Verse 1
Psalms 22:1. My God, my God, why
hast thou forsaken me? — In
these words Christ, when hanging
on the cross, complained, that
he was deprived, for a time, of
the loving presence and
comforting influence of his
heavenly Father: and St. Matthew
and St. Mark give us the very
expressions which he used, Eli,
Eli; or, as St. Mark has it,
Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani. It
is perhaps worthy of notice
here, that sabachthani is not a
Hebrew word; the Hebrew word
being עזבתני, gnazabtani; and
from hence it appears most
likely that our Saviour used
that dialect which was most
commonly understood by the Jews
in his time; and which, it is
probable, was a mixed dialect,
composed of Hebrew, Chaldee, and
Syriac. Agreeably to this
supposition, it may be further
observed, that Eloi, Eloi, as
St. Mark expresses our Saviour’s
words, were more nearly Chaldee.
Christ, it must be well
observed, “was not ignorant of
the reason why he was afflicted.
He knew that all the rigours and
pains which he endured on the
cross were only because the
chastisement of our peace was
upon him: and God laid on him
the iniquity of us all, Isaiah
53:5-6. The words then imply,
that he had done nothing to
merit the evils which he
suffered. This is the meaning of
the question here, Why hast thou
forsaken me? as also of that in
Psalms 2:1, Why do the heathen
rage?” &c. The repetition of the
words, my God, my God, denotes
the depth of his distress, which
made him cry so earnestly. From
the words of my roaring — From
regarding, pitying, or answering
my fervent prayers and strong
cries, forced from me by my
miseries. This latter clause
seems to refer to Christ’s
prayer in the garden.
Verse 2
Psalms 22:2. I cry in the
day-time, &c. — I continue
praying night and day without
intermission; but thou hearest
not — St. Paul says, Hebrews
5:7, that Christ was heard in
that he feared. Christ therefore
here says that his Father heard
him not, only to intimate that
he did not exempt him from
suffering the death of the
cross, for which the Father, who
heard him always, had wise
reasons, taken from the end for
which his Son became incarnate,
John 12:27. And am not silent —
Hebrew, I have no silence, no
rest, or quietness, as the word
דומיה, dumijah, here used, is
sometimes rendered.
Verse 3
Psalms 22:3. But thou art holy —
“But notwithstanding thou dost
not answer me at present, I am
persuaded that thou wilt do so,
for thou art holy, good, and
gracious;” O thou that
inhabitest the praises of Israel
— That dwellest in the place
where the praises of Israel have
always been offered for mercies
granted unto them: or, who
receivest and rightly possessest
the praises of Israel; whom thy
people are perpetually praising
for one mercy or another; and
therefore, I trust I also shall
have occasion to praise thee.
Verse 4-5
Psalms 22:4-5. Our fathers, &c.
— That is, my fathers, according
to the flesh, the Israelites;
trusted in thee, and were
delivered — Were not
disappointed of that for which
they prayed and hoped: but
whenever they cried unto thee in
their distress, thou didst send
them deliverance, as by Gideon,
Samson, Samuel, &c. To trust in
God is the way to obtain
deliverance, and “the former
instances of the divine favour
are so many arguments why we
should hope for the same; but it
may not always be vouchsafed
when we expect it. The
patriarchs, and Israelites of
old, were often saved from their
enemies: but the holy Jesus was
left to languish and expire
under the malice of his. God
knows what is proper for him to
do and for us to suffer; we know
neither. This consideration is
an anchor for the afflicted
soul, sure and steadfast.” —
Horne.
Verse 6
Psalms 22:6. But I am a worm,
and no man — Neglected and
despised, as a mean reptile; a
reproach of men, and despised of
the people — Not only of the
great men, but also of the
common people. This does not so
truly agree to David (who,
though he was hated and
persecuted by Saul and his
courtiers, was honoured and
beloved by the body of the
people) as to Christ: see Isaiah
53:2-3. “Christ may be said to
have been a worm. with respect
to the mean and poor condition
in which he lived; but
especially to that kind of death
which he suffered; for he was
stripped of his clothes, and
fixed upon the cross, naked as a
worm of the earth.” — Dodd. See
Philippians 2:7; Matthew
27:39-43.
Verse 7
Psalms 22:7. All they that see
me laugh me to scorn — Instead
of pitying, or helping, they
deride and insult over me: such
is their inhumanity; they shoot
out the lip — They gape with
their mouths, and put forth
their tongues in mockery; they
shake the head — Another custom
of scoffers. This and the next
verse are applied to Christ,
(Matthew 27:39; Matthew 27:43,)
in whom they were literally
fulfilled when he hung upon the
cross; and the priests and
elders used the very words that
had been put into their mouths
by the spirit of prophecy so
long before. “O the wisdom and
knowledge of God,” exclaims Dr.
Horne, “and the infatuation and
blindness of man! The same are
too often the sentiments of
those who live in times when the
church and her righteous cause,
with their advocates, are under
the clouds of persecution, and
seem to sink beneath the
displeasure of the powers of the
world. But such do not believe,
or do not consider, that in the
Christian economy death is
followed by a resurrection, when
it will appear that God
forsaketh not them that are his,
but they are preserved for
ever.”
Verse 9-10
Psalms 22:9-10. Thou art he, &c.
— This seems to refer to the
miraculous conception of Christ,
who was the Son of God, in a
sense in which no other man ever
was, being formed, as to his
human nature, by the power of
God, in the womb of a pure
virgin. Therefore he said, at
his entrance into the world,
Sacrifice and offering thou
wouldest not, but a body hast
thou prepared me. Thou didst
make me hope — Or, trust, that
is, Thou didst give me
sufficient ground for hope and
trust, if I had been capable of
it, because of thy wonderful and
watchful care over me in that
weak and helpless state; when I
was upon my mother’s breasts —
When I was a sucking child. This
was eminently true of Christ,
whom God so miraculously
preserved and provided for in
his infancy, giving, in a
supernatural way, an order to
Joseph and Mary to carry him
into Egypt, as we read Matthew
2:20-21. I was cast upon thee
from the womb — Thou didst take
me at my birth, and in a
particular manner didst charge
thyself with the care of me.
Verses 11-13
Psalms 22:11-13. Be not far from
me — As to affection and
succour; for trouble is near —
At hand, and ready to swallow me
up; for there is none to help —
Thy help therefore will be the
more seasonable, because it is
most necessary, and thou wilt
have the more glory by it,
because it will appear that it
is thy work alone. Many bulls
have compassed me — Wicked,
violent, and potent enemies, for
such are so called, Ezekiel
39:18; Amos 4:1. Strong bulls of
Bashan — Fat and lusty, as the
cattle there bred were, and
therefore fierce and furious.
“By these,” says Dr. Dodd, “are
represented the haughty
senators, the chief priests, the
scribes, the Pharisees, and the
other great men of Judea; who,
after having resolved upon his
death, Psalms 2:2, were so
insolent as to make their
appearance about his cross, and
to insult him with their
mockeries.” They gaped upon me
with their mouths — To tear and
devour me, as the following
metaphor explains it.
Verse 14-15
Psalms 22:14-15. I am poured out
like water — My spirits are
spent and gone like water,
which, once spilt, can never be
recovered; my very flesh is
melted within me, and I am
become as weak as water. My
bones are out of joint — I am as
unable to help myself, and as
full of pain, as if all my bones
were disjointed. My heart is
like wax — Melted through fear
and overwhelming grief. My
strength is dried — I have, in a
manner, no more moisture left in
me, than is in a dry potsherd.
My tongue cleaveth, &c. —
Through excessive thirst and
drought. Thou hast brought me to
death —
By thy providence delivering me
into the power of mine enemies,
and by thy terrors in my soul.
Verse 16
Psalms 22:16. Dogs have
compassed me — So he calls his
enemies, or rather the enemies
of Christ, for their insatiable
greediness, and implacable
fierceness against him. The idea
seems to be taken from a number
of dogs encompassing a
distressed deer, which they have
hunted down, as is intimated in
the remarks on the title.
Hereby, Dr. Dodd thinks, are
represented the Roman soldiers
and the other Gentiles who were
with the Jews around the cross.
But without such a particular
application, it may be
interpreted generally of
Christ’s enemies, either
consulting and conspiring
against him, or assaulting him
with violence. They pierced my
hands and my feet — These words
cannot, with any probability, be
applied to David, nor to the
attempts of his enemies upon
him; for their design was, not
to torment his hands or feet,
but to take away his life. And
if it be pretended that it is to
be understood of him in a
metaphorical sense, it must be
considered that it is so uncouth
and unusual a metaphor that
those who are of this opinion
cannot produce any example of
such a one, either in the
Scriptures or in other authors;
nor are they able to make any
tolerable sense of the words
thus understood. But what need
is there of such forced
interpretations, when this
clause was most properly and
literally verified in Christ,
whose hands and feet were really
pierced, and nailed to the
cross, according to the manner
of the Roman crucifixions? to
whom therefore it is applied in
the New Testament.
Verses 17-21
Psalms 22:17-21. I may tell all
my bones — Theodoret observes,
that when Christ was extended,
and his limbs distorted, on the
cross, it might be easy for a
spectator literally to tell all
his bones. They — Namely, my
enemies; look and stare at me —
With delight and complacency, at
my calamities, and I am a
spectacle to earth and heaven.
They part my garments among them
— This also cannot be applied to
David, without a strained and
unprecedented metaphor, but was
literally fulfilled in Christ,
Matthew 27:35; John 19:24.
Deliver my soul from the sword —
That is, from the rage and
violence of mine enemies, as the
next clause explains it, and, as
the sword is often to be taken
in Scripture. My darling —
Hebrew, my one, or only one,
namely, his soul, as he now
said, which he so terms, because
it was very dear to him, or
because it was left alone, and
destitute of friends and
helpers. From the power of the
dog — “The ravening fury of the
dog,” says Dr. Horne, “the lion,
and the unicorn, or oryx, (a
fierce and untameable creature
of the stag kind,) is made use
of to describe the rage of the
devil, and his instruments,
whether spiritual or corporeal.
From all these Christ
supplicates the Father for
deliverance. How great need have
we to supplicate for the same
through him!”
Verse 22
Psalms 22:22. I will declare thy
name — “Nothing is more common
in the Psalms than these sudden
transitions, and nothing more
beautiful. Our Saviour here
passes from the mournful view of
death to the comfortable
prospect of his resurrection. He
intimates that, after God shall
have delivered him from the
power of death, by a glorious
resurrection, he would more
fully publish his gospel, by
which the adorable perfections
of God, and especially his
wisdom and mercy, would be more
eminently displayed among his
apostles, and among the rest of
his disciples and followers,
whom he is not ashamed to call
his brethren, Hebrews 2:11. The
following verses can certainly
be applied to David only in a
very restrained sense, but are
literally true of Christ and his
triumphant reign; when in the
latter days, all the people upon
earth, even in the most remote
corners of the world, shall
worship and adore him.” — Dodd.
Verses 23-25
Psalms 22:23-25. Ye that fear
the Lord, praise him — Not only
for my sake, (they are the words
of the risen and exalted
Saviour,) but chiefly for your
own benefit, received through my
deliverance from death, and
exaltation to God’s right hand,
by which I am made head over all
things, for the good of my
church and people. All ye seed
of Jacob, &c. — He first
addresses himself to his ancient
people, to whom the gospel was
first to be preached. How long,
O Lord, holy and true, shall thy
once highly favoured nation
continue deaf to this gracious
call of thine? For he hath not
despised thee, &c. — He hath not
rejected, but graciously
accepted, my humiliation and
sufferings, as a propitiation
and sacrifice for the sins of
the world, which acceptance is
testified by my resurrection
from the dead: inasmuch as the
discharge of the surety proves
the payment of the debt. This is
the great subject of praise and
thanksgiving in the church of
Christ. My praise shall be of
thee in the great congregation —
In the universal church, made up
of Jews and Gentiles, as the
following verses explain it. I
will pay my vows before them
that fear him — Those praises
and services which, in my
distress, I vowed to return unto
thee when thou didst deliver me.
“The vow of Christ was to build
and consecrate to Jehovah a
spiritual temple, in which the
spiritual sacrifices of prayer
and praise should be continually
offered. This vow he performed,
after his resurrection, by the
hands of his apostles, and still
continues to perform, by those
of his ministers, carrying on
the work of edification in the
great congregation of the
Gentile Christian Church. The
vows of Christ cannot fail of
being performed. Happy are they
whom he vouchsafeth to use as
his instruments in the
performance of them.” — Horne.
Verse 26
Psalms 22:26. The meek — That
is, the poor or humble, gentle
and teachable, namely, believing
and godly persons whose hearts
the grace of God hath softened
and sweetened, subduing their
pride and passion, and their
rebellion against God, and
fierceness toward men; shall eat
and be satisfied — Shall partake
of those spiritual blessings
which God hath provided for them
in his gospel, that grace, and
peace, and comfort, which all
believing souls enjoy, in a
sense of God’s love, in the
pardon of their sins, and in the
influences of God’s Spirit. Of
these and not of any temporal
blessings, this clause is
doubtless to be understood. They
shall praise the Lord that seek
him — That seek his favour, and
the true spiritual knowledge of,
and communion with, him. Your
heart shall live — He speaks of
the same persons still, though
there be a change from the third
to the second person, as is
usual in these poetical books.
For ever — Your comfort shall
not be short and transitory, as
worldly comforts are, but
everlasting.
Verse 27
Psalms 22:27. All the ends of
the world — All nations, from
one end of the world to the
other. So this is an evident
prophecy of the calling of the
Gentiles to the knowledge of God
and Christ by the gospel, and a
clear proof that this Psalm
immediately speaks of Christ; to
whom alone this and divers other
passages of it belong. Shall
remember — They shall remember
their former wickedness with
grief, and shame, and fear;
particularly in worshipping dead
and impotent idols. They shall
remember their great and
manifold obligations to God,
which they had quite forgotten,
his patience in sparing them so
long, in the midst of all their
impieties, and in revealing his
gospel to them, and in giving
his Son for them: they shall
remember the gracious words and
glorious works of Christ, what
he did and suffered for them;
which possibly divers of them
had been eye and ear witnesses
of. And turn unto the Lord —
Unto the only true God, and unto
Jesus Christ, to whom this name
of Jehovah is often ascribed in
Scripture. All the kindreds of
the nations — Hebrew, כל
משׁפחות, cal mishpechoth, all
the families. Which is not to be
understood strictly of every
particular person and family,
but of all sorts, and of great
numbers of them; as such
universal phrases are often to
be understood in Scripture.
Verse 28
Psalms 22:28. For the kingdom is
the Lord’s — This is added as a
reason why the Gentiles should
be converted, because God is not
only the God and Lord of the
Jews, but also of the Gentiles,
and of all nations. And,
therefore, though for a time he
thought fit to confine his
kingdom or visible church to
Israel, yet he had resolved, in
due time, to enlarge it, and to
set up his throne and government
in the Gentile world, which were
no less created and redeemed by
him than the Jews, Romans
3:29-30; Zechariah 14:9.
Verse 29
Psalms 22:29. All they that be
fat upon the earth — It was
said, Psalms 22:26, that the
meek, the lowly, and poor should
eat and be satisfied: it is here
foretold, that the fat ones of
the earth; the rich and great,
the nobles, princes, and kings,
should be called in to partake
of the feast. And worship — This
word is added to show what kind
of eating he spoke of, that it
is a spiritual eating, a feeding
upon the bread of life, a
partaking of Christ and his
benefits. High and low, rich and
poor; all mankind are invited to
partake of the gospel-feast. All
they that go down to the dust —
That is, the whole human race;
for none can escape death; shall
bow before him — “As I live,
saith the Lord, every knee shall
bow to me, and every tongue
shall confess to God.” And none
can keep alive his own soul —
Can secure or preserve his
natural life longer than God is
pleased to continue it to him,
or can be the author to himself
of spiritual and eternal life.
It is, therefore, the great
interest as well as duty of all
to bow before the Lord Jesus; to
give themselves up to him to be
his subjects and worshippers;
for this is the only way, and it
is a sure way, to secure
happiness when they go down to
the dust. Seeing we cannot keep
alive our own souls, it is our
wisdom, by an obedient faith, to
commit our souls to Jesus
Christ, who is able to save
them, and keep them alive for
ever. Observe, reader, all who
would partake of the benefits of
Christ’s passion, here or
hereafter, must worship, confide
in, love and obey him as a
Saviour and a king, before they
are called to bow before and
adore him as a judge. But the
latter part of this verse is
understood differently by some.
All that descend into the dust,
they suppose to mean all the
poor, who, as well as the rich,
are called upon, and shall have
the privilege to worship him.
For none can keep alive his own
soul — That is, the greatest, as
well as the meanest, must
acknowledge that their salvation
proceeds from him alone.
Verse 30
Psalms 22:30. A seed shall serve
him — Christ shall not want a
seed or posterity, for though
the Jewish nation will generally
reject him, the Gentiles shall
come in their stead. It shall be
accounted for a generation —
That believing seed shall be
reputed, both by God and men,
the generation, or people of the
Lord, as the Jews formerly were.
Verse 31
Psalms 22:31. They shall come —
The seed last mentioned, or,
some shall come, (for this may
be indefinitely spoken,) and do
the work here mentioned, namely,
the apostles and ministers of
the gospel shall come from Judea
and Jerusalem, from whence the
gospel was to go forth, to the
Gentile world, to the several
parts whereof the apostles went
upon this errand. And shall
declare his righteousness:
either, 1st, His wonderful grace
and mercy to mankind. in giving
them Christ and the gospel: for
righteousness is often put for
mercy or kindness. Or, 2d, That
righteousness which God hath
appointed for the justification
of sinners, called the
righteousness of faith, Romans
3:21-22; Philippians 3:9, which
the Jews were ignorant of, and
would not submit to, Romans
10:3, but which the Gentiles
joyfully embraced. Or, 3d, His
truth or faithfulness, (which is
very frequently and properly
called righteousness,) in the
performance of those exceeding
great and precious promises made
and recorded in the Old
Testament, and especially those
two concerning the sending of
Messias, and concerning the
calling of the Gentiles; Unto a
people that shall be born —
Either, 1st, Spiritually, that
is, born again: for conversion
to God is sometimes called a
birth, and creation, even in the
Old Testament. Or rather, 2d,
Naturally, that is, unto
succeeding generations. Whereby
David gives us a key to
understand this Psalm, and
teacheth us that he speaks not
here of himself, or of the
occurrences of his times, but of
things which were to be done in
after ages, even in the
spreading of the gospel among
the Gentiles, in the time of the
New Testament. That he hath done
this — They shall declare that
this is the work of God, and not
of man, and is carried on by his
power alone in the world,
against all the policy and power
of men. |