Psalms - Cheyne, T. K. (Thomas Kelly), 1841-1915 PDF
Psalms - Cheyne, T. K. (Thomas Kelly), 1841-1915 PDF
Psalms - Cheyne, T. K. (Thomas Kelly), 1841-1915 PDF
^^^S^-
J
;
:;39 -<c
.2 X52
THE BOOK OF PSALMS
v^nli <^.
y
ISM. acv'Ae
'
THE
BOOK OF PSALMS
LONDON
KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH &- CO.
MDCCCLXXXIIII
INTRODUCTION.
I.
5 I am cast down,
and none reaches forth his hand to me.
6 I weep in silence,
and no man takes my hand.
7 I utter my prayer,
and none hears me.
S I am enfeebled, overwhelmed,
and no man delivers me.
13 Absolve my faults !
5 Thy will, even thine, from above, like the space of heaven in
its openness,
makes the earth to bring forth.
sway ;
II.
xiv INTRODUCTION.
as a whole comes to us with the authority of the Syna-
gogue as a Book of Common Prayer and Praise. First
of all, however, it appears to have passed through
several editions. How much, it may be asked, was
included in the first edition ?
1 Verses 8-22 are taken from Ps. cv. 1-15 ; verses 23-33 from
Ps. xcvi. 1-13 ; verses 34, 35, from Ps. cvi. i, 47.
2 He did this by taking over a verse, very awkwardly, from
I Chron. xvi. 36, as a doxology.
INTRODUCTION. xvii
their love for the Law, it is not the ritual forms which
they honour most, but " the weightier matters," which
the later Pharisees so sadly forgot. In fact, it was by
no means the Law alone that they studied. There is
internal evidence enough that some of the prophets,
especially Jeremiah and " the Second Isaiah," afforded
them constant food for thought, and hence it is that
the Exile and post-Exile psalms present us with a
synthesis in varying proportions of the legal and the
prophetic religion. Concentration on the Law (but not
as a mere system of rites), may be the characteristic of
a few {e.g. Ps. i., xix. 1-7, xl., cxix.), but an all-ab-
sorbing love to God is the soul of a much larger num-
ber. That purer conception of the Deitj^ which
chilled the author of Ecclesiastes almost into infidelity,
became to the psalmists a fresh source of light and
warmth [see Psalms cxiii., cxlvi., cxlvii.). The more
they assimilated it by loving meditation, the more
replete they found it with important results for the
religious life. It is these later psalms, in fact, which
almost justify the saying, that *' the spiritual side of
Christianity is inherited from the Hebrew psalmists."
Original they may not often be, but passages really
striking in their simplicity abound. Thus in Ps. Ixxxvi.
we find the most distinct of the Old Testament pro-
phecies of the conversion of all nations (ver. 9). What
a sweet humility, moreover, breathes in the phrase,
"Save the son of thy handmaid " (ver. 16), and what
an earnest belief in Providence in the petition, *' Work
in my behalf a token for good " (ver. 1 7, comp. Neh.
V. 19). And lastly, three at least of the psalms of this
xviii INTRODUCTION.
period (ciii., civ., cxxxix.) are not unworthy to be
classed among the gems of the Psalter.
III.
(
Gelegenheitsgedichie).
It is hardly necessary, except for the sake of com-
pleteness, to justify the form of parallel lines in which
the psalms are printed. The student of the Old
Testament, who only knows the
ordinary editions, has
no means of distinguishing poetry from prose. He
may, indeed, when better instructed, retort upon the
critics thatby their own confession the poetical parts
of the Old Testament have few indeed of what are
called the forms of poetry,
no metre, only a slight
tendency to rhyme, and a strong affection for allitera-
tion. Perhaps it may be so, although a succession of
critics (among them, quite lately. Dr. Bickell, of whom
,
INTRODUCTION. xix
IV.
INTRODUCTION. xxi
7 And in the greatness of thy majesty didst thou pull douTx thine
assailants,
thou sentest forth thy hot wrath which devoured them as
stubble,
and by the breath of thy nostrils the waters were piled up.
ID Thou didst blow with thy wind, the sea covered them,
they sank as lead in the glorious waters.
11 Who is like thee among the gods, Jehovah,
X3di INTRODUCTION.
In ver. 2, for Dread (Heb. elohim), comp. Milton'5
"our living Dread in Silo his bright sanctuary," and
Max Muller's Science of Religion, ed. I, pp. 179-180.
Clearly this song was not intended for the place it
now occupies. For it refers not only to the overthrow
of Pharaoh but to the conquest of Canaan by Joshua ;
and as Canaan was only won by slow degrees, it
would almost appear that the song cannot have been
written till long after the Israelites were settled.
However this may be, the style, which is peculiar,
does not favour a very late date. Ewald thinks that
a really ancient song was filled out and added to by
the historian.
2. THANKSGIVING-PSALM OF HEZEKIAH
(Isa. xxxviii. 10-20).
15 What can I say? he both spake and hath kept his promise !
She weeps sore in the night, and her tears are on her cheek ;
comforter has she none out of all those that loved her :
all her friends have betrayed her, they are now her enemies.
"the Zion-song
which Jehuda ben Halevy
dying on the sacred ruins
of Jerusalem indited."
POSTSCRIPT.
The translator has often enough envied Chaucer's
command of English, but can at least fully appropriate
the modesty of his " envois." Only the greatness of
the need would have justified the present attempt.
Were the Psalms to be represented in the Parchment
Library by a mere adaptation of a version intended
(like Coverdale's) for the unlettered people and not
for lovers of poetry? And yet how attempt a task
which a critic like Mr. Matthew Arnold has told us
that he declines ? How venture on a kind of transla-
tion of the Bible hitherto reserved for scholars alone,
and use such " unbiblical " words as " sympathy " and
*
aeon " ? Possibly indeed some literary readers may
think that the one is sufficiently authorized by Milton
xxviii INTRODUCTION.
and the other by Tennyson. But what of ** loving " as
applied to Jehovah and his worshippers? Scholars
may very plausibly criticise it, but what other ren-
dering is not too cold and pale to express the peculiar
Hebrew conception of the religious sentiment ? But is
not "Hades" an anachronism? Not more so in an
English than in a Greek version ; not more so than
" hell," and not nearly so misleading. Will any one
seriously propose Sheol as a substitute in a literary ver-
sion? At any rate, **the earthborn," "mortal map,"
"deadly shade," imply antiquated scholarship and de-
sertion of Ewald ? Is it certain ? Are not many other
false etymologies sanctioned by the Hebrew writers ?
But the reader who seeks to enjoy his Psalms will cry
out if I parley any longer with the critics. I will only
assure him again that he cannot climb up to David's
Psalms by Coverdale's ladder, and that I well know
that my own or any version of a masterpiece like the
Psalter can be only in a slight degree successful.
^*^ The symbol ' head of some psalms (thus
at the
VII=. ) means psalm referred
that the translation of the
to involves one or more emendations ; words inclosed
in square brackets represent Hebrew words supposed
to have dropped out of the text.
A
list of passages in which important corrections of
THE PSALMS.
BOOK I.
PSALM I.
graced,
because ye love vanity, and seek after falsehood ?
3 But see how passing great kindness Jehovah hath
shown me
Jehovah hears when I call unto him.
J refuge
save me from all my pursuers, and deliver me :
10 And that they who know thy name may trust in thee,
since thou, Jehovah, dost not forsake those that
inquire after thee.
13
*' Have pity upon me, Jehovah ; behold my affliction
from them that hate me,
thou that liftest me up from the gates of Death :
14 That I may tell out all thy praise in the gates of the
daughter of Zion,
that I may exult in thy salvation."
3 *
7
****
seven times refined.
for ever.
4-, Thou didst win for me escape out of the strifes of the
people,
thou didst set me to be head of the nations
people whom I knew not did serve me.
44 At the hearing of the ear they were obsequious unto
me,
aliens came cringing unto me.
and
*****
Their voice has gone out through the whole earth,
their words unto the end of the world
J glad
and for thy salvation how greatly doth he exult !
him ;
let him rescue him, since he delights in him."
me
all the days of my life,
Jehovah is my life,
the fortress of
at whom have I to tremble ?
2 When evil-doers came near against me
to eat my flesh,
those my foemen and mine enemies
stumbled and fell.
6 Blessed be Jehovah !
quity,
and in whose spirit there is no guile.
4 For day and night thy hand was heavy upon me,
my tongue was turned as in the droughts of sum-
mer.
9 ^
Fear Jehovah, ye his holy ones ;
19 Let not them rejoice over me that are for a lie mine
enemies,
they that for no cause hate me let them not wink
with the eye.
; ;
when the ungodly are cut off, thou shalt see it.
J indignation,
neither correct me in thy hot displeasure.
2 For thine arrows have sunk into me,
and upon me has sunk thy hand.
I am
wasted away with the onset of thy hand.
11 With rebukes for iniquity when thou dost chasten a
man,
thou destroyest, like the moth, his desirable things,
surely every man is vanity.
thy God ?
4 Let me bethink me of these things, pouring out my
soul within me,
how went along with the throng, and led them
I
house of God,
in procession to the
with ringing cries and giving of thanks a festive
multitude.
5 Why art thou cast down, O my soul, and why dis-
quieted within me ?
gotten me ?
why go I as a mourner amidst the oppression of
"
the enemy ?
10 As though they broke my bones, my foes reproach
me,
whilst all day long they say unto me, Where is thy
God?
11 Why art thou cast down, my soul, and why dis-
quieted within me ?
hope thou in God, for I shall yet thank him
who is the salvation of my countenance and my
God.
cast me off?
why go I as a mourner amidst the oppression of
the enemy ?
3 Send out thy light and thy truthfulness, let them
lead me,
let them bring me unto thy holy hill and to thy
dwelling-place.
4 Then will I go in unto the altar of God,
even unto God my exceeding joy :
XLivO THE BOOK OF PSALMS. 6i
but thy right hand, and thine arm, and the light
of thy countenance,
because thou hadst pleasure in them.
XLVII1.
f~^
REAT is Jehovah, and highly to be
VJT praised
in the city of our God, his holy mountain.
2 Beauteous in elevation, the joy of the whole earth,
is mount Zion, the city of the great king.
3 God in the palaces thereof
has made himself known as a sure retreat.
dence,
and of those who after them applaud their speech.
14 Like sheep, they are folded in Hades
death is their shepherd, and their form shall waste
away ;
Hear, O my people,
and I will speak,
O and I will protest unto thee,
Israel,
God, even thy God, am I.
Not for thy sacrifices will I reprove thee,
(truly, thy burnt offerings are continually before
me,)
;
23 Whoso me,
sacrifices thanksgiving, glorifies
and to him that keeps the way will I shew the
salvation of God.
LI.] THE BOOK OF PSALMS. 71
* * a deceitful tongue.
IJV.] THE BOOK OF PSALMS. 73
7
''
Lo, there is the man that made not God his strong-
hold,
but trusted in his great wealth, and felt strong in
his substance."
8 But I am like a fresh-green olive-tree in the house of
God;
I trust in the lovingkindness of God for ever and
ever.
9 I will give thanks unto thee for ever, for thou hast
done nobly,
and declare iDefore thy loving ones that thy name
is good.
PSALM LIII.
A repetition of Psalm XIV.
7 * * * *
lies.
if no heed thereto,
riches increase, take
n God hath spoken once ; twice have I heard this
that strength belongs unto God :
ness,
and with mirthful my mouth sing praise.
lips shall
9 And all men shall fear and shall declare God's work,
and shall understand his operation.
10 The righteous shall rejoice in Jehovah, and take
refuge in him,
and all the upright in heart shall glory.
; : :
approach,
that he may abide in thy courts :
17
18
yea,
The
Thou
*****Jehovah
chariots of
hast gone
will abide there for ever.
God are mjnriads twice-told,
received
gifts of men, yea, and also of the rebellious.
the God of Israel it is he that gives strength
and mightiness to his people ; blessed be Jehovah.
;
O God of Israel.
good;
according to thy plenteous compassions turn to-
wards me.
17 And hide not thy face from thy servant
for I am in straits : answer me speedily.
18 Draw nigh unto my soul and release it
PSALM LXX.
(A repetition of Psalm XL., 13-17.)
19 * * *
and thy righteousness, O God, unto high heaven
thou who hast done great things,
God, who is like unto thee ?
20 Thou, who hast let us see troubles great and sore,
wilt revive us again,
and bring us up again from the abysses of the earth.
BOOK III.
PSALM LXXIIP.
21 Truly my
heart had become soured,
and had pierced myself to my reins.
I
(God speaketh.)
2 For *'
appointed time
I will seize the ;
6 **
I will call to mind " (said I) " my song in the
night,
I will muse in my heart
;
" and my spirit (thus)
searched out
7 " Will the Lord cast off for ever,
and be favourable no more ?
8 Is his loving-kindness come utterly to an end ?
has his promise failed for all generations ?
9 Has God forgotten to pity?
"
or has he drawn in his compassions angrily ?
frighted,
but the sea covered their enemies.
* * *
LXXXII.
f^ OD stands in a divine assembly
V-X He judges amidst the gods.
r^
LXXXni.
o GOD, be not silent,
hush thee not, neither be
God.
still, O
For, lo, thine enemies make a roaring,
and they that hate thee have lifted up the head :
;
* * *
and thy faithfulness round about thee.
;
38
But thou thou hast cast off and spurned,
and hast become furious against thine anointed,
39 Thou hast abhorred the covenant of thy servant,
thou hast profaned his crown to the ground.
48 Whois the man that shall live on and not see death,
PSALM XCc,
11 Mine eye also has looked its full upon mine adver-
saries,
upon them that rose up against me, doers of evil.
; ; ;
* * * to-day
oh that ye would hear his voice !
J earth exult,
let many far-off lands rejoice ;
XCVIII. ^
O
INGye unto Jehovah a new song,
marvellous things has he done
for
his own right hand has helped him,
and his holy arm.
2 His saving help Jehovah has made known
before the eyes of the nations
has he unveiled his righteousness.
3 His kindness and faithfulness has he remembered
unto the house of Israel ;
all the ends of the world have seen
the saving help of our God.
J must tremble :
within my house.
3 I will not set before mine eyes
any villainous thing
deeds that swerve do I hate
such shall not cleave unto me.
4 A perv'erse heart shall depart from me ;
12
But thou, Jehovah, thou art seated for ever,
and thy fame endures unto all generations ;
13 Thou wilt arise and have compassion upon Zion,
for it is time to have pity on her, for the set time
is come :
thou openest thy hand they are filled with good.
29 Thou hidest thy face they are confounded ;
Hallelujah.
CVI. TTALLELUJAH.
XJL O give thanks unto Jehovah, for he is
good,
for his mercy endures for ever.
2 Who can express the mighty acts of Jehovah,
and show forth all his praise ?
PSALM CVIIe.
(Appendix.)
PSALM cvni.
See Psalm LVH. 7-1 1, LX. 5-12.
25 And I
am become a reproach unto them,
I
CXL TT ALLELUJAH.
XJ. I will thank Jehovah with my whole
heart,
in the council and assembly of the upright.
; ; ;
CXIL TTALLELUJAH.
JljL Happy the man that fears Jehovah,
that delights much in his commandments.
2 Mighty on earth shall be his seed ;
CXHP. TTALLELUJAH.
JLX Praise, O ye servants of Jehovah,
name of Jehovah.
praise the
2 Blessed be the name of Jehovah
from henceforth even for ever.
3 From the rising of the sun unto the going down
thereof
the name of Jehovah is to be praised.
CXIV.
WJ HEN
V V The
Israel went forth from Egypt,
house of Jacob from a strange-
speaking people,
2 Judah became his sanctuary,
Israel his dominion.
15 Blessedmay ye be of Jehovah,
who made heaven and earth !
CXVIII,
O THANK ye Jehovah, for he
for his lovingkindness endures for
is good,
;
CXIX. ALEF.
HAPPY those that are blameless in their way, thai
walk law of Jehovah
in the !
thy commandments.
7 I will thank thee with an unfeigned heart when
I learn thy righteous ordinances.
8 Thy decrees will I observe ; O forsake me not
utterly !
BETH.
9 Wherewith young man cleanse his path,
shall a
to keep himself after thy word ?
10 With my whole heart have I inquired after thee ; let
GIMEL.
17 Deal bountifully with thy servant that I may live ;
so will I heed thy word.
18 Uncover mine eyes that I may behold wondrous
things out of thy law.
19 1 am a sojourner upon earth ; hide not thy command-
ments from me.
20 My soul is crushed with longing for thine ordinances
at all times.
21 Thou hast rebuked the proud, the accursed ones,
who wander from thy commandments.
22 Roll away from me reproach and contempt, for thy
testimonies have I kept.
23 Yea, princes sit and speak against me ; thy servant
muses upon thy statutes.
24 Yea, thy testimonies are my solace, and my coun-
sellors.
DALETH.
25 My soul cleaves unto the dust ; revive me according
to thy word.
26 I have rehearsed my ways, and thou hast answered
me teach me thy statutes.
;
VAU.
41 And let thy lovingkindnesses come unto me, Jehovah,
even thy salvation, according unto thy promise.
42 And I shall have words to answer him that re-
proaches J for my trust is in thy word.
176 THE BOOK OF PSALMS. [cxix.
KHETH.
57 My portion art thou, Jehovah ; I have resolved
to heed thy words.
;
YOD.
73 Thy hands made me and fashioned me ; give me
understanding that I may learn thy command-
ments.
74 They that fear thee will be glad when they see me,
for I have waited on for thy word.
75 I know, Jehovah, that thy judgments are righteous,
and that thou in faithfulness hast afflicted me.
76 O let thy lovingkindness come forth to comfort me,
according to thy promise unto thy servant.
77 Let thy compassions come unto me that I may live,
for thy law is my solace.
behests.
79 They that fear thee shall turn unto me, and they
that know thy testimonies.
80 Let my heart be sound in thy statutes, that I be not
ashamed.
CAF.
81 My soul pines for thy salvation 5 I have waited on
for thy word.
82 Mine eyes pine for thy promise, sajdng, WTien wilt
thou comfort me ?
SAMECH.
113 I hate the double-minded, but thy law do I love.
114 Thou art my covert and my shield ; I wait on for
thy word.
115 Depart from me, ye evil-doers ; I would keep the
commandments of my God.
1 16 Sustain me, according to thy promise, that I may
live, and let me not be ashamed of my hope.
;
AIN.
121 I have practised justice and righteousness ; thou
wilt not leave me to mine oppressors.
122 Be surety for thy servant for good j let not the
proud oppress me.
123 Mine eyes pine for thy salvation and for thy
righteous promise.
124 Deal with thy servant according to thy loving-
kindness, and teach me thy statutes.
125 I am thy servant, give me understanding, that I
may know thy testimonies.
126 It is time for Jehovah to do valiantly ; they have
made void thy law.
127 Therefore do I love thy commandments above
gold, yea, above fine gold.
128 Therefore have I chosen all thy behests j every
false way have I hated.
PE.
SADE.
truth.
KOF.
RESH.
153 Behold my affliction and rescue me, for I do not
forget thy law.
154 Plead thou my cause and release me ; revive me
according to thy promise.
iSS Far is salvation from the ungodly, for they inquire
not after thy statutes.
156 Thy compassions are many, Jehovah ; revive me
according to thine ordinances.
157 Many are my persecutors and my foes ; I have not
declined from thy testimonies.
158 I beheld the unfaithful, and had loathing, because
they heeded not thy sayings.
159 Behold how I love thy precepts revive me, Je-;
my solace.
175 Let my soul but live, and it shall praise thee, and
let thine ordinances help me.
176 I wander like a lost sheep seek thy ; servant, for I
do not forget thy commandments.
:
3 What shall one give unto thee, and what more give
unto thee,
O deceitful tongue ?
4 Arrows of a mighty man, sharpened ones,
with glowing coals of broom.
in truth
he will not go back from it :
CXXXV. TJALLELUJAH.
Jl~\. Praise ye the name of Jehovah
praise him, O ye servants of Jehovah.
2 Ye that stand in the house of Jehovah,
in the courts of the house of our God.
3 Praise Jehovah, for Jehovah is good,
Hallelujah.
everlasting.
13 To him that cut the Red Sea into parts ; for his
kindness is everlasting.
14 And made Israel to pass through the midst of it ; for
his kindness is everlasting.
15 But shook off Pharaoh and his host into the Red
Sea ; for his kindness is everlasting.
everlasting.
18 And slew glorious kings ; for his kindness is ever-
lasting.
everlasting.
* * * *
make my supplication
I pour out my complaint before him,
I display before him my trouble.
CXLIVe. O LESSED
xJ who
be Jehovah my Rock,
teaches my hands to war,
my fingers to fight.
2 My castle and my fortress, my high tower, and my
deliverer,
my shield, and he in whom I take refuge,
who subdues peoples under me.
3 Jehovah, what is the earth-born that thou takest
notice of him ?
or the son of mortal man that thou so accountest
of him ?
4 Earth-born man is like unto a breath,
his days are as a passing shadow.
their youth,
our daughters are as cornices carved in palace
fashion ;
15 The
eyes of all wait upon thee,
and thou givest them their food in due season.
16 Thou openest thine hand,
let him blow with his wind, and the waters will
flow.
19 He declared his word unto Jacob,
his statutes and ordinances unto Israel
20 He has not done so to any nation,
and as for his ordinances. men know them not.
Hallelujah.
CXLVIIP. TJ ALLELUJAH.
iTjl O praise Jehovah from the hea-
vens;
praise him in the heights.
2 Praise him all ye angels of his,
praise him, ajl his host.
212 THE BOOK OF PSALMS. [CXLVIII.
CXLIX. TT ALLELUJAH.
J.X Sing unto Jehovah a new song,
and his praise in the congregation of the loving.
2 Let Israel rejoice in him that made him,
let the children of Zion exult in their king.
and lyre.
CL^ TT ALLELUJAH.
-L X Praise God in his sanctuary,
him in the firmament of his power
praise ;
Psalm IL A lyric
echo of the promises to David's seed in
2 Sam. vii. be read with Ps. Ixxxix. The psalmist
12, 14-16, to
"sees not yet " a Davidic empire worthy of *' Jehovah's son,"
but trusts the Divine promise (see on ver. 8). What political
event suggested the psalm, is uncertain.
Ver. 6. What impiety, %vhen I have established my king !
Ver. 7. my son. Sam. vii. 14, Ps. Ixxxix.
So 2 26. this
day. The day that the king was anointed, begotten. Figura-
tively, in the sense of adoption.
Ver. 8. This promise does not occur in 2 Sam. vii., but may
be compared with Ps. Ixxxix. 27.
Ver. 12. Kiss the Son. Comp. " Kissed my feet," i.e. " did
homage," in Assyrian. The word for " son " is a rare one (see
Prov. xxxi. 2) adopted from the Chaldee. Some have thought
the phrase corrupt or an interpolation but at any rate we ;
(am allowed to enter) thy hozise the grand pleasure of the
psalmists.
Ver. 8. thy way, i.e. that which thou wouldst have me walk
m. level, i.e. free from difficulties, moral or physical.
EXPLANATIONS. 217
Psalm VI. Ver. i. not in thine anger, "but with mild-
ness and with perfect love," as the supposed Dante paraphrases.
Ver. 2. my bones. The bones often appear as the represen-
tatives of the whole body, and even of the whole nature of man.
See e.g. xxxi. 10, xxxii. 3, xxxv. 10, li. 8.
Ver. 5. in Death. Another name for Hades. See Rev. i.
begin, and begin (as in Isa. iii. 13-15) with the great men of Israel.
For the figure of eating, co7n/>. Mic. iii. 3.
Ver. 7.Probably added when the psalm was adopted for
liturgical use. Israel was then under a cloud, and longed lor de-
liverance to come from Jehovah's throne.
{i.e. in accordance with thy promise, Isa. xlii. 6, xlv. 13) mystic
communion with God, begun in this life, and to be perfected
" when I awake." thine image. But the letter of the psalm is
bolder" thy form."
hands and my feet, when I try to beat them off, and to escape.
This feature in the description would have seemed more in place
after ver. 17. The dogs torture the sufferer with their inso-
first
lent gaze, and then, when he seeks to escape from this, with their
fangs.
Ver. 20. wj/ darling (lit. my only one), i.e. my soul. Comp.
Ps. xvi. 9,
" my glory,"
and Macbeth *s '' mine eternal jewel."
Ver. 21. yeafro7u the horns ... A sudden rise of believing
confidence.
Ver. 26. shall eat and oe satisfied, i.e. shall thrive, let yotir
heart revive. Comp. Ixix. 32.
Ver. 27. shall remember, viz. God (ix. 17).
Ver. 29-31. Comp. cii. 16-18. the fat ones . . . , i.e. those in
the full vigour of opposed to the feeble shades
life (as xcii. 14),
in Hades, the dust, i.e. Hades {see on ver. 15). Jehovah's
covenant embraces the living and the dead cojup. Phil. ii. 10. ;
Ver. 30. Even if the present generation should die out, there
is tl^ comfort that the next will be able to represent it in the
service of Jehovah.
plain, his secret and his covenant are designed for their
instruction.
enigma for the faithful. The solution is, that he who worships
God " in spirit and in truth " in the temple will find himself in
God's house wherever he is. pleasantness, i.e. graciousness, as
Ps. xc. 17.
conip. Ixxxviii. 4), or from a " sea of troubles " {comp. xviii. 16,
Ixix. I, 2).
Ver. memorial, i.e. name (as xcvii. 12).
4.
Ver. A " moment " is opposed to "a life," as an "evening"
5.
to a "morning." Grief is but a moment in a life-time of God's
favour.
Ver. 8. did I cry, i.e. when trouble came.
in my life.
Ver. 20. the covert of thy face. The shining of God's face
(like brooding wings, Ixi. 4) shelters believers from the storms
of human passion.
Ver. 21. in an entrenched city, i.e. either by protecting me
in it when besieged, or by bringing me safely into it icotnp. Iv.
18, line 1). The expression favours a reference to some excep-
tional event in the speaker's history ; similarly the next verse.
Ver. 17. They cry, viz. the righteous certainly not the evil- :
Ver. 13. And tny prayer . . . , i.e. Since they are so un-
grateful, do thou, O Lord, recompense me in their stead, into
my boso7n, i.e. into the folds of my garment.
Ver. 16. profatie jnockers. Profane, because in mocking at
a believer, they do despite to God.
EXPLANA TIONS. 227
Ver. 33. nor condem^i hint. . The world may do so, but Je-
.
5, 6.
Ver. II. lovers, i.e. Israel's friendly neighbours ; cotnp. Jer.
XXX. 14, Lam. i. 2, 19.
does the psalmist wish this ? That he may not set his hope on
earthly floods, but on Him "whose lovingkindness is better than
life itself."
indeed the " new song," but at any rate an echo of it. treacher-
otisly recreant, probably by apostatizing to heathenism.
Ver. 6. thou hadst no delight. Understand, " when Jehovah
made a covenant with Israel." Comp. Jer. vii. 22, 23. ears, i.e.
indefinitely long periods of time. Comp. cxlv. 13, " thy kingdom
is one of all aeons."
EXPLANA TIONS. 229
two sources of encouragement one in the past (ver. 4), the
other in the future " Weeping," as another psalmist said, "may
;
endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning." The day
of lovingkindness will dawn again, and even in the night of
trouble I can sing my prayers (such as that which follows) to my
own personal God. (Or the night may be that which will follow
on a day when God has been gracious.) A similar phrase in Job
XXXV., 10. his song, i.e. a song concerning him. Praise and
prayer are not inconsistent ideas (Ps. Ixv. ver. i, 2).
Ver. I. a loveless nation. Want of love and want of common
honesty are parallelized as in xii. 1.
Ver. 3. thy light. Light stands here for lovingkindness (Ivii.
3), being more suitable to the figure of guiding, bring 7ne, i.e.
bring me again.
Ver. O God. Probably, however, we should correct this to
4.
Psalm XLVI. This and the two next psalms seem to have
been composed on the same occasion and not improbably on
the overthrow of Sennacherib. The refrain of Ps. xlvi. reminds
us of "God (is) with us" in Isa. viii. 8, 10, and Ps. xlviii. pre-
sents points of contact with Isa, xxxiii.
Ver. 2. sho7ild change, in fact should "suffer a sea-change."
Ver. 4. Whether a verb has dropped out, or whether the
psalmist compares God's lovingkindness to a river, is uncertain.
Comp. Isa. xxxiii. 21, where Jehovah's protecting presence is
likened to "a
place of rivers and streams."
Ver. 10. That the danger has been averted is represented as
due to a word from God.
Ver. 10. they make their rounds, viz. to spy out opportunities
for evil-doing.
Ver. II. from its/orum. Lit. "from its broad place."
Ver. 12-14. A
digression, referring to some event in the per-
sonal history of the psalmist himself.
Ver 20. A
fresh description of the wicked and appeal to Je-
hovah begins here.
when the fire has burned up, the caldrons are put on. But before
the pots with the flesh can feel the fire in the thorns, they are
swept away by a whirlwind.
Ver. II. The abounding iniquity tempted men to atheism.
But now these providential interpositions force even heathens to
confess that tJiere are dizizne powers (E\ohim)ikaijucf-e (justly)
in the earth.
Psalm LXI. Ver. 2. From, the end 0/ the earth, i.e. from
some distant region.
Ver. 4. forever; lit. for aeons, i.e. for an indefinitely long
period, for an eternity like that of Jehovah (Isa. xl. 28).
Ver. 5. hast hearkened, viz. in time past.
in parallel clauses mean " again and again " (Job xxxiii. 14,
xl. 5). The psalmist claims for himself (and therefore for all
believers) a subjective conviction of certain fundamental truths,
produced by the Divine Spirit {comp. Ixxxv. 8). On this war-
rant he once more proclaims the old truth, that power belongs
only to God, but supplements it directly by a less generally
recognized truth, that the God who reveals Himself in Israel
{i-e. Jehovah) is also essentially kind, that instead of crushing
frail man for his "lapses" (xix. 12), He will reward him accord-
east and west, tlte sources of jnorning and evening. " Morn-
ing " and " evening " are here synonyms for the sun, who "goes
forth" from the east and "goes in " at the west.
Ver. 9. the river of God, i.e. the water stored up behind
the "doors" and "lattices" of heaven (Ixxviii. 23, Gen. vii. 11).
thusfilly, i.e. with the overflow of God's inexhaustible river.
Ver. II. The year of thy goodness, i.e. the year so full of thy
good gifts, thy tracks, as though Jehovah drove through the
land in His chariot, not as a man of war (as Hab. iii.), but to
scatter the blessings of peace.
Ver. 13. they shout for joy, i.e. the meadows and valleys.
When the seed sown brings forth a hundredfold (Gen. xxvi. 12),
it is not enough to speak of " smiling fields."
by the thought of the mortal nature of its tjT-ants (Isa. li. 12) ;
here, however, it is the ignominy of servitude, to be tyran-
nized over by the creatures of a day. fire . water, images
. .
the moment, like the vow of Jephthah (Judg. xi. 35, 36, same
word).
Ver. 17. was {already) under my tongue. So confident was
he of an answer.
Ver. 18, 19. A
reassuring inference from recent events as to
the moral state of the people. God never hears the prayer of
the wicked. But God has lately given a striking answer to
prayer; Israel, therefore, is "absolved from great transgres-
sion " (xix. 13).
Ver. 20. my prayer, i.e. that for which I prayed.
EXPLANATIONS. 241
Ver. 16. npon the top of the mountains, i.e. on the terraces
which cover the lofty slopes of Lebanon, like Lebano7i, stately
and multitudinous.
Ver. 26. should have wasted away, i.e. should seem to have
wasted away.
Mace. i. 54.
Ver. 8. Their family altogether i Mace. i. 50, "And . . .
or the nerve of the spiritual life would be a shorter and not less
effectual way of putting out the light of Israel. Hence all God's
places of meeting, i.e. all the synagogues, are burned up.
Ver. g. our In contrast to " their signs," ver. 4. no
signs.
prophet. This was the great complaint of the Maccabean period.
Co7np. I Mace. iv. 46, ix. 27, xiv. 41.
Ver. 13, 14. the drago'ns leviathan. SynonjTnous sym-
. . .
bolic expressions for Egj'pt, See for the former, Isa. li. 9, Ezek.
.
242 EXPLANATIONS.
xxix, 3, xxxii. 2. Leviathan =
wreathed, gavesi him to he food.
... i.e. gavest the dead bodies of the Egyptians to be a prey to
the tribes of wild beasts. So the ants and rock-badgers are
called a people in Prov. xxx. 25, 26.
Ver. 15. An allusion to the miracles of the water from the
rock, and the passage of the Jordan.
Ver. 16. the light-bearer. In Gen. i. 16 the sun and moon
both receive this name ; here, as it seems, the moon alone
battle.
[the Assidaioi] three-score men, and slew them in one day, ac-
cording to the words which he wrote (Ps. Ixxix. 2). thy loving
OJies. The same word (khasidim) under the form Assidaioi,
became a party-name in the Maccabean times {see i Mace.
ii. 42).
Ver. 9. thifte miointed, i.e. either the king, or the high priest,
if the psalm be Maccabean.
rainbow have all been thought of, but at the close of the speech
an appeal to Jehovah seems most in point (fomp. Job. xvi. 19).
Ver. 50. tJie reproach of peoples. Comp. Ezek. xxxvi. 15,
" neither shalt thou bear the reproach of peoples any more."
Ver. 51. the footsteps of thine anointed, i.e. wherever he
goes.
inviolability.
so much abused by those who are charged with it, must ttirn
again and join itself to righteo7isness.
Ver. 17. Silence, a synonym for Hades, as cxv. 17, comp.
xxxi. 17.
Ver. 19. his word, i.e. Joseph's prophetic word, which, at any
rate at first, was combined with the promise of Jehovah to
himself. The delay in the fulfilment of the promise assayed
or purified his spiritual character.
xxxix. 20.
Psalm CXI. This and the next psalm are alphabetical, each
line beginning with one of the twenty-two Hebrew letters.
"'
Psalm CXIII. With this psalm begins the " Egyptian Hallel
(or hymn), which lasts on to the end of Ps. cxviii.,and which
was recited at the three great feasts, at the New Moons, and
at the Feast of Dedication.
them would respond in ver. 20. Ver. 26 will also belong to the
latter.
Ver. 22. A proverbial expression ; the builders are the Gen-
tiles, the head corner stone (which unites two walls and supports
the roof) is the Jewish nation.
Ver, 27. even unto. Understand, "and bring it," or "and
lift it up (unto)."
the "proud" who oppress him are the persecuting kings of the
family of the Seleucidse. Of course, the reverence here ex-
pressed for the law does not exclude a loving study of the works
of the prophets, regarded (rightly or wrongly) as continuators of
the work of Moses. It is evident, indeed, that the writer has
imbibed much of their spirit, as he nowhere refers to the details
of rites and ceremonies, and in ver. 108 presents to God "the
freewill offerings of his mouth." He a kindred spirit to the
is
252 EXPLANATIONS.
iscompared to that of sheep left to themselves in the wilderness.
Comp. Jer. 1. 6.
Psalm CXX. This and the next fourteen psalms having the
same heading, we may conclude that they once formed a sepa-
rate collection. What the heading means, is too difficult a
question to enter upon here. None of these psalms requires, from
internal evidence, to be placed in the pre-Exile period.
Ver. 4. The wrath of Jehovah described in figures from
nomad life, coals 0/ broom, the roots of which plant are used by
the Arabs for charcoal.
Ver. 5. RIeshech (tribes between the Black and the Caspian
Sea) and Kedar (the nomad tribes of north Arabia) either repre-
sent the remote regions inwhich the Jews were dispersed, or
symbolize the malignant neighbours of the Jews at home in
Nehemiah's time.
parched Negeb (in the south of Palestine) are filled with rushing
torrents by the winter rains.
Ver. 25. all flesh, i.e. all living creatiu-es, as Gen. vi. 13, 17,
vii. 15.
Psalm CXLI. A
most obscure psalm ; verses 5-7 seem
hopeless in the present state of the text.
comp. especially Ps. viii. xviii. Verses 12-15 are very original
in style.
Ver. 12.
as cornices. Syrian architecture still delights
. . .
256 EXPLANATIONS.
plemeoted by that of warring ajjainst the Gentiles. The
" afilicted " and tlie " lovers of God " (loving ones) are the Jews
of the Maccabean period, whose victories are described in
heightened terms in ver. 7-9. With ver. 6 comp. 2 Mace. xv. 26,
27, " But Judas and his company encountered the enemies with
invocation and prayer so that fighting with their hands, and
;
praying unto God with their hearts, they slew no less than
thirty and five thousand men."
None
of these corrections have been hastily adopted, and I
deprecate as much as anybody the licence which some fanciful
critics have allowed them3elves. I have drawn from various
sources ; among the more recent suffice it to mention the names
"lands").
ii. II ; iv. 3 ; vii. 2, 4, 10 ; viii. i ; ix. 7 ; x. 6 ; xi. 6 ; xii, 4, 7 ;
EXPLANATIONS. 2S7
xxii. 8, IS, i6, 29-31 ; xxiii. 6 xxiv. 6; xxv. 17; xxvii.
; 8, 13;
xxviii. 8; xxix. 6; xxx. 7, 12; xxxi. 6, 11, 20; xxxii. 6, 8;
xxxiv. 5 XXXV. 5, 6, 7, 8, 13, 15, 17 xxxvi. i
; ; ; xxxvii. 28, 35,
36 ; xxxviii. 11, 19 ; xxxix. i, 4, 5 xlli. 4, 5, 6 ; ; xliv, 2 ; xlv. 4,
Ixvi. 12 ; Ixviii. 18, 23, 28, 30, 35 Ixix.l 4, 10, 20, 26 Ixxi. 13 ; ; ;