Passage
Also when the people saw him, they praysed their god: for they sayde, Our god hath deliuered into our hands our enemie and destroyer of our countrey, which hath slayne many of vs.
Also when the people saw him, they praysed their god: for they sayde, Our god hath deliuered into our hands our enemie and destroyer of our countrey, which hath slayne many of vs.
Judges 16:22 And the heare of his head began to growe againe after that it was shauen.
Judges 16:23 Then the Princes of the Philistims gathered them together for to offer a great sacrifice vnto Dagon their god, and to reioyce: for they said, Our god hath deliuered Samson our enemie into our handes.
Judges 16:24 Also when the people saw him, they praysed their god: for they sayde, Our god hath deliuered into our hands our enemie and destroyer of our countrey, which hath slayne many of vs.
Judges 16:25 And when their heartes were merie, they said, Call Samson, that he may make vs pastime. So they called Samson out of the prison house, and he was a laughing stocke vnto them, and they set him betweene the pillars.
Judges 16:26 Then Samson saide vnto the seruant that led him by the hande, Lead me, that I may touch the pillars that the house standeth vpon, and that I may leane to them.
The verse centers on "people", "praysed", "sayde", "hath", "deliuered", "hands", "enemie", and "destroyer". It is saying that the verse draws attention to "people" and "praysed", so its meaning should be read from those terms before moving to application.
The nearby context moves from verse 23's "Then the Princes of the Philistims gathered..." into verse 25's "And when their heartes were merie they...", so "people" and "praysed" belong inside that flow. In Judges context, the local focus is covenant, worship, and faithfulness.
A plain takeaway is to answer the verse's own emphasis on "people" and "praysed" with trust shaped by these words, not by a vague optimism outside the passage.