Verse 1
Psalms 129:1. Many a time have
they — Namely, my enemies or
oppressors; afflicted me from my
youth — From the time that I was
a people; when I was in Egypt,
and after I came out of it,
which is called the time of
Israel’s youth, Jeremiah 2:2;
Ezekiel 23:3. I am the people
that has been oppressed more
than any people, that has been
as a speckled bird, pecked at by
all the birds round about;
attacked by all the beasts of
the field assembled to devour,
Jeremiah 12:9. It is true they
brought their troubles upon
themselves by their sins, for
which it was that God punished
them; but it was for the
peculiarity of their covenant,
and the singularities of their
religion, that their neighbours
hated and persecuted them. God’s
real people have always had many
enemies, and the state of the
church, from its infancy, has
frequently been an afflicted
state.
Verse 3-4
Psalms 129:3-4. The ploughers
ploughed upon my back — They not
only threw me down and trod me
under foot, but cruelly wounded,
mangled, and tormented me, and
had no more pity upon me than
the plough-man hath upon the
earth which he cuts at his
pleasure. He saith, upon my
back, either because they did
literally scourge the captives
upon their backs with such cords
as are mentioned Psalms 129:4,
although we do not read that the
Israelitish captives were thus
used by any of their enemies, or
by way of allusion to that
usage, which made a sort of
furrows on the backs of those
whom they thus scourged. They
made long their furrows — They
often repeated their injuries,
and prolonged my torments. Thus,
for our sakes, he who knew no
sin gave his back to the
smiters, (Isaiah 50:6,) and
permitted those ploughers to
make long their furrows upon it.
But, (Psalms 129:4,) The
righteous Lord cut asunder the
cords of the wicked — Defeated
their schemes and projects,
frustrated their designs, and
brought ruin on them by those
very means whereby they
endeavoured to effect the
destruction of the rising
church. Vengeance overtook the
wretched instruments of the
Messiah’s sufferings; and the
persecutors of his servants, in
all ages, shall perish in like
manner, as the psalmist proceeds
to assure us in the verses
following.
Verses 5-8
Psalms 129:5-8. Let them all be
confounded, &c. — Hebrew, יבשׁו
ויסגו אחור, they shall all be
confounded, and turned back —
Forced to retreat with shame and
disappointment. And so in the
next verse, instead of Let them
be, read, They shall be as grass
upon the house tops — Which
there were flat, and therefore
more capable of grass, or green
corn, growing between the stones
than ours are; which withereth,
&c. — Which, having no deep
root, never comes to maturity.
And so all their designs shall
be abortive. Thus the enemies of
God’s church wither of
themselves, and stay not till
they are rooted out by the
judgments of God. Neither do
they which go by — According to
the ancient and laudable custom
of saluting and praying for the
prosperity of harvest labours;
say, The blessing of the Lord be
upon you, &c. — Which was a
usual salutation given by
passengers to reapers, as we see
Ruth 2:4. If, in a similar way,
we acknowledge God’s providence,
testify our good-will to our
neighbours, and commend their
industry, our kind wishes will
be accepted as pious
ejaculations, if they come from
devout and upright hearts. But
religious expressions, being
sacred things, must never be
made use of in light and
ludicrous actions. Mowing the
grass on the house-top would be
a jest, and therefore those that
have a reverence for the name of
God will not prostitute to such
an action those forms of
salutation which savour of
devotion; for holy things must
not be jested with. |