One generation will commend your works to another, and will declare your mighty acts.
Parallel translations
- KJV One generation shall praise thy works to another, and shall declare thy mighty acts.
- BSB One generation will commend Your works to the next, and will proclaim Your mighty acts—
- NKJV One generation shall praise Your works to another, And shall declare Your mighty acts.
- NASB One generation will praise Your works to another, And will declare Your mighty acts.
- NLT Let each generation tell its children of your mighty acts; let them proclaim your power.
Scripture taken from the New King James Version®. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Scripture quotations taken from the (NASB®) New American Standard Bible®, Copyright © 1960, 1971, 1977, 1995, 2020 by The Lockman Foundation. Used by permission. All rights reserved. lockman.org
Scripture quotations are taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation, copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Quick answer
Each generation will pass on the testimony of God's mighty works to the next. Praise and faith are meant to be handed down through the generations.
Overview
God's deeds are not merely remembered privately but proclaimed publicly from parents to children, sustaining covenant faith across time. This generational transmission guards against forgetting what God has done. The church continues this calling, declaring the mighty acts of God supremely accomplished in the death and resurrection of Christ.
Cross-references & the web
Cross-references · 8
- Ps 71:18Yes, even when I am old and gray-haired, God, don’t forsake me, until I have declared your strength to the next generation, your might to everyone who is to come.
- Ps 78:3–7Which we have heard and known, and our fathers have told us.
- Deut 6:7and you shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise up.
- Isa 38:19The living, the living, he shall praise you, as I do today. The father shall make known your truth to the children.
- Josh 4:21–24He spoke to the children of Israel, saying, “When your children ask their fathers in time to come, saying, ‘What do these stones mean?’
- Ps 44:1–2For the Chief Musician. By the sons of Korah. A contemplative psalm. We have heard with our ears, God; our fathers have told us, what work you did in their days, in the days of old.
- Exod 12:26–27It will happen, when your children ask you, ‘What do you mean by this service?’
- Exod 13:14–15It shall be, when your son asks you in time to come, saying, ‘What is this?’ that you shall tell him, ‘By strength of hand Yahweh brought us out from Egypt, from the house of bondage.
Themes, concepts, people & topics
Resources, by level
Commentaries & study tools
Free animated overview and word-study videos for this book.
Sermons and teaching on this passage from across YouTube.
Clear, readable, conservative exposition — the best free place to start on any passage.
Matthew Henry, Barnes, Gill, the Pulpit Commentary, Ellicott, Cambridge, and more — stacked on one page for this exact verse.
The beloved Puritan exposition of this whole book — warm, devotional, and verse by verse (free, CCEL).
Hebrew/Greek interlinear, word definitions, and cross-references for this verse.
Christ at the center
The Psalms are Christ's own prayer book and a gallery of his portraits — the suffering one of Psalm 22, the risen Lord of Psalm 16, the priest-king of Psalm 110, the Son to whom the nations are given.
How Psalms 145:4 points to him is part of the one story that runs through all Scripture — meet Jesus at the heart of the web, or follow a trail that traces him from Genesis to Revelation.
Original language
Each word below is tagged with its Strong’s number — tap one to see the underlying Hebrew word, its meaning, and every verse that uses it.