Psalms 104:6

Berean Standard Bible · deep dive

You covered it with the deep like a garment; the waters stood above the mountains.

This deep dive was funded by Tejas Kumar, a dewfall+ member — and kept free for every reader.

What it means

Picture the earth as a newborn, and God wrapping it up — but the blanket He uses is the ocean. That's the image. "You covered it with the deep like a garment." The Hebrew word for "deep" here is the same word used in Genesis 1:2, where the Spirit of God hovers over "the deep." So the psalmist is deliberately taking you back to the very beginning, when there was nothing but dark water and God.

Then the second line: "the waters stood above the mountains." Read that slowly. Above. Not beside. Not lapping at. Above. The mountains we think of as immovable were once underwater. The biggest, most permanent thing you can imagine — a mountain range — was once just terrain at the bottom of an ocean God hadn't drained yet.

Where does this sit in the larger song? Psalm 104 is a hymn celebrating God as Creator, walking through Genesis 1 in poetry. Verses 1–4 paint God Himself — robed in light, riding the clouds. Verses 5–9 are the founding of the earth: God lays the foundations (verse 5), covers it with the deep (verse 6), then rebukes the water and sends it fleeing (verses 7–8) and sets a boundary it cannot cross (verse 9). So verse 6 is the "before" picture. It's the chaos right before God speaks order.

Christians have split on whether this is describing the original creation (Genesis 1) or the great Flood of Noah (Genesis 7). Most readers — Jewish and Christian, ancient and modern — read it as creation, because verses 5 and 9 only make sense that way: God is founding the earth, not flooding a finished one. But some early church writers (like Augustine in places) heard echoes of both, since the same word — the deep — shows up in both stories.

Historical Context

Psalm 104 doesn't carry a name in its title — no "of David," no "of Asaph" — so we don't know who wrote it. Most scholars date it somewhere in the long stretch between King Solomon (around 950 BC) and the period after the Babylonian exile (the catastrophe in 586 BC when the Babylonian army destroyed Jerusalem and dragged the survivors east in chains). It feels like a temple song, meant for public worship.

Here's the fascinating thing: there's an Egyptian poem called the Great Hymn to the Aten, written by Pharaoh Akhenaten around 1350 BC, that sounds startlingly like parts of Psalm 104. Same structure, same wonder at sun and animals and water. Scholars argue about whether the Israelite poet knew it directly, knew a tradition descended from it, or whether the parallels are just because people everywhere look up at the same sun. Either way, Psalm 104 is doing something the Egyptian hymn isn't: it's deliberately ransacking Genesis 1 and putting it to music.

Why does verse 6 matter to the original audience? In the ancient world around Israel — among the Canaanites, Babylonians, and Egyptians — the sea was terrifying. It was chaos. In Babylonian myth, the storm-god Marduk had to kill the sea-monster Tiamat to make the world. In Canaanite stories, Baal had to fight Yam, the sea, to become king. Water was an enemy gods had to defeat.

Then comes Israel's poet, calmly saying: no. The deep isn't a rival god. It's not even a fight. It's a garment God draped over the earth and then peeled back when He was ready. The sea is God's bathwater, not His opponent. To a people surrounded by sea-monster mythologies, that's a quiet, devastating claim.

Original Language

תְּהוֹם (tehom) — "the deep." This is the word. It's the same one in Genesis 1:2, "darkness was over the surface of the deep." Some linguists hear a faint echo of the Babylonian sea-monster Tiamat in this word, but in Hebrew, tehom has been completely de-fanged. It's not a god, not a beast — just a noun, just water. The Bible takes the scariest mythological word in the neighborhood and turns it into a piece of God's wardrobe.

לְבוּשׁ (levush) — "garment, clothing." Not a ceremonial robe, just regular clothes — what you'd throw on in the morning. The picture is casual, almost domestic. God dresses the earth in oceans the way you'd dress a child.

כִּסִּיתוֹ (kissito) — "you covered it." From the root kasah, to cover. The same verb used for covering sin (Psalm 32:1), covering shame, covering the ark. Covering is intimate, protective work.

יַעַמְדוּ-מָיִם (ya'amdu mayim) — "the waters stood." The verb amad means to stand, take a position, hold ground. The waters weren't just sloshing — they were standing at attention above the mountains, the way soldiers stand. They were there because God told them to be there. And in verse 7, when He rebukes them, they flee like soldiers under fire.

Application

You probably came to this verse looking for comfort or wisdom about your week, and instead you got cosmology. Stay with me.

Here's what verse 6 wants to do to you: it wants to shrink you, and that's a gift. The thing you're afraid of right now — the diagnosis, the conversation you're avoiding, the money that won't stretch, the child who won't talk to you — feels like a mountain. Immovable. Permanent. Looming.

The psalmist says: God once covered actual mountains in ocean and then rolled the ocean back like a blanket. Your mountain is not the biggest thing in the room. God is.

But notice what the verse is not saying. It's not promising your mountain will move tomorrow. It's not a self-help slogan. It's something deeper and quieter: the God you pray to is the One for whom the deep is a piece of clothing. He puts oceans on and takes them off. That God is listening to you.

Here's the cost. This verse asks you to stop treating God as your peer, your therapist, your sympathetic uncle. If God covered the mountains with the deep like a garment, then your demand to understand His ways before you'll trust them is, frankly, ridiculous. You don't get to understand. You get to worship.

And worship looks like this: you stop telling God how to run your life today. You actually open your hands. You say, "If You can drape oceans over mountains, You can handle this." And then — here's the hard part — you go to bed without checking your phone one more time, without rehearsing the argument in your head, without lying awake managing the universe.

Sleep. He's awake. He's dressed in light, and the deep is His garment.

Prayer Points

Reflections

Sources

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