Verse 1
Psalms 137:1. By the rivers of
Babylon — Of the city, or rather
of the territory of Babylon, in
which there were many rivers, as
Euphrates, which also was
divided into several streams or
rivulets, and Tigris, and
others; there sat we down — The
usual posture of mourners, Ezra
9:4; Job 2:12; Isaiah 47:1;
Isaiah 47:5. It is supposed by
some, that they were employed in
draining the marshy parts of the
country; but it seems more
probable, that their present
distress did not arise from that
circumstance, but from their
reflecting on Zion, and their
banishment from it: and that
they seated themselves down by
the rivers from choice, retiring
thither from the noise and
observation of their enemies, as
they had opportunity, in order
that they might unburden their
oppressed minds before the Lord,
and to one another. We wept when
we remembered Zion — He means,
either their former enjoyments
in Zion, which greatly
aggravated their present misery,
Lamentations 1:7, or Zion’s
present desolation. “What an
inexpressible pathos is there in
these few words! How do they, at
once, transport us to Babylon,
and place before our eyes the
mournful situation of the
Israelitish captives! Driven
from their native country,
stripped of every comfort and
convenience, in a strange land
among idolaters, wearied and
broken- hearted, they sit in
silence by those hostile waters.
Then the pleasant banks of
Jordan present themselves to
their imaginations; the towers
of Salem rise to view; and the
sad remembrance of much loved
Zion causes tears to run down
their cheeks!”
Verse 2
Psalms 137:2. We hanged our
harps upon the willows, in the
midst thereof. — These are, not
without great probability,
supposed to be the words of some
holy Levites, who had been
accustomed to music, both vocal
and instrumental, in the service
of the temple. Harps are here
put, by a synecdoche, for all
instruments of music. It is
further to be observed, that
although the harp was used by
the Greeks in mourning, yet it
was used by the Hebrews in
rejoicing, as is manifest from
Genesis 31:27; 2 Chronicles
20:27-28; Psalms 43:4. This
passage is to be understood,
either, 1st, Figuratively,
signifying only, that they
abandoned all signs and means of
comfort; or rather, 2d,
Properly, as the songs are which
the Babylonians required them to
sing to their harps, Psalms
137:3. Upon the willows — Which
commonly grow upon the banks of
rivers, as they did on the banks
of the Euphrates, in such an
abundance that from thence it is
called the brook, or torrent, or
river, (as נחלmay be properly
rendered,) of willows, Isaiah
15:7. Thus “the sincere
penitent, like these captives,
hath bidden adieu to mirth; his
soul refuseth to be comforted
with the comforts of Babylon;
nor can he sing any more till
pardon and restoration shall
have enabled him to sing in the
temple a song of praise and
thanksgiving.”
Verse 3
Psalms 137:3. There they that
carried us away — Our new
masters, who had made us their
slaves, and carried us captives
out of our own land; required of
us a song — דברי שׁיר, the words
of a song: in the LXX., λογους
ωδων, words of songs. They
required us to entertain them
with our music and singing. And
they that wasted us — Hebrew,
ותוללינו, contumulatores nostri,
they that laid us on heaps,
namely, that laid Jerusalem and
the temple in ruins, required of
us mirth, שׁמחה, joy, or
gladness; saying, Sing us of the
songs (so it is in the Hebrew)
of Zion — Sing us some of those
songs which were wont to be sung
in the temple on occasions of
public joy. This they required,
probably partly out of
curiosity, and partly by way of
scoffing and insult over them
and their temple and worship,
not without “a tacit reflection
on their God, who could not
protect his favoured people
against their enemies. Thus the
faithful have been, and thus
they will be insulted over in
the day of their calamity.”
Verse 4
Psalms 137:4. How shall we sing
the Lord’s song — Those sacred
songs which are appropriated to
the worship of the true God in
his temple, and are appointed by
him to be sung only to his
honour and in his service; in a
strange land — When we are
banished from our own temple and
country, and among those who are
strangers and enemies to our God
and his worship? How can you
imagine that miserable slaves
should be disposed to sing songs
of joy? Or that we can frame our
minds in the land where we are
exiles, to sing those songs
which recount the mercies of God
unto us in our once flourishing
country. How, indeed, says Dr.
Horne, “could they tune their
voices to festive and
eucharistic strains, when God,
by punishing them for their
sins, called to mourning and
weeping? But then Israel in
Babylon foresaw a day of
redemption; and so doth the
church in the world; a day when
she shall triumph, and her
enemies shall lick the dust. No
circumstances, therefore, should
make us forget her and the
promises concerning her.”
Verse 5-6
Psalms 137:5-6. If I forget
thee, O Jerusalem — If I do not
retain a deep and sorrowful
sense of thy desolations, though
never so far removed from thee;
or if I indulge myself in mirth
and jollity, as if I had
forgotten thee; let my right
hand — The hand chiefly used in
playing on musical instruments,
and in all other actions; forget
her cunning — That is, lose its
skill of playing. In the Hebrew
it is only, Let my right hand
forget, without expressing what,
to intimate the extent and
generality of this wish; let it
forget, or be disabled for every
action, in which it was formerly
used. If I do not remember thee
— With affection and sympathy,
so as to damp my joys; let my
tongue cleave to the roof of my
mouth — Become incapable of
singing, speaking, or moving; if
I prefer not Jerusalem, &c. — If
I do not value and desire
Jerusalem’s prosperity more than
all other delights, and
consequently, if Jerusalem’s
misery do not so deeply affect
me as to hinder my delighting in
any other thing. Hebrew, אם לא
אלעה, literally, If I advance
not Jerusalem in the beginning,
or at the head, (as על
ראשׁproperly signifies,) of my
joy; that is, “if I again sing
any such festive song till that
joyful day shall come, when I
shall see Jerusalem and her holy
solemnities restored.” “The
whole nation,” says Dr. Horne,
“may be supposed, in these
words, to declare as one man,
that neither the afflictions nor
the allurements of Babylon
should efface from their minds
the remembrance of Jerusalem, or
prevent their looking forward to
her future glorious restoration.
If any temptation should induce
them to employ their tongues and
their hands in the service of
Babel rather than that of Sion,
they wish to lose the use of the
former, and the skill of the
latter.” Thus, “the thoughts and
affections of true penitents,
both in prosperity and
adversity, are fixed upon their
heavenly country and city: they
had rather be deprived of their
powers and faculties than of the
will to use them aright; and the
hope of glory hereafter to be
revealed in the church is the
flower and crown of their joy.”
Verse 7
Psalms 137:7. Remember, O Lord,
the children of Edom — Their
constant and inveterate enemies,
who had no regard either to
consanguinity or humanity, but,
instead of pitying Jerusalem, as
became kind neighbours and
relations, were glad to see the
day of its desolations; and
encouraged their destroyers with
their acclamations, saying, Rase
it, rase it, &c. Hebrew, ערו
ערו, make it bare, empty it, or
lay it flat, even to the
foundation thereof, or the
ground on which it stands. Edom
is charged with this unnatural
behaviour, and threatened for it
by God himself in the prophecy
of Obadiah, Obadiah 1:10, and
for it God’s judgments came upon
them, as it was here foretold
they should do.
Verse 8-9
Psalms 137:8-9. O daughter of
Babylon — By which he
understands the city and empire
of Babylon, and the people
thereof, who art to be destroyed
— Who by God’s righteous and
irrevocable sentence, art
devoted to certain destruction,
and whose destruction is
particularly and
circumstantially foretold by
God’s holy prophets. For the
subject of these two verses is
the same with that of many
chapters in Isaiah and Jeremiah;
namely, the vengeance of Heaven
executed upon Babylon by Cyrus,
raised up to be king of the
Medes and Persians for that
purpose. Happy shall he be — He
shall be blessed and praised in
his deed, as having done a
glorious work in executing the
divine justice upon Babylon, and
at the same time, as an
instrument in God’s hand,
rescuing and delivering the
people of God. Happy shall he be
that taketh and dasheth thy
little ones, &c. — That
retaliates upon thee the
calamities thou didst bring upon
us. It has been objected, that
the imprecations, in these
verses, against Babylon, do not
well comport with God’s
directions to his captive
people, Jeremiah 29:7, to pray
for the peace of Babylon. But
here we must distinguish between
the ordinary rule of practice
and the extraordinary commission
given to prophets. The psalmist
was a prophet, and wrote by the
special direction of the Holy
Spirit; while the common people
of Israel, and prophets also, in
their private capacity, were to
follow the ordinary rule of
praying for those very enemies
whose destruction was coming on,
but in God’s own time. In the
meanwhile the safety of the
Jewish captives depended on the
safety of Babylon, and was
wrapped up in it; and so it
concerned them, both in point of
duty and interest, to submit
peaceably and quietly to their
new masters, and to pray for
their prosperity:
notwithstanding all which, they
might justly hope for a
deliverance at the seventy
years’ end, and God might
instruct his prophets to declare
it before hand, together with
the manner of it: “see
Waterland’s Script. Vind., part
3. page 28. “The meaning of the
words, happy shall he be,” says
Dr. Horne, “is, He shall go on
and prosper, for the Lord of
hosts shall go with him, and
fight his battles against the
enemy and oppressor of his
people, empowering him to
recompense upon the Chaldeans
the works of their hands, and to
reward them as they served
Israel. The slaughter of the
very infants, mentioned in the
last verse, is expressly
predicted by Isaiah 13:16; Their
children also shall be dashed to
pieces before their eyes; their
houses shall be spoiled, and
their wives ravished. The
destruction was to be universal,
sparing neither sex nor age.
Terrible, but just, are thy
judgments, O Lord! The fall of
the mystical Babylon is
described Revelation 18. in
terms and phrases borrowed from
this and other prophecies,
relating primarily to the
ancient city called by that
name. Whoever will carefully
read over the chapter referred
to, with the three subsequent
ones, concerning the triumph of
Messiah, and the glory of the
new Jerusalem, will be able to
form proper ideas of the world
and the church, and will know
where to choose his portion.” |