Laudate eum in tympano et choro: laudate eum in chordis et organo.
Praise him with timbrel and dance; praise him with strings and pipe.

Word Notes

  • tympanum, tympanī (n.) — drum
  • chorus, chorī (m.) — dance
  • chorda, chordae (f.) — string
  • organum, organī (n.) — pipe, instrument

5

Laudate eum in cymbalis benesonantibus: laudate eum in cymbalis jubilations.
Praise him with resounding cymbals; praise him with cymbals of jubilation.

Word Notes

  • cymbalum, cymbalī (n.) — cymbal
  • benesonans — well-resounding
  • jubilātiō, jubilātiōnis (f.) — joyful shout

6

Omnis spiritus laudet Dominum. Alleluia.
Let everything that breathes praise the Lord. Alleluia.

Word Notes

  • omnis — every
  • spīritus, spīritūs (m.) — breath, spirit
  • alleluia — praise the Lord

MORPHOLOGY EXERCISES (5)

Identify tense, voice, mood, and principal parts:

  1. laudate
  2. secundum
  3. benesonantibus
  4. jubilations
  5. laudet

MORPHOLOGY EXERCISES — KEY

laudate

  • Verb: laudō, laudāre, laudāvī, laudātum
  • Tense: present
  • Voice: active
  • Mood: imperative (plural)
  • Meaning: praise!

secundum

  • Preposition with accusative
  • Meaning: according to

benesonantibus

  • Adjective (ablative plural, agreeing with cymbalis)
  • Meaning: well-resounding

jubilations

  • Noun: jubilātiō, jubilātiōnis (f.)
  • Case: genitive singular
  • Meaning: of jubilation

laudet

  • Verb: laudō, laudāre
  • Tense: present
  • Voice: active
  • Mood: subjunctive (jussive)
  • Meaning: let … praise

TRANSLATION EXERCISES (5)

Translate into Latin:

  1. Praise the Lord in his holy place.
  2. Praise him for his mighty deeds.
  3. Praise him with trumpet and harp.
  4. Praise him with dance and music.
  5. Let everything that breathes praise the Lord.

TRANSLATION EXERCISES — KEY

  1. Laudate Dominum in sanctis ejus.
  2. Laudate eum in virtutibus ejus.
  3. Laudate eum in sono tubæ et psalterio.
  4. Laudate eum in tympano et choro.
  5. Omnis spiritus laudet Dominum.

SUMMARY (≈120 words)

Psalm 150 is the Psalter reduced to its essence. There is no instruction, confession, or memory — only sound. Praise is no longer reasoned but enacted, embodied in breath and rhythm. Instruments multiply until language itself gives way to resonance. The final imperative is universal: not Israel alone, not humanity alone, but everything that breathes. After lament, protest, wisdom, history, fear, and hope, the Psalter ends where it began beneath all words — existence responding to its source. Praise here is not persuasion or reward; it is alignment. Breath returns to the one who gave it.


FINAL REFLECTION

If prayer begins in need and matures through understanding, Psalm 150 suggests that it ends in participation — life itself becoming response.

Alleluia.

Beātus vir quī nōn dēserit, sed colit, quod eī commissum est.

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