Verse 2
Psalms 128:2. Thou shalt eat the
labour, &c. — Thy labour shall
not be vain and fruitless, and
the fruit of thy labour shall
not be taken from thee and
possessed by others, as was
threatened to the disobedient
Deuteronomy 28., but enjoyed by
thyself with comfort and
satisfaction. Happy shalt thou
be — Whether thou be high or
low, rich or poor, in the world,
if thou fear God, and walk in
his ways, thou mayest take the
comfort of the promise to
thyself, and expect the benefit
of it, as if it were directed to
thee by name. And it shall be
well with thee — Both in this
world and (as even the Chaldee
paraphrast interprets the words)
in the world to come. Whatever
befalls thee, good shall be
brought out of it; and “it shall
be well with thee while thou
livest, better when thou diest,
and best of all in eternity.” —
Henry.
Verse 3
Psalms 128:3. Thy wife shall be
as a fruitful vine — “He will
bless thee also in thy wife, and
make her as fruitful as the
vine, which spreads itself,
laden with full clusters, over
all the sides of thy house; and
in thy hopeful children too, who
shall grow up and flourish like
the young olive-plants that are
set in thy arbour, round about
thy table.” Thus Bishop Patrick
interprets the verse, and
certainly the text, in its most
obvious and literal sense, seems
to countenance his
interpretation. Mr. Harmer,
however, in his Observations on
Divers Passages of Scripture,
questions the propriety of it,
remarking that it does not
appear, from the accounts of any
travellers, that it was ever the
custom of the Jews to conduct
vines along the sides of their
houses, and that we find no such
arbours in the Levant as the
bishop supposes, composed of
young olive-plants, in the midst
of which tables were set. He
therefore understands the words
thus: “Thy wife shall be in the
sides, or private apartments of
thy house, fruitful as a
thriving vine:” considering the
sides of the house as referring
to the wife, not to the vine;
and the table, in the other
clause, to the children only,
not to the olives. Cocceius,
however, and Rabbi Kimchi, agree
with Bishop Patrick, as does Dr.
Hammond also, whose words are,
“Vines, it seems, were then
planted on the sides of houses,
as now they are among us, and
not only in vineyards, and to
that the psalmist here refers.
So likewise of olive-plants it
is observable, not only that
tables were dressed up with the
boughs of them, ramis felicis
olivæ, but that, in the eastern
countries, they were usually
planted, as in arbours, to shade
the table, entertainments being
made without doors, in gardens,
under that umbrage, which gave
all the liberty of the cool
winds and refreshing blasts. An
image whereof we have Genesis
18:4, Wash your feet, and rest
yourselves under the tree; and a
full expression Esther 1:5, The
king made a feast in the court
of the garden of the king’s
palace.” Dr. Horne also, after
weighing what Mr. Harmer had
advanced against it, adopts this
interpretation, observing that
Mr. Merrick, in his Annotations,
produces some very good
arguments in favour of it. The
doctor’s comment is, “The vine,
a lowly plant, raised with
tender care, becoming, by its
luxuriance, its beauty, its
fragrance, and its clusters, the
ornament and glory of the house
to which it is joined, and by
which it is supported, forms the
finest imaginable emblem of a
fair, virtuous, and fruitful
wife. The olive-trees planted by
the inhabitants of the eastern
countries around their tables,
or banqueting-places in their
gardens, to cheer the eye by
their verdure, and to refresh
the body by their cooling shade,
do no less aptly and
significantly set forth the
pleasure which parents feel at
the side of a numerous and
flourishing offspring.”
Verse 5-6
Psalms 128:5-6. The Lord shall
bless thee out of Zion — Where
the ark of the covenant was, and
where the pious Israelites
attended to offer their
devotions. He will bless thee
with those spiritual and
everlasting blessings which are
to be had nowhere but in Zion,
and from the God who dwells in
Zion, blessings which flow, not
from common providence, but from
special grace, and with all
other mercies which thou shalt
ask of God in Zion. And thou
shalt see the good of Jerusalem
— The prosperity of that city to
which thou belongest, and which
is the only seat of God’s
worship and special presence,
and whose good, therefore, is
very delightful to every pious
Israelite, and upon whose peace
and safety those of every
citizen of it depend, as every
seaman is concerned in the
safety of the ship in which he
sails. Thou shalt see thy
children’s children — Thy family
shall be built up and continued,
and thou shalt have the pleasure
of seeing it; and peace upon
Israel — Not only upon
Jerusalem, and parts adjacent,
but upon all the tribes and
people of Israel. Thy private
comforts shall not be allayed
and imbittered by public
troubles, but thou shalt see the
welfare of God’s church and of
thy native country, which every
man that fears God is no less
concerned for than for the
prosperity of his own family.
For a good man can have little
comfort in seeing his children’s
children, unless, withal, he
sees peace upon Israel, and have
hopes of transmitting the entail
of religion, pure and entire, to
those that shall come after him. |