4 I will praise you as long as I live, and in your name I will lift up my hands.
4 Thus will I bless thee while I live: I will lift up my hands in thy name.
4 So I will bless you as long as I live; in your name I will lift up my hands.
4 I bless you every time I take a breath; My arms wave like banners of praise to you.
4 Thus I will bless You while I live; I will lift up my hands in Your name.
4 I will praise you as long as I live, lifting up my hands to you in prayer.
2 May my prayer be set before you like incense; may the lifting up of my hands be like the evening sacrifice.
2 Let my prayer be set forth before thee as incense; and the lifting up of my hands as the evening sacrifice.
2 Let my prayer be counted as incense before you, and the lifting up of my hands as the evening sacrifice!
2 Treat my prayer as sweet incense rising; my raised hands are my evening prayers.
2 Let my prayer be set before You as incense, The lifting up of my hands as the evening sacrifice.
2 Accept my prayer as incense offered to you, and my upraised hands as an evening offering.
(Read Psalm 141:1-4)
Make haste unto me. Those that know how to value God's gracious presence, will be the more fervent in their prayers. When presented through the sacrifice and intercession of the Saviour, they will be as acceptable to God as the daily sacrifices and burnings of incense were of old. Prayer is a spiritual sacrifice, it is the offering up the soul and its best affections. Good men know the evil of tongue sins. When enemies are provoking, we are in danger of speaking unadvisedly. While we live in an evil world, and have such evil hearts, we have need to pray that we may neither be drawn nor driven to do any thing sinful. Sinners pretend to find dainties in sin; but those that consider how soon sin will turn into bitterness, will dread such dainties, and pray to God to take them out of their sight, and by his grace to turn their hearts against them. Good men pray against the sweets of sin.
Matthew Henry's Commentary on Psalm 63:4
Commentary on Psalm 63:3-6
(Read Psalm 63:3-6)
Even in affliction we need not want matter for praise. When this is the regular frame of a believer's mind, he values the loving-kindness of God more than life. God's loving-kindness is our spiritual life, and that is better than temporal life. We must praise God with joyful lips; we must address ourselves to the duties of religion with cheerfulness, and speak forth the praises of God from a principle of holy joy. Praising lips must be joyful lips. David was in continual danger; care and fear held his eyes waking, and gave him wearisome nights; but he comforted himself with thoughts of God. The mercies of God, when called to mind in the night watches, support the soul, making darkness cheerful. How happy will be that last morning, when the believer, awaking up after the Divine likeness, shall be satisfied with all the fulness of God, and praise him with joyful lips, where there is no night, and where sorrow and sighing flee away!