Verses 1-3
Psalms 68:1-3. Let God arise,
&c. — As God was in a peculiar
manner present in the ark, and
as his presence was the great
security of the Israelitish
nation from the dangers of the
wilderness, and the power of
their enemies, Moses addressed
his prayer to him in these words
whenever the ark was taken up
for their several marches: see
Numbers 10:35. And in these same
words the singers began, when,
at the command of David, the
Levites first took up the ark on
their shoulders to carry it from
the house of Obed-edom to Zion.
There is, indeed, this little
difference between the passage
in Numbers and this of the
Psalm, that the first word of
the former in the Hebrew is in
the imperative mood, קומה, kumah,
Let God arise, whereas here the
word is in the future tense, and
is literally rendered, God
shall, or will, arise. And, in
like manner, all the clauses of
this and the next two verses are
expressed in the same tense, as
if they were a prediction of
what was to come; his enemies
shall be scattered — those that
hate him shall flee, &c. — God’s
enemies, it must be observed,
are also the enemies of his
people, and they are therefore
said to hate him, because they
hate them, and because they hate
his laws and government, and his
holy image and nature; the
carnal mind which is in them,
being enmity against him, and
not subject to his law, neither,
indeed, can it be subject
thereto. As smoke is driven away
— Which, though it rises from
the earth in black and
tremendous clouds, is soon
scattered and dispersed by the
wind; so drive them away — Or,
so they shall be driven away,
shall be dispersed by a force
which, notwithstanding their
threatening aspect, they are
utterly unable to resist. And as
wax melteth before the fire —
Which, though to appearance it
be of a firm and solid
consistence, yet, when brought
to the fire, is soon dissolved,
and makes no resistance; so let
the wicked perish, &c. — And so
they shall perish when the Lord
is revealed from heaven, with
his mighty angels, in flaming
fire. But let the righteous be
glad, &c. — For God’s gracious
appearance in their behalf, and
for his settled presence with
them.
Verse 4
Psalms 68:4. Sing unto God, &c.
— “The prophet here exhorts the
people of God to magnify with
Psalms, and hymns, and spiritual
songs, the eternal and
incommunicable name of Him who
was, and is, and is to come;
who, deriving being from none,
gives it to all, and who, as
Redeemer of his people, is
exalted above the heavens, and
all the powers therein, above
the gods of the nations; is
acknowledged and glorified by
saints and angels; feared and
trembled at by ungodly men and
evil spirits.” — Horne. Extol
him, &c. — Hebrew, cast up, or
prepare the way, for him that
rideth through the deserts, or,
that did ride in the desert,
namely, manifested his presence
between the cherubim upon the
mercy-seat of the ark, when it
was carried through the
wilderness; or marched along
with it in the cloudy pillar.
Or, that now rideth, as in the
desert, that is, whose ark, with
which he is present, is now
carried from place to place, as
it was in the desert. This
construction is most agreeable
to the common usage of the
original words here employed,
סלו, sollu, rendered extol,
properly meaning, to cast up, or
prepare a way; and ערבות,
gnaraboth, translated heavens,
generally signifying the
deserts, or plain fields. By his
name Jah — Whereby he is known
and distinguished from all false
gods, Jah being, no doubt, an
abbreviation of the name
Jehovah, which the heathen
pronounced Jao. And rejoice
before him — Before the ark,
with which he is present. Thus
David is said to have danced
before the Lord on this
occasion.
Verse 5-6
Psalms 68:5-6. A father of the
fatherless — He now proceeds to
mention some of the reasons for
which God is to be praised. Of
these this is one, that he is
the patron of such as are
injured and oppressed, and have
not power to help themselves; is
God in his holy habitation — In
his tabernacle, or rather, in
heaven. Though he is in a
peculiar manner present and
dwells there, yet the eyes of
his fatherly providence and care
run to and fro through the
earth, to observe and help his
people when they are in
distress. God setteth the
solitary — Hebrew, יחדים,
jechidim, such as are left
single and alone, and are
destitute of help; in families —
Hebrew, he causeth them to sit
down in houses: he blesseth them
with partners in life, and a
posterity, and with the safe and
comfortable enjoyment of the
social blessings attending it.
He bringeth out those which were
bound, &c. — He setteth captives
and prisoners at liberty, as he
did the Israelites. But the
rebellious — Those that rebel
against God, as the Egyptians
did; dwell in a dry land — Are
deprived of all true comfort,
and plagued with manifold
calamities. This part of the
Psalm, from Psalms 68:1 to
Psalms 68:6, inclusive, Dr.
Chandler supposes to have been
sung just as the Levites took up
the ark on their shoulders: and
certainly it was a proper
exordium to this great
solemnity: containing “a solemn
acknowledgment of God, a devout
prayer for the dispersion of his
enemies, and an exhortation to
his people to rejoice before
him, and to celebrate his
praises, who guided their
forefathers in the desert; when
he redeemed them from Egyptian
bondage, avenged them of their
enemies, enlarged them into
families, enriched them with the
spoils of Egypt, and condemned
their oppressors to poverty,
disgrace, and misery.”
Verse 7-8
Psalms 68:7-8. O God, when thou
wentest forth before thy people
— In the cloudy pillar, as their
captain, leading them out of
Egypt; the earth shook — Or,
trembled, that is, either the
inhabitants of those parts of
the earth, according to Exodus
15:14; or the earth itself,
through an earthquake, as a
token of God’s dreadful
presence, as seems to be
intimated, Psalms 114:5-7. The
heavens also dropped — Dissolved
into showers, as the consequence
of those mighty thunders and
lightnings, which also bespoke
his presence, and of the thick
cloud that covered the mount.
Even Sinai itself, &c. — Shook,
or dropped, for either verb may
be supplied from the former
clause, there being no verb in
the Hebrew text of this clause.
Sinai was even melted, or
dissolved with fear. It is a
poetical representation of the
terribleness of God’s
appearance. Dr. Chandler
supposes that this part of the
Psalm, from Psalms 68:7 to the
14th, was sung just as the
procession began, and the
Levites moved along with the
ark, placed by its staves on
their shoulders.
Verse 9
Psalms 68:9. Thou, O God, didst
send a plentiful rain, &c. —
Hebrew, נדבות, גשׁם, geshem
nedaboth, a rain of
spontaneousness, or liberality.
The Seventy render it, βροχην
εκουσιον, a spontaneous,
voluntary, or free rain. As we
do not read of any showers of
rain that fell during the
continuance of the Israelites in
the wilderness, except that
before mentioned on Sinai, the
people being supplied with
water, partly from wells which
they found, and partly by
miracle from rocks, Dr. Chandler
thinks the plentiful rain here
mentioned “relates to the manna
and the quails, which were
rained down on them from
heaven.” Thus God promised, I
will rain bread from heaven for
you, Exodus 16:4; and the
psalmist observes, Psalms
68:23-24; Psalms 68:27, He
opened the doors of heaven, and
rained down manna upon them to
eat, and gave them of the corn
of heaven. He rained flesh also
upon them as dust, and feathered
fowls as the sand of the sea.
“This,” he thinks, “may truly be
called a kind of spontaneous
shower; as both the manna and
the quails offered themselves to
their hands without any pains or
labour in the people to procure
them. By this shower, says the
sacred writer, thou didst
confirm thine inheritance, (see
Deuteronomy 32:9;) that is,
didst recruit and refresh thy
people; for they greatly needed
it, as they were weary; that is,
tired, and almost worn out with
hunger, the hardships of which
they bore with great impatience
and murmuring.” There is,
however, one great objection to
this interpretation of the
passage. It does not seem to
comport with the next verse,
which speaks of the congregation
of Israel as dwelling in the
inheritance refreshed by this
rain, which inheritance was
certainly the land of Canaan. In
this they had dwelt for many
ages when David wrote this
Psalm, and though they had
sometimes been chastised with
drought, yet they had often
witnessed the descent of
abundant rains upon their
country, which were the more
necessary and desirable, because
it was hilly and of a dry soil,
and not watered, like Egypt, by
the overflowings of a great
river. See Deuteronomy 11:10-11.
Verse 10
Psalms 68:10. Thy congregation —
Thy people Israel, who are all
united in one body, under thee
their head and governor. It is
true, the word חיה, chajab, here
rendered congregation, primarily
signifies life, living creature,
or animal, and is often put for
beast, and wild beast; but, as
the best lexicographers observe,
it also frequently means cœtus,
or caterva, a company or troop
of men, as in Psalms 68:30 of
this chapter, and 2 Samuel
23:13, compared with 1
Chronicles 11:15, and Psalms
74:19. But, retaining the proper
signification of the word, the
clause may be rendered, as it is
by the LXX., τα ζωα σου, thy
living creatures, or thy flock,
that is, thy people, the sheep
of thy pasture, hath dwelt
therein, ישׁבו בה, jashebu bah,
have dwelt in it, namely, in the
inheritance mentioned in the
preceding verse, to which the
preposition, with the feminine
affix, בה, in it, can only
properly refer. God often
compares himself to a shepherd,
and his people to sheep; and he
is particularly said to have led
his people like a flock, by the
hand of Moses and Aaron, Psalms
77:20, namely, in the
wilderness; and consequently he
may be here said to have brought
his sheep into, and to have made
them dwell in, Canaan, as in a
green and good pasture; see
Psalms 23., where God speaks of
his people under this very
metaphor. This interpretation,
evidently adopted by our
translators, seems much more
easy and natural, and more
agreeable to the Hebrew text,
than that of Dr. Chandler and
some others, who would render
the word above mentioned, (which
we translate thy flock, or thy
congregation,) thy food, or the
support of thy life; and who
thus interpret the clause: thy
food, or, as to thy food, the
food which thou, O God, gavest
them, they dwelt in the midst of
it: which is surely a very
unnatural and forced exposition.
Thou hast prepared of thy
goodness, &c. — Dr. Chandler, in
consistency with his
above-mentioned interpretation
of the preceding clause,
understands this of the
provision made miraculously by
God for his people in the
wilderness: but, according to
our translation, it speaks of
the provision made for them in
Canaan; the good land which God
prepared for his people, by
expelling the old inhabitants,
sending frequently refreshing
and fertilizing rains upon it,
making it fruitful by his
special blessing, and furnishing
it with all sorts of provisions:
and all this of his goodness,
that is, by his free, unmerited,
and singular goodness: and that
both as to the cause and measure
of this preparation. God did it;
not for their righteousness, as
he often told them, but of his
mere mercy; and he increased the
fruits of the earth very
wonderfully, that they might be
sufficient for the supply of
such a numerous people, which,
without his extraordinary
blessing, would not have been
the case, as appears by the
state of that land at this day,
which is well known to be very
barren. For the poor — Thy
people of Israel, whom he calls
poor, partly to repress that
pride and arrogance to which
they were exceedingly prone, and
to remind them of their entire
dependance on God for all they
had or hoped for; and partly
because they really were poor
when God undertook the conduct
of them into Canaan, and such
they would have been still if
God had not provided for them in
a singular manner.
Verse 11
Psalms 68:11. The Lord gave the
word — The matter of the word,
or discourse here following. He
put this triumphal song into the
mouths of his people; he gave
them those successes and
victories which are here
celebrated. Or he gave the
matter or thing which was
published. Having celebrated the
goodness of God, which fed them
in, and led them through, the
wilderness, conducted them into
Canaan, watered and refreshed
the land with plentiful showers,
and rendered it fruitful, he now
proceeds to speak of the great
victories which God had given
them over their enemies, and of
the great deliverances he had
wrought out for them. Great was
the company of those that
published it — The deliverances
wrought out by God for his
people were so glorious and
wonderful, that all sorts of
persons, women as well as men,
that heard of them, broke forth
into songs of praise to God for
them. Indeed the Hebrew word
המבשׂרות, hambasseroth, here
rendered, that published it, is
in the feminine gender, and
therefore refers chiefly to the
women, who with songs and music
celebrated the victories of the
Israelites over their enemies,
according to the custom of those
times, Exodus 15:20; 1 Samuel
18:6. So also in this
procession, besides the singers
and players on other
instruments, we have the damsels
playing with timbrels. The
clause here, literally
translated, is, Large was the
number of women who published
the glad tidings; which glad
tidings are those contained in
the next two verses.
Verse 12
Psalms 68:12. Kings of armies —
The kings of the Midianites, of
Canaan, and other nations, which
came forth against the
Israelites with numerous and
powerful armies; did flee apace
— Hebrew, ידדונ ידדונ, jiddodun,
jiddodun, fled away, fled away,
the reduplication of this word
denoting their hasty flight and
utter dispersion. They fled with
their routed forces, and were
pursued, overtaken, and
destroyed by the victorious
Israelites. She that tarried at
home divided the spoil — The
spoil was so much that there was
enough, not only for the proper
use of those that took it, but
also to be divided to their
wives and children when they
came home. After the conquest of
the Midianites, God ordered the
prey which was taken from them
to be divided between them who
went out on that expedition, and
the rest of the people who
continued in their tents,
Numbers 31:27; and therefore
this was part of the damsels’
song, that the women, who had
charge of the household affairs,
were enriched by an equal
division of the enemies’ spoils,
in which their husbands and
fathers had their share; and
perhaps it is the victory over
the Midianites which is here
referred to.
Verse 13
Psalms 68:13. Though ye have
lien among the pots — The word
שׁפתים, shepattaim, here
rendered pots, “signifies
kettles, pots, or furnaces, for
various uses, fixed in stone or
brick, placed in double rows,
and so regularly disposed for
convenience and use; and refers
to those pots, or furnaces, at
which the Israelites in Egypt
wrought as slaves, and among
which they were forced to lie
down for want of proper
habitations, and in the most
wretched and vile attire,
Deuteronomy 4:26; Psalms 81:6.
But how great was the alteration
by the conquest of their
enemies, and especially of the
Midianites! Enriched by the
spoils of your enemies, ye shall
now lie down, that is, dwell at
ease and with elegance in your
tents.” Ye shall be — Or, ye
have been, which seems to be
more suitable to the context,
both preceding and following, in
which he does not speak
prophetically of things to come,
but historically of things past.
The sense of the verse then is,
Though you have formerly been
exposed to great servitude,
reproach, and misery, namely, in
Egypt; yet since that time God
hath changed your condition
greatly for the better. As the
wings of a dove, &c. — Beautiful
and glorious, like the feathers
of a dove, which, according to
the variety of its postures, and
of the light shining upon it,
look like silver or gold. He is
thought to refer to the rich
garments, or costly tents, which
they took from the Midianites,
and their other enemies, and
which, either because of their
various colours, or their being
ornamented with silver and gold,
resembled the colours of a dove,
the feathers of whose wings or
body glistered interchangeably,
as with silver and gold: see
Chandler and Bochart. Thus the
church of Christ has frequently
emerged from a slate of
persecution and tribulation into
one of liberty and comfort. “And
such is the change made in the
spiritual condition of any man,
when he passes from the bondage
of corruption into the glorious
liberty of the sons of God: he
is invested with the robe of
righteousness, and adorned with
the graces of the Spirit of
holiness.” — Horne. But still,
yea, incomparably greater will
be the change of state and
condition which all the true
disciples of Christ shall
experience when they shall
completely put off the image of
the earthly, with all its
attendant infirmities,
afflictions, and sufferings, and
shall be fully invested with
that of the heavenly, their very
bodies being conformed to
Christ’s glorious body. Then
indeed shall all remains of
their state of humiliation
disappear: and they shall be as
the wings of a dove covered with
silver, and her feathers with
yellow gold: yea, they shall
shine forth as the sun in the
kingdom of their Father.
Verse 14
Psalms 68:14. When the Almighty
scattered kings in it — In
Canaan, at the coming of the
Israelites thither; it was white
as snow in Salmon — “The
Almighty appeared most
illustrious as Salmon,” says
Bishop Patrick, that is, as
mount Salmon covered with snow:
“The land and nation,” says Mr.
Samuel Clark, “were then in a
very flourishing, joyful
condition, and resplendent, by
the establishment of God’s pure
worship there.” Dr. Hammond
explains and confirms this
interpretation of the passage
more at large, as follows: “The
construction lies thus: בפרשׂ
שׁדי מלכים בה, O God, by
scattering kings there; or, when
thou, O God Almighty, didst
scatter kings in, or on it, επ
αυτης, say the LXX., that is, on
Salmon, תשׁלג, tashleg, thou
wast white as snow; or, thou
didst snow, that is, thou didst
there appear in the most
shining, bright, propitious
form; thy mercies made that
place more beautiful than the
crown of snow doth the head of
that mountain, when it melts in
fertile moisture on the
neighbouring valleys.” “Salmon,”
he adds, “was the name of a very
high hill on this side Jordan,
in the portion of the tribe of
Ephraim, 9:40, and consequently
used to have snow lying long
upon it.” Poole however thinks,
with many other interpreters,
both Hebrew and Christian, and
the Chaldee among the rest, that
the word Salmon ought to be
taken here, not for a proper,
but a common name, signifying
darkness, or a shadow, and
therefore proposes rendering the
clause, It was snow-white, or,
Thou madest it snow-white in
darkness; or, Thou didst cause
light to shine out of darkness:
that is, at a time when the
state of thy people, and the
land of Canaan, which thou hadst
given them, was dark and dismal,
or bloody, by reason of the wars
raised against them by the
Canaanitish kings, thou didst
quickly change it, and whereas
it was red like scarlet, or
crimson, thou madest it whiter
than snow. Thus Buxtorf
translates תשׁלג בצלמון, tashleg
betsalmon, nivesces, thou didst
snow, or albesces sicut nix, in
caligine. Thou didst grow white
in darkness. Henry understands
it of the church of God that
then was: “She was white as snow
in Salmon, purified and refined
by the mercies of God.” Chandler
renders the clause, When the
Almighty scattered kings
therein, thou didst make them
joyful in Salmon; or, There was
great joy in Salmon. Dr. Horne
who doubtless had consulted the
commentators above quoted and
many others on the passage,
acquiesces in this
interpretation, observing, “The
purport of this difficult verse
seems to be, that all was white
as snow, that is, all was
brightness, joy, and festivity
about mount Salmon, when the
Almighty, fighting for his
people Israel, vanquished their
enemies in or about that part of
the country.”
Verse 15
Psalms 68:15. The hill of God —
That is, Zion, the seat of God’s
ark; is as the hill of Bashan —
Equal, yea, superior to it.
Bashan was a rich and fruitful
mountain beyond Jordan, called
by the LXX. πιον ορος, a fat
mountain, and ορος τετυρωμενον,
a mountain that yielded much
butter and cheese. But Zion had
greater advantages, and yielded
much better fruits. A high hill
as the hill of Bashan — Though
it be but a low, mean hill,
compared with Bashan, in outward
appearance, yet it is as high as
it, yea, is exalted far above
it, through its spiritual
privileges, being the place
where God’s worship is
established, where he is
peculiarly present, and where he
confers his choicest blessings;
in which respect the mountain of
the Lord’s house is said to be
established on the top of the
mountains, and exalted above the
hills. Dr. Chandler supposes
that this and the two following
verses were begun to be sung
when the ark came in view of
mount Zion, the place of its
fixed residence for the future,
and probably when they began to
ascend the hill. And he reads
this, as well as the following
verse, with an interrogation,
conceiving that it makes them
appear more suitable to the
occasion, and worthy of the
genuine spirit of poetry; thus:
Is the hill of Bashan, is the
craggy hill of Bashan the hill
of God? As if he had said,
Bashan may boast of its proud
eminences, its craggy summits,
but is this the hill where God
will fix his residence?
Verse 16
Psalms 68:16. Why leap ye, ye
high hills — Why exult ye, or
triumph, boasting of your
height, and looking down upon
poor Zion with scorn and
contempt, as an obscure and
inconsiderable hill, if compared
with you? He speaks to the hills
by a usual figure, called a
prosopopœia. This is the hill,
&c. — This hill, though
despicable in your eyes, is
precious and honourable in the
eyes of God, and chosen by him
for the place of his settled and
perpetual residence. Dr.
Chandler, however, gives a
different sense to the word
תרצדון, teratsdun, here
rendered, leap ye; and
translates the whole verse thus:
Why look ye with envy, ye craggy
hills? This is the mountain God
hath desired to dwell in; yea,
the Lord will dwell there for
ever. Thus he considers the
psalmist as poetically
introducing Bashan, and the
other little hills, as looking
with envy on mount Zion, that
she, above all the other
mountains, should be favoured
with the residence of the
eternal God, and become the
fixed seat of his ark. He
tacitly bids them cease their
envy; and by pointing to mount
Zion, says, “See! there is the
hill which God hath chosen,
above all others, to inhabit!
Yea, the Lord will dwell there
for ever. His ark shall never be
removed from it to any other
dwelling whatsoever.” For,
though the ark was removed from
that particular spot, in which
it was now to be placed, to the
hill of Moriah, upon which the
temple was to be built; yet it
must be remembered that Zion and
Moriah stood near each other,
being both in Jerusalem, and
were, probably, but two tops of
one and the same hill. Here,
excepting the seventy years of
the Babylonish captivity, during
which time Jerusalem lay
desolate, God would dwell “till
the old dispensation should be
at an end; till the glory of the
Lord should be revealed in human
nature; till God should be
manifest in the flesh; and the
true tabernacle and temple
should succeed the typical.
After that, the privileges of
Zion were transferred to the
Christian Church; she became,
and, while the world lasts, will
continue to be, the hill in
which God delighteth to dwell;
she will therefore be justly
entitled to the pre-eminence
over all that may seem to be
great and glorious in the
world.” — Horne.
Verse 17
Psalms 68:17. The chariots of
God are twenty thousand — Nor
let the heathen boast of their
hosts or armies, or of the
multitude of their chariots,
wherein chiefly their strength
consists; for in Zion there are
ten thousand times more, even
innumerable hosts of angels, who
attend upon God, to do his
pleasure, and to fight for him
and for his people. Twenty
thousand here stands for an
innumerable company, a certain
number being put for an
uncertain. The Lord is among
them — And here is not only the
presence of the angels, but of
the great and blessed God
himself; in Sinai as in the holy
place — God is no less
gloriously, though less
terribly, present here than he
was in Sinai, when, attended
with thousands of his angels, he
solemnly appeared there to
deliver the law. Hebrew, סיני
בקדשׁ, sinai bakodesh,
literally, Sinai is in the
sanctuary, or holy place, which
is a poetical, and a very
emphatical expression, and very
pertinent to this place. For,
having advanced Zion above all
other hills, he now equals it to
that venerable hill of Sinai,
which the divine majesty
honoured with his glorious
presence. Here, says he, you
have, in some sort, mount Sinai
itself, namely, all the glories
and privileges of it, the
presence of Jehovah, attended
with his angels, and the same
law and covenant, yea, and a
greater privilege than Sinai
had, to wit, the Lord descending
from heaven into a human body,
as appears by his ascending
thither again, which the next
verse describes. For here the
psalmist seems evidently to be
transported by the prophetic
spirit, from the narration of
those external successes and
victories, of which he had been
speaking in the former part of
the Psalm, unto the prediction
of higher and more glorious
things, even of the coming of
the Messiah, and of the happy
and transcendent privileges and
blessings accruing to mankind
thereby. And the connection of
this new matter with the former
is sufficiently apparent. For
the preference of Zion to other
places having been stated,
Psalms 68:15-16, he now proves
its excellence by an invincible
argument; it was the place to
which the Lord of hosts himself,
the Messiah, God manifest in the
flesh, was to come; and, when he
came, was to be attended by a
multitude of angels, celebrating
his birth, ministering to him in
his temptation, attesting his
resurrection, and accompanying
him in his ascension.
Verse 18
Psalms 68:18. Thou hast ascended
on high — “When the ark had
ascended mount Zion, and was
deposited in the place assigned
for it, the singers are
supposed, by Dr. Chandler, to
gave proceeded with this part of
the Psalm, in which (he thinks)
they celebrate the ascension of
their God and king, by the
symbol of his presence, to the
heights of Zion, after having
subdued their enemies, and
enriched his people with the
spoil of the vanquished, and the
gifts of the tributary nations;
of which much was probably
employed in the service of the
tabernacle, and afterward in
building the temple, first
designed by David, that the Lord
God might dwell and have a fixed
habitation among his people.” —
Horne. But although David, in
composing this Psalm for the
occasion, as is supposed, of
removing the ark, might
probably, in this part of it,
refer in some measure to the
ascent of that symbol of the
divine presence to the top of
mount Zion; yet his expressions
are evidently too strong and
exalted to be confined to that
transaction, or even to have
been primarily intended of it.
He certainly speaks principally
of another and much more
important event, typified,
indeed, by that ascent of the
ark, and the advantages
resulting therefrom to the
people, but far more glorious in
itself, and producing effects of
infinitely greater consequence,
not only to the Jews, but to the
whole human race. He speaks of
the ascension of the Messiah
into heaven, in consequence of
his victory over his and our
enemies, obtained by his death
and resurrection. And,
accordingly, as is well known,
his words are so applied by the
apostle to the Gentiles,
Ephesians 4:8, who, guided as he
was, by the Spirit of truth,
certainly neither did, not
could, mistake the meaning of
this divine oracle given forth
by the inspiration of the same
Spirit. It must, however, be
acknowledged, that, having been
speaking of victories and
conquests in war, he borrows, as
it was natural for him to do,
his expressions on this subject
from the ancient custom of
princes and generals of armies,
who, after such glorious
achievements, were wont to go up
into their royal cities in
triumphant chariots, being
attended by their captive
enemies, and afterward to
distribute divers gifts to their
soldiers and subjects, and
sometimes to do some acts of
clemency, even to their enemies
and rebels, and to receive them
into the number of their own
people. In allusion to this, he
here represents the victorious
Captain of our salvation as
ascending to his royal city in
the heavens, leading his enemies
captive, and conferring the most
important gifts, privileges, and
blessings on his subjects, and
even on such as had been rebels
against his government. Thou
hast led captivity captive —
That is, either those who did
formerly take thy people
captive, or rather, those whom
thou hadst taken captive, as
this expression is most commonly
used. See Deuteronomy 21:10;
5:12. Thus poverty is but for
the poor, 2 Kings 24:14; see the
Hebrew. This is meant of Satan,
sin and death, and of all the
enemies of Christ and his
people, whom he led in triumph,
having spoiled them, and making
a show of them openly, as is
expressed Colossians 2:15. Thou
hast received gifts for men —
Hebrew, באדם; εν ανθρωπω, in the
man, as the LXX. render it, that
is, in the human nature,
wherewith thou wast pleased to
clothe thyself, that thou
mightest be a merciful and
faithful High-Priest in things
pertaining to God. Not in thy
Godhead; but according to thy
manhood, thou hast received from
God all the treasures of wisdom
and knowledge, and all those
gifts and graces of the Holy
Spirit which are necessary,
either to the perfection of thy
nature, or the good of thy
church and people; or, for men;
not for angels; “fallen angels
were not to be made saints,”
says Henry, “nor standing angels
ministers. Not for Jews only,
but for all men; whosoever will
may reap the benefit of these
gifts.” The apostle, in the
reference which he makes to
these words, names some of these
gifts: they were prophets,
apostles, evangelists, pastors,
teachers; namely, the
institution of a gospel
ministry, and the qualification
of men for it, both which are to
be valued as the gifts of God,
and the fruits of Christ’s
ascension. The apostle reads it,
he gave gifts to men. For he
received that he might give
them. And some of the best
critics have observed, that in
the Hebrew idiom, to take gifts
for another, is the same as to
give them to another: see 1
Kings 3:24; and Genesis 18:5, in
the Hebrew. The anointing of the
Spirit was poured on his head,
that it might descend to the
skirts of his garments, to the
lowest and meanest members of
his mystical body. Yea, for the
rebellious also — For those that
had been rebellious, who had not
only broken his laws, but
appeared in arms against him;
even for his most stubborn and
determined enemies, whether Jews
or Gentiles; for those who
crucified him and put him to
open shame. Even for these, as
well as others, he received, and
to these he gave those saving
gifts and graces; and of such as
these, converted by the power of
his gospel, he formed and
established a holy church; that
the Lord God might dwell among
them — That having received such
gifts and graces, and thereby
being made fit habitations for
God, he, who as man is ascended
into the highest heavens, might,
as God, come down to them and
abide with them, not only in and
by his ordinances, in which he
is present, but by his Spirit
dwelling in their hearts.
Verse 19-20
Psalms 68:19-20. Blessed be the
Lord, &c. — Having surveyed
God’s dispensations of grace and
mercy to his church and people,
thus manifested in their
redemption and salvation, the
psalmist is so overcome with
gratitude for them, that he thus
breaks forth abruptly in praise
and thanksgiving; who daily
loadeth us with his benefits —
Who, besides the great and
glorious blessing of our
redemption, once wrought for us,
is daily conferring new favours
upon us. So many and so weighty
are the gifts of God’s bounty to
us, that he may be truly said to
load us with them; and so
incessant are they, and so
unwearied is he in doing us
good, that he daily loads us
with them, according as the
necessity of every day requires.
Even the God of our salvation —
The only author and finisher of
our present and of our eternal
salvation. He that is our God —
Who is our Friend, Father, and
God in covenant; is the God of
salvation — He will not put us
off with present things for a
portion, but he will be the God
of our salvation: and what he
gives us now, he gives as the
God of salvation, pursuant to
his great design of bringing us
to everlasting happiness. For
that only will answer the vast
extent of his covenant relation
to us as our God. But has he
power to complete this
salvation? Yes, certainly; for
unto the Lord our God belong the
issues from death — The keys of
hell and death are put into the
hands of the Lord Jesus,
Revelation 1:18. He, having made
an escape from death itself, in
his resurrection, has both
authority and power to rescue
his followers from the dominion
of it, by altering the property
of it to them when they die, and
giving them a complete victory
over it when they shall rise
again; for the last enemy that
shall be destroyed is death.
Verse 21
Psalms 68:21. But God shall
wound the head of his enemies —
Of Satan, the old serpent, of
whom it was, by the first
promise, foretold, that the seed
of the woman should bruise his
head; and the heads of all the
powers of the nations, whether
Jews or Gentiles, that oppose
him and his kingdom among men.
Psalms 110:6, He shall wound the
heads over many countries; of
all those, whoever they are,
that will not have him to reign
over them. For these he accounts
his enemies, and they shall be
brought forth and slain before
him, Luke 19:27. The hairy
scalp, &c. — This expression
seems to refer to the custom
prevalent with many, in ancient
times, of wearing long shaggy
hair, that their looks might be
more terrible to their enemies.
Of such a one as goeth on still
in his trespasses — And hates to
be reformed. Christ looks on all
such as his enemies, and will
treat them accordingly. The
original words here used have
great emphasis, and imply, God
shall strike deep, or exhaust
the blood of the head of his
enemies, that is, utterly
destroy them. As if he had said,
“He will avenge himself on their
devoted heads; nor shall their
strength or craft be able to
protect them from his
indignation.” For the head, and
the hairy scalp, or crown,
denote the principal part, the
strength, the pride, and the
glory of the adversary, which
was to be crushed, according to
the original sentence, Genesis
3:15. It is justly observed here
by Dr. Horne, that this verse
begins a prediction of that
vengeance which the person who
was “ascended on high would
infallibly execute upon his
impenitent enemies, and which
was shadowed forth in the
destruction of the enemies of
Israel by David, after that the
ark of God was placed upon the
hill of Zion.”
Verse 22-23
Psalms 68:22-23. The Lord said —
Purposed within himself, and
promised by divers of his
prophets, though not in the same
words which are here used: see 2
Samuel 4:8. I will bring again
from Bashan — I will repeat my
ancient favours, and give my
people, by David, as great
deliverances as I formerly gave
them when I saved them from the
hand of Og, king of Bashan, who
came out against them with all
his forces, Deuteronomy 3:1; a
deliverance often mentioned in
succeeding parts of Scripture as
one of the most eminent. I will
bring my people again from the
depths of the sea — I will
appear as powerfully for them as
I did when I delivered them from
the Egyptian army, by giving
them a safe passage through the
Red sea. That thy foot may be
dipped, &c. — The meaning is,
that if the enemies of God’s
people should continue to invade
and harass them by war, they
should be entirely cut off by
the sword, and their slaughter
be so great, as that the
victorious army should be forced
to trample on their dead and
bloody bodies, and the dogs
should satiate themselves by
lapping up their blood. The
words are the description of a
complete victory, and of what
happens after a bloody
engagement.
Verse 24
Psalms 68:24. They, &c. — When
the ark was safely deposited,
the sacrifices offered, the
solemnity well nigh concluded,
and the whole assembly about to
return back, Dr. Chandler
supposes the singers struck up
and joined in the remaining part
of this noble anthem. They have
seen — Men saw and observed, thy
goings, O God — The procession
of the ark to Zion, the
solemnity whereof is
particularly described in the
following verses. The word,
goings, הליכותיךְ,
halichotheicha, means, thy
marches; the procession, it
seems, stopping several times,
and being performed in several
sorts of periods, in proper
succession, one after another,
for the ease of those who bore
the ark, and for performing some
sacred rites, which were
appointed on this occasion, 2
Samuel 6:13; 1 Chronicles 15:26.
Even the marches of my God, my
King — He repeats it, because
the words contain a sort of
triumph on account of this great
work of translating the ark
being now happily accomplished,
which he seems to have
considered as a pledge and
earnest of the mighty things God
would do for them, having now,
by this symbol of his presence,
taken possession of the place
prepared for him on mount Zion,
and therefore of Jerusalem, the
capital of the kingdom: in the
sanctuary — Or, in holiness, for
it was not a light and carnal,
but a serious and holy
procession: or, into the
sanctuary, as the words may be
rendered; or, holy tabernacle
prepared for it; to which they
had now carried the ark.
Verse 25-26
Psalms 68:25-26. The singers
went before — David had ordered
the chief of the Levites to
appoint their brethren for
singers, by lifting up the voice
with joy, 1 Chronicles 15:16;
the players on instruments
followed after —
Of which see 2 Samuel 16:15; 1
Chronicles 13:8. Among them were
the damsels — According to the
usage; playing on timbrels — And
with their voices celebrating
the praises of God. Bless ye God
in the congregation — This verse
contains what they sang on this
occasion, in concert with the
band of music. From the fountain
of Israel — Or, as it is
rendered in the margin, and by
many others, Ye that are of, or
from, the fountain of Israel, or
Jacob; that is, all ye people of
Israel, derived from the stock
or family of Jacob; see Isaiah
48:1. But these words are by
some joined to the former
clause, thus: Bless the Lord for
the fountain of Israel, that is,
for that fountain which God hath
opened to Israel, for the
purging away of sin and
uncleanness, as is expressed
Zechariah 13:1, even the blood
and Spirit of Christ, and all
those spiritual blessings which
God confers upon his people in
the sanctuary, and by his
ordinances. But the former sense
seems most natural and easy.
Verse 27
Psalms 68:27. There is little
Benjamin — Present in this
solemn pomp of carrying the ark
to Zion, under the conduct of
David their king. That tribe is
called little, partly because it
was the youngest, as being
descended from Jacob’s youngest
son, and principally because it
was exceedingly diminished, and
almost annihilated under the
judges. And he notices it
particularly here, both because
it was nearest to Judah, and to
the place to which the ark was
now carried; and also to signify
their reconciliation and
submission to David, against
whom they had stood out with
more obstinacy than any other
tribe, as having been so long
used to govern, and unwilling to
part with the regal dignity,
which was, by God’s appointment,
first seated among them. With
their ruler — With the prince of
their tribe, who marched at the
head of them. Hebrew, Benjamin
their ruler; the tribe which had
lately swayed the sceptre, but
now submitted to David. The
princes of Judah — It is no
wonder that he should mention
the princes of this tribe,
because he was elected by them
to be their king; their council
— “This tribe was certainly the
council or chief support of the
Israelitish constitution, both
in the cabinet and the field; in
the former it had the lead. The
princes of Zebulun and Naphtali
are added, as the most remote,
to show the unanimity of the
whole nation, and of all the
tribes far and near, in
attending this solemnity; to
testify their willing
acknowledgment of David for
their king, and their consent,
that henceforward Jerusalem, the
city of David, should be
declared and esteemed the
capital of the whole nation.”
Verse 28
Psalms 68:28. Thy God, O Israel,
hath commanded — Hath ordained,
or effectually procured; thy
strength — All that strength and
power which thou hast
effectually exerted at any time
against thine enemies, and which
is now greatly increased by the
union of all the tribes under
one head. In other words, the
great power of the Israelites,
and the height of glory and
strength to which the kingdom of
David had arisen, were the work
of God. This naturally makes way
for the petition following:
Strengthen, O God, that which
thou hast wrought in us — Let
the foundation of our present
happiness be firm and durable.
Verse 29
Psalms 68:29. Because of thy
temple at Jerusalem — The
tabernacle erected there by
David, in which the ark was now
placed; or rather, the temple
which he foresaw would be built,
and which he knew would be very
magnificent, and of fame and
glory throughout all countries,
as he says, 1 Chronicles 22:5;
and such as would command esteem
and reverence, even from the
heathen princes and people, and
that, not only for its most
splendid and glorious structure,
but especially for the wonderful
works which the God of that
temple would work in behalf of
his people, and in answer to the
prayers that should be made in
that temple; of which see 1
Kings 8:41-43. Shall kings bring
presents unto thee — Which was
done in part in the times of
Solomon and Hezekiah, and
afterward by others; but more
fully when the Lord Christ was
come into his temple, according
to Malachi 3:1, and had built a
better temple instead of it,
even the Christian Church, to
which it was foretold, in many
prophecies of the Old Testament,
that the kings and nations of
the earth would flow in great
abundance.
Verse 30
Psalms 68:30. Rebuke, &c. —
Chastise those that will not
bring presents unto thee till
they see their error and submit
themselves. It is a prophetical
prayer against the enemies of
the Israelitish Church. The
company of spearmen — The
reading in the margin, The
beasts of the reeds; or, as קנה
חית, chajath kaneh, is still
more literally rendered, the
beast, or wild beast of the
reed, seems preferable here to
this which our translators have
placed in the text. For although
the word הית, rendered
congregation, Psalms 68:10, may
signify a company, (see the note
there,) it does not appear that
there is any sufficient
authority for translating קנה,
spearmen, the word properly
signifying a reed. The LXX.
render the clause, επιτιμησον
τοις θηριοις του καλαμου, rebuke
the beasts of the reed. “By the
wild beast (or beasts) of the
reeds,” says Dr. Horne, after
Poole, Chandler, Lowth, and
several other learned men, “is
to be understood the Egyptian
power, described by its emblem,
the crocodile, or river-horse,
creatures living among the reeds
of the Nile.” In consistency
with this interpretation, by the
calves of the people, or of the
nations, as he translates it, he
understands the objects of
worship among the Egyptians,
their Apis, Osiris, &c., around
which the congregation of the
mighty (Hebrew, עדת אבירים,
gnadath abbirim, rendered in our
text, the multitude of the
bulls) assembled to worship.
There is, however, one
considerable objection to this
interpretation. As David was not
now attacked by the Egyptians,
nor about to make war upon them,
it does not seem likely that he
should so particularly advert to
them, or pray so pointedly
against them, on this occasion.
Some enemy, however, of great
power, and fierce as a wild
beast, was, no doubt, intended.
Bishop Patrick, who refers us to
2 Samuel 8:3, evidently thought
that Hadadezer, king of Zobah,
and the Syrians were meant. His
paraphrase on the clause is,
“Destroy that fierce prince,
who, like a wild beast out of
the forest, comes against us,
with a great number of captains
as furious as bulls, and of
soldiers as insolent as young
heifers.” Till every one submit
himself — Hebrew, מתרפס,
mithrappes, literally, casts
himself down, or offers himself
to be trod upon. The same word
bears the same sense Proverbs
6:3. With pieces of silver —
Bringing pieces of silver by way
of tribute, or in token of
subjection. This sense of the
clause seems to connect best
with the context, although, it
must be acknowledged, the
original text is very obscure,
and is capable of several
different interpretations, as
learned men have shown: see
Chandler, Lowth, Dodd, and
Horne. Which interpretations it
would require more room to state
than can be spared in this work.
Scatter — Hebrew, בזר, bizzar,
he hath scattered; that is,
according to the prophetic
style, He will certainly
scatter; the people that delight
in war — That without any
necessity or provocation, and
merely out of love of mischief
and spoil, make war upon others,
and particularly upon us. The
sense of the verse upon the
whole is, Now that thou hast
given thy people rest, and
settled the ark in its place, O
Lord, rebuke all our malicious
and bloody enemies, and give us
assured peace, that we may
worship thee without
disturbance. Thus “the Christian
Church,” says Dr. Horne,
“through faith in the power of
her Lord, risen from the dead,
and ascended into heaven, prays
for the confusion of her
implacable enemies, who delight
in opposing the kingdom of
Messiah.”
Verse 31
Psalms 68:31. Princes shall come
out of Egypt — The word חשׁמנים,
chashmannim, here rendered
princes, is not found elsewhere
in the Scriptures, and therefore
its precise meaning is not
certainly known. Elias, a Jewish
rabbi, observes that the Jews
call cardinals by this name in
Italy: and the term is thought
to signify a princely person
accompanied by a numerous
attendance. The Seventy render
it πρεσβεις, elders, senators,
or ambassadors. It does not
appear from Scripture, whether
any of the great men of Egypt
came up to worship the true God
at Jerusalem, while the temple
was standing, or not. But it is
certain that, in after ages, a
great number of the inhabitants
of Egypt were Jews, whether it
was that they were of Jewish
original, and whose ancestors
had betaken themselves thither,
or whether they were originally
Egyptians who had embraced the
Jewish religion. The Prophet
Isaiah foretold, that it should
come to pass that five cities in
the land of Egypt should speak
the language of Canaan, and
swear to the Lord of hosts, that
is, worship him. Ethiopia shall
soon stretch out her hands unto
God — Either in the way of
humble supplication and
submission, begging mercy of
him, or to offer up the presents
expressed Psalms 68:29. He only
mentions Egypt and Ethiopia, as
having been the great and
ancient enemies of God and of
his church, and as a most wicked
and idolatrous people; but by
them he understands all other
nations of a like character. And
he here expresses his hope, that
the victories which he and the
Israelites should gain over the
neighbouring nations would
induce even those which were
more remote, and most addicted
to idolatry, to come to
Jerusalem, and join themselves
to the worshippers of the true
God. And his hopes were so far
realized, that when, through the
instrumentality of David, the
surrounding “hostile powers were
overthrown, and the church of
Israel was fully established,
the more distant nations, even
those which had been most given
to idolatry, sued for her
friendship, and came to
Jerusalem with gifts and
oblations.” — Horne. But this
prophecy, as also that contained
in the next verse, evidently
belongs to the times of the
Messiah, when the Gentiles were
to be brought to the knowledge
and worship of the true God;
with the thoughts and hopes
whereof David often comforted
himself in that confined and
afflicted state of the church in
his time.
Verse 32-33
Psalms 68:32-33. Sing unto God,
ye kingdoms of the earth — Not
only Egypt and Ethiopia, but
other kingdoms and nations also,
who shall partake of the same
grace with them. To him that
rideth upon the heavens of
heavens — Upon the highest
heavens, his truest and best
sanctuary; dwelling there in
infinite glory and majesty, and
from thence looking down upon
all the inhabitants of the
earth, and ruling them by his
almighty power, and therefore
most fit to be acknowledged and
received by all kings and
kingdoms as their Lord and
Governor; which were of old —
From the very beginning of the
world; whereas the ark was only
a few hundreds of years old. Lo,
he doth send out his voice —
Thunder is described in
Scripture as the voice of God,
(Psalms 29.,) and is peculiarly
awful and terrible in the
eastern and warmer parts of the
earth. But the word of God seems
to be here meant, namely, the
gospel, published by Christ and
his apostles, with the Holy
Ghost sent down from heaven;
which might well be called God’s
voice, and that a mighty voice,
because it produced such great
and wonderful effects, as are
here mentioned, in converting
the kings and kingdoms of the
earth.
Verse 34
Psalms 68:34. Ascribe ye
strength unto God — Acknowledge
that he is mighty, and able to
do whatsoever he pleaseth for
his people, or against his or
their enemies. His excellency is
over Israel — His excellent
power and goodness; Hebrew,
גאותו, gaavatho, his highness,
or majesty; this dwells among
them, and is employed for them,
as occasion requires. He is
indeed the universal Lord of the
whole heaven and earth, but in a
special and excellent manner he
is the God of Israel, and his
kingdom is particularly exalted
over them. He hath taken them
for his peculiar inheritance;
and by them alone he is adored
and worshipped as the universal
Creator, the supreme Lord of
heaven and earth. His strength
is in the clouds — Hebrew,
בשׁחקים, in the heavens, or
skies. He hath two dwellings and
thrones, the one in his church
and among his people, and the
other in heaven, and in both
these he manifests his power;
redeeming, preserving, and
sanctifying the former, and
directing and governing the
mighty orbs of the latter in all
their motions, and from thence
upholding and influencing the
whole universe, animate and
inanimate, rational and
spiritual, and sending forth
both the thunder of his power,
and the great and small rain of
his strength.
Verse 35
Psalms 68:35. O God, thou art
terrible — Hebrew, נורא, nora,
venerable, yea, infinitely
worthy to be both reverenced and
feared. Out of thy holy places —
Or, sanctuaries. “Heaven was his
sanctuary of old; his earthly
sanctuary was in Zion: he was
worthy to be feared as
inhabiting both, and he is
represented as going out of
them, to take vengeance on the
enemies of his people, and as
dreadful on account of the
judgments which, from thence, as
the places of his dwelling, he
executes on them. He giveth
strength and power to his people
— Though the marks of his
displeasure are dreadful to his
enemies, yet he gives fortitude
and courage unto his people,
inspires them with resolution
and vigour, and renders them
victorious over all that oppose
them. The psalmist adds, Blessed
be God! And surely men and
angels, heaven and earth, ought
to say, Amen! All is from him;
let all be returned to him, in
praise and thanksgiving; and let
the whole intelligent creation
exclaim, Blessed be God, who
hath so wonderfully blessed us! |