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Who is the accepted author of Psalm 137, and if it was David Hamelech, then is it accepted as a prophecy?

Michoel
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    related http://judaism.stackexchange.com/q/15215/759 – Double AA Mar 10 '13 at 00:10
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    Ilana, welcome to Mi Yodeya, and thanks very much for bringing your question here! I hope you'll look around and find other material that interests you, perhaps including our 48 other [tag:tehilim-psalms] questions. – Isaac Moses Mar 10 '13 at 03:01
  • related: https://judaism.stackexchange.com/q/106129/170 – msh210 Jul 31 '19 at 03:18

3 Answers3

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Shmuel
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  • The JPS Study Bible says that it was written by somebody who returned in the post-exilic period? That's interesting: scholarship that I have seen on the psalm has suggested an exilic origin, given that it ends without any indication of restoration. – Shimon bM May 20 '13 at 08:07
  • @ShimonbM - Yes. If you click the link it should take you to that page. – Shmuel May 20 '13 at 20:10
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The Gemora (Gitin 57b) states that Hashem showed Dovid Hamelech a prophecy of the destruction of the two temples and he composed Tehillim Chapter 137.

However the Ibn Ezra (in his introduction to his commentary on Tehillim) writes that some say it was composed at the time of the Babylonian Exile.

Michoel
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In the introduction to his Moreh Nevukhei ha-Zman, Nachman Krochmal argues at length for the (Ibn Ezra's) view that this mizmor was composed at the time of the Babylonian exile.

wfb
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