Verse 1
Psalms 73:1. Truly, or
nevertheless, &c. — The
beginning is abrupt, and
sufficiently intimates that he
had a great conflict within
himself about the matter here
spoken of, and that many doubts
and objections were raised in
his mind concerning it. But, at
last, light and satisfaction
broke forth upon him, like the
sun from under a cloud, and
overcame and silenced his
scruples, in consequence of
which he lays down this
conclusion. God is good to
Israel — Though he may sometimes
seem negligent of, and harsh and
severe toward, his people; yet,
if all things be considered, it
is most certain, and hereafter
will be made manifest, that he
is really and superlatively
good, that is, most kind and
bountiful, and a true friend to
them, and that they are most
happy in possessing his favour,
and have no reason to envy
sinners their present and
seeming felicity. Even to such
as are of a clean heart — To all
true Israelites, who love God
with their whole hearts, and
serve him in spirit, in truth,
and uprightness: see John 4:23;
Romans 2:28-29. So this clause
limits the former, and takes off
a great part of the force of the
objection, indeed the whole of
that which was drawn from the
calamities which befell the
hypocritical and half-hearted
Israelites, who were vastly the
greater number of that people.
Verse 2-3
Psalms 73:2-3. But as for me —
Yet I must acknowledge with
grief and shame, concerning
myself, that notwithstanding all
my knowledge of this truth, and
my own experience and
observation of God’s dealings
with me and other good men; my
feet were almost gone — My faith
in God’s promises and providence
was almost overthrown by the
force of temptation; and I was
almost ready to repent of my
piety, Psalms 73:13, and to
follow the example of ungodly
men. My steps had well nigh
slipped — Hebrew, שׁפכו,
shuppechu, were almost poured
forth, namely, like water upon
the ground, which is unstable,
and runs hither and thither with
great disorder and uncertainty,
till it be irrecoverably lost.
So was I almost transported by
my unruly fancies and passions
into unworthy thoughts of God,
and a sinful course of life. For
I was envious at the foolish — I
was vexed and murmured to see
the wicked, notwithstanding
their guilt and desert of
punishment, in a very
flourishing condition, and I
thought it very hard that pious
men should not equal, if not
exceed, them in such happiness;
especially when I saw no
likelihood that it would end,
but that they continued in their
prosperity. With great propriety
are the wicked, and those that
live as if there were no God,
called the foolish; for nothing
can show greater folly.
Verse 4
Psalms 73:4. For there are no
bands in their death — They are
not violently dragged to an
untimely death, either by the
hand and sentence of the
magistrate, which yet they
deserve, or by any sudden and
unexpected stroke of Divine
Providence, like the fruit
forced from the tree before it
is ripe, but are left to hang
on, till, through old age, they
gently drop off themselves.
Hebrew, אין חרצבות, een
chartzuboth, There are no pangs,
anguish, or agonies, in their
death; they are not afflicted
with sore and painful diseases,
nor brought to the grave by
grievous torments of body or
mind; but after a long life, in
firm and vigorous health, they
enjoy a sweet and quiet death,
and depart easily out of the
world: “while others of a
contrary character are worn with
chronical, or racked with acute
disorders, which bring them with
sorrow and torment to the
grave.” — Horne. But their
strength is firm — Hebrew, בריא
אולם, baria ulam, their strength
is fat, that is, sound and good;
the best of any thing being
called fat, in Scripture, as
Genesis 41:2; Daniel 1:15. They
continue strong and healthful
all their days, till at last
they expire quietly, as a lamp
goes out when the oil is spent.
Verses 5-9
Psalms 73:5-9. They are not in
trouble as other men — They
escape even common calamities.
Therefore pride compasseth them
about — Discovers itself on
every side, in their
countenances, speech, behaviour.
Their eyes stand out with
fatness — They live in great
plenty and prosperity. They are
corrupt — Dissolute and
licentious, letting loose the
reins to all manner of
wickedness. And speak wickedly
concerning oppression — Wickedly
boasting of their oppressions;
either of what they have done,
or of what they intend to do in
that way. They speak loftily —
Arrogantly presuming upon their
own strength, and despising both
God and men. They set their
mouth against the heavens — That
is, against God, blaspheming his
name, denying or deriding his
providence, reviling his saints
and servants. Their tongue
walketh through the earth —
Using all manner of liberty,
introducing and reproaching all
sorts of persons, not caring
whom they displease or hurt by
it.
Verse 10
Psalms 73:10. Therefore his
people return hither — “It seems
impossible to ascertain,” says
Dr. Horne, “with any degree of
precision, the meaning of this
verse, or to whom it relates.
Some think it intends those
people who resort to the company
of the wicked, because they find
their temporal advantage by it;
while others are of opinion that
the people of God are meant,
who, by continually revolving in
their thoughts the subject here
treated of, namely, the
prosperity of the wicked, are
sore grieved, and enforced to
shed tears in abundance.”
Certainly a variety of
discordant interpretations have
been given of the verse. But a
literal translation, which the
following is, seems, in some
degree at least, to determine
its meaning. Therefore — Hebrew,
לכן, lachen, on this account,
his people shall return thither,
and waters of fullness shall be
wrung out to them — As if he had
said, Because of the prosperity
of the wicked, and the afflicted
state of the righteous, his
people, that is, the people of
God, will be under a strong
temptation to return; and many
will actually return to the
company of the ungodly, which
they had forsaken, in order to
share their prosperity: but in
consequence thereof, waters of a
full cup shall be wrung out to
them, they shall bring upon
themselves many chastisements
and troubles, and shall be
oppressed with grief and sorrow
for their sin and folly. Waters,
in Scripture, frequently signify
afflictions, although, it must
be acknowledged, they also often
signify mercies and comforts;
but the former, and not the
latter sense of the metaphor,
seems to be intended here: for
when did, or do, the people of
God receive mercies and
comforts, or blessings of any
kind, by returning to the sins
and follies which they had
forsaken, or to the society of
the ungodly, from which they had
withdrawn themselves? Do they
not uniformly meet with
chastisement and trouble? The
clause, “waters of a full cup,”
&c., may probably refer to the
cups of liquor, mingled with
poison, which were, in those
days, given to criminals. The
verse, it must be observed, is
in the future tense, and it
seems most natural, as Mr. Scott
has remarked, to interpret it as
expressive of the psalmist’s
apprehension, that the
prosperity of daring sinners
would eventually prove a strong
temptation, and a great source
of sorrow to believers.
Verse 11
Psalms 73:11. And they say —
Namely, the ungodly, described
in the preceding verses, (verse
the 10th coming in by way of
parenthesis,) or the people
confederate with them, or that
fall back to them. For these and
such like opinions and speeches
are often ascribed to the carnal
and wicked in Scripture, but
never to any good man. Some such
expressions as this were indeed
charged on Job by his friends,
but, although he had used many
intemperate speeches, he utterly
disowned such as these. How doth
God know? Is there knowledge,
&c. — As if they said, Since
blasphemers of God and enemies
of all goodness are crowned with
so many blessings, how is it
credible that there is a God who
sees and orders the affairs of
this lower world? For if God did
know these things, and concerned
himself with affairs here below,
he certainly neither could nor
would suffer them to be thus
managed.
Verse 12
Psalms 73:12. Behold, these are
the ungodly who prosper in the
world — This is their condition
and behaviour in it. “The
temptation is now stated in its
full force. As if he had said,
These worthless, ungodly,
blasphemous wretches, whose
characters I have been
delineating, these are the men
who prosper in the world, who
succeed in every thing they
undertake, and roll in riches!
What are we to think of God, his
providence, and his promises?”
Verse 13-14
Psalms 73:13-14. Verily I have
cleansed my heart in vain, &c. —
Hence I have been tempted to
think, that religion is a vain
and unprofitable thing; that
“all my faith, my charity, and
my devotion; all my watching and
fastings, in short, all the
labour and pains I have taken in
the way of goodness, have been
altogether vain and fruitless;
since, while the rebellious
enemies of God enjoy the world
and themselves at pleasure, I,
who continue his servant, am in
perpetual tribulation and
affliction.” — Horne. True
religion is properly and fully
described in this verse, by its
two principal parts and works,
the cleansing of the heart from
sinful lusts and passions, and
of the hands, or outward man,
from a course of sinful actions.
And although it be God’s work to
cleanse the heart, yet he says,
I have cleansed it, because
every pious man co-operates with
God’s grace in cleansing his
heart. Compare 2 Corinthians
6:1; 2 Corinthians 7:1. And
washed my hands in innocency —
That is, kept my hands (the
chief instruments of action,
and, consequently, the rest of
the members of my body) innocent
and pure from evil practices. I
have washed my hands, not only
ceremonially with water,
wherewith hypocrites satisfy
themselves, but also morally,
with the waters of God’s grace
and Spirit, in innocency or
purity. For all the day long I
have been plagued, &c. — While
their ungodliness hath been
attended with constant
prosperity, my piety hath been
exercised with continual
afflictions.
Verse 15
Psalms 73:15. If I say, I will
speak thus — I will give
sentence for the ungodly in this
manner. I should offend against
the generation of thy children —
By grieving, discouraging, and
condemning them, and by tempting
them to revolt from thee and thy
service. By the generation of
God’s children must be
understood all true believers;
those who have undertaken the
service of God, and entered into
covenant with him; part of which
covenant and profession is to
believe in God’s providence;
which, therefore, to deny,
question, or doubt of, is to
break the covenant, to
prevaricate, to deal
perfidiously; according to the
meaning of the word בגד, bagad,
here rendered, offend. The
reader will observe, that “the
psalmist,” having particularly
described the disease, “proceeds
now, like a skilful physician of
the soul, to prescribe a
medicine for it, which is
compounded of many salutary
ingredients. And first, to the
suggestions of nature, grace
opposes the examples of the
children of God, who never fell
from their hope in another
world, because of their
sufferings in this. For a man,
therefore, to distrust the
divine goodness on that account,
is to belie their hope, renounce
their faith, and strike his name
out of their list.”
Verse 16
Psalms 73:16. When I thought to
know this — To find out the
reason and meaning of this
mysterious course of Divine
Providence, it was too painful
for me — I found it too hard a
task to attain satisfaction, as
to these points, by my own
meditations and reasonings.
Indeed, it is a problem not to
be solved by the mere light of
nature; for if there were not
another life after this, we
could not fully reconcile the
prosperity of the wicked with
the justice of God. Here, then,
we have “a second reason why a
man should not be too forward to
arraign God’s dispensations of
injustice, namely, the extreme
difficulty of comprehending the
whole of them, which, indeed, is
not to be done by the human
mind, unless God himself shall
vouchsafe it the necessary
information.” — Horne.
Verse 17
Psalms 73:17. Until I went into
the sanctuary of God — Till I
consulted with the oracle, or
word of God. He alludes to the
practice of those times, which
was in dark and difficult cases
to resort to God’s sanctuary,
and the oracle in it, for
satisfaction. Then understood I
their end — There I learned that
their prosperity was short, and
would quickly have an end, and
that a most terrible one; that
their fair morning would be
followed with a black and
dreadful evening, and an
everlasting night. “This is the
third argument, with which we
may repress the spirit of
murmuring and distrust, so apt
to be excited by the prosperity
of the wicked; and it is one
communicated to us by the word
of God, which alone can acquaint
us with what shall be the end,
the final portion of sinners.
This is an arrow from the
heavenly quiver, which brings
down our enemy at once, and lays
Dagon prostrate before the ark.”
Verse 18
Psalms 73:18. Thou didst set
them in slippery places — Their
happiness hath no firm
foundation; it is very unstable,
like a man’s standing on very
slippery ground. Thou castedst
them down into destruction — The
same hand which raised them will
soon cast them down into utter
ruin. “Worldly prosperity,” says
Dr. Horne, “is as the narrow and
slippery summit of a mountain,
on which, to answer the designs
of his providence, God permits
the wicked, during his pleasure,
to take their station; till, at
length, the fatal hour arrives,
when, by a stroke unseen, they
fall from thence, and are lost
in the fathomless ocean of
sorrow, torment, and despair.”
Verse 19-20
Psalms 73:19-20. They are
brought to desolation as in a
moment — Their fall is
wonderful, both for its
greatness, and for its
suddenness. They are utterly
consumed with terrors — With the
horrors of their own minds; or
rather, with God’s judgments
unexpectedly seizing upon them.
As a dream when one awaketh —
Their happiness is like that of
a dream, wherein a man seems
highly pleased and transported
with ravishing delights, but
when he awakes he finds himself
deceived and unsatisfied. O
Lord, when thou awakest —
Arisest to punish them. Or
rather, when they shall awake;
namely, out of the pleasant
dream of this sinful life, by
death and the torments
following. For the Hebrew is
only בעיר, bagnir, in awaking,
an expression which may be
applied either to God or to
them, as the context directs,
and the latter application seems
to agree best with the metaphor
here before mentioned. Thou
shalt despise their image — That
is, all their felicity and
glory, which, as indeed it ever
was, so now shall evidently be
discerned to be no real, or
substantial and solid thing, but
a mere image, or shadow, or vain
show, which can neither abide
with them, nor yield them
satisfaction. Thus the word
rendered pomp, Acts 25:23, is,
in the Greek, φαντασια, a mere
fancy and imagination. And
Psalms 39:6, man is said to walk
in a vain show; in the LXX., εν
εικονι, in an image, the word
used by these interpreters here.
God is said to despise the
image, when they awake, not
really, for in that sense God
ever did despise it, even when
they were in the height of all
their glory; but declaratively,
things being often said to be
done in Scripture when they
appear or are manifest. The
sense is, Thou shalt pour
contempt upon them; make them
despicable to themselves and
others, notwithstanding all
their riches; shalt raise them
to shame and everlasting
contempt. The LXX. render it,
τον εικονα αυτων εξουδενωσεις,
Thou shalt bring to naught, or
make nothing of their image. God
will render utterly contemptible
even in their own sight, as well
as in that of himself, of his
holy angels, and the spirits of
the righteous, those imaginary
and fantastic pleasures for
which they have lost the
substantial joys and glories of
his heavenly kingdom. For it is
evident that what the psalmist
here affirms, concerning the end
of the wicked, cannot be
understood, consistently with
the rest of the Psalm, of their
temporal destruction, but must
be interpreted of their future
wretched state in another world,
which is often represented, in
Scripture, by death and
destruction; and so, indeed,
these verses explain it. How are
they brought to desolation in a
moment, that is, the moment when
they pass out of this life to
another. It is then only that
the wicked will be thoroughly
awakened to see their misery,
especially if they die without
much pain or anguish, in a
stupid, thoughtless way, as
seems to be intimated Psalms
73:4. And here let us reflect,
with Dr. Horne, If “the sudden
alteration which death makes in
the state of a powerful and
opulent sinner, cannot but
affect all around him, though
they behold but one part of it;
how much more would they be
astonished and terrified if the
curtain between the two worlds
were withdrawn, and the other
half of the change exposed to
view! Let faith do that which
sight cannot do;” let it show
us, that the life of the ungodly
is a sleep; their happiness a
dream, illusive and transitory;
at best a shadow, afterward
nothing; and that, at the day of
death, the soul is roused out of
this sleep, the dream vanishes,
and the sinner finds himself
consigned to everlasting
torments, “and then the ungodly,
however wealthy and honourable,
will surely cease to be the
objects of our envy.”
Verse 21-22
Psalms 73:21-22. Thus my heart
was grieved — I was disturbed,
so as I have expressed, with
envy and indignation at the
prosperity of the wicked.
Hebrew, יתחמצ לבבי, jithchamets
lebabi, my heart was in a
ferment, or, had wrought itself
up into a ferment, namely, with
unbelieving thoughts, and
reasonings on the
above-mentioned subject. And I
was pricked in my reins — I was
heartily and deeply wounded in
my spirit. So foolish was I, and
ignorant — Of what I might have
known and which, if I had known
it aright, would have been
perfectly sufficient to have
prevented or silenced the
disquieting thoughts and
perplexing reasonings which have
given me so much uneasiness. I
was as a beast before thee — A
most stupid and sottish
creature, as though I had not
only been devoid of grace, but
of reason too. For reason
itself, informed by the Holy
Scriptures, sufficiently
discovered, that, all things
considered, I had no sufficient
cause to envy the prosperity of
wicked men. I minded only
present things, as the brutes
do, and did not look forward to
and consider things to come, as
reasonable creatures ought to
do. Before thee — In thy sight,
or judgment, and therefore in
truth, Romans 2:2, howsoever I
seemed to myself, or others, to
have some degree of reason and
discretion.
Verse 23
Psalms 73:23. Nevertheless —
Notwithstanding all my
temptations, and my gross folly
in yielding to them; I am
continually with thee — In thy
favour and under thy care.
Although I gave thee just cause
to cast me off, yet thou didst
continue thy gracious presence
with me, and kindness to me.
Thou hast holden me by thy right
hand — Hast upheld me, that my
faith might not fail, and I
might not be overthrown by this,
or any other temptation. “The
remainder of the Psalm contains
the most dutiful and
affectionate expressions of a
mind perfectly at ease, and
reposing itself with comfortable
assurance on the loving-kindness
of the Lord, of which it had
thus experienced a fresh
instance in its support under
the late temptation, and
complete victory over it.” —
Horne.
Verse 24
Psalms 73:24. Thou shall guide
me, &c. — As thou hast kept me
hitherto, in all my trials, so I
am persuaded thou wilt lead me
still into, and in, the right
way, and keep me from straying
from thee, or falling into evil
or mischief; with thy counsel —
By thy gracious providence,
executing thy purpose of mercy
to me, as being one of thy
believing and obedient people,
and watching over me, by thy
word, which thou wilt open my
eyes to understand; and
principally by thy Holy Spirit,
sanctifying and directing me in
the whole course of my life. And
afterward receive me to glory —
Translate me to everlasting
glory in heaven. As all those
who commit themselves to God’s
conduct shall be guided by his
counsel, so all those who are so
guided in this world shall be
received to his glory in another
world. If God direct us in the
way of our duty, and prevent our
turning aside out of it;
enabling us to make his will the
rule, and his glory the end of
all our actions, he will
afterward, when our state of
trial and preparation is over,
receive us to his kingdom and
glory; the believing hopes and
prospects of which will
reconcile us to all the dark
providences that now puzzle and
perplex us, and ease us of the
pain into which we may have been
put by some distressing
temptations. Here we see, that
“he, who but a little while ago
seemed to question the
providence of God over the
affairs of men, now exults in
happy confidence of the divine
mercy and favour toward himself;
nothing doubting but that grace
would ever continue to guide him
upon earth, till glory should
crown him in heaven. Such are
the blessed effects of going
into the sanctuary of God, and
consulting the lively oracles,
in all our doubts, difficulties,
and temptations.” — Horne.
Verse 25
Psalms 73:25. Whom have I in
heaven but thee? — To seek to,
or trust in, to court or covet
an acquaintance with? God is in
himself more glorious than any
other being, and must be in our
eyes infinitely more desirable.
He, and he alone, is the
felicity and chief good of man.
He, and none but he, who made
the soul, can make it happy.
There is no other in heaven or
earth that can pretend to do it.
Now, in order that God may be
our felicity, we must have him,
as it is here expressed; we must
possess his favour, his image,
and communion with him. We must
choose him for a portion, and
ensure to ourselves an interest
in his love. What will it avail
us that he is the felicity of
souls, if he be not the felicity
of our souls; and if we do not,
with a lively faith, make him
ours, by joining ourselves to
him in an everlasting covenant?
Our affection must be set upon
him, and our delight must be in
him. Our desires must not only
be offered up to God, but they
must terminate in God, as their
ultimate object. Whatever we
desire besides him must be
desired in subordination to him
and his will, and with an eye to
his glory. We must desire
nothing besides God but what we
desire for God. He must have our
heart, our whole heart, and no
creature in earth or heaven must
be permitted to share with him.
Verse 26
Psalms 73:26. My flesh and my
heart faileth — I find, by sad
experience, my own weakness and
inability to encounter such
temptations, and bear, with
becoming patience and
resignation, such troubles, as I
frequently meet with; yea, I
find myself a frail, dying
creature, that shall shortly
return to the dust. Both my
flesh and heart, my body and
soul may, and, unless supported
by God, will soon fail. But God
is the strength of my heart — I
have found him so; I do find him
so, and hope I ever shall. As if
he had said, Though I have no
strength in myself, I have it in
God, my never- failing refuge,
to whom I will trust as long as
I live. Hebrew, צור לבבי, tsur
lebabi, the rock of my heart, a
firm foundation, which will bear
my weight, and not sink under
it. In the distress supposed, he
had put the case of a double
failure, a failure of both the
flesh and heart; but in the
relief, he fixes on a single
support; he leaves out the
flesh, and the consideration of
it; it is enough that God is the
strength of his heart. He speaks
as one careless of the body; let
that fail, it must, there is no
remedy; but he is concerned
about his soul, to be
strengthened in the inner man.
And my portion for ever — He
will not only support me while I
am here, but will make me happy
when I go hence, happy to all
eternity. The saints choose God
for their portion; he is their
portion; and it is their
happiness that he will be their
portion for ever; a portion that
will last as long as the
immortal soul. Reader, consider
this, and make choice of this
portion without delay.
Verse 27
Psalms 73:27. For lo, they that
are far from thee shall perish —
That is, they that forsake thee
and thy ways, preferring the
prosperity of this present evil
world to thy love, and favour,
and service; they who estrange
themselves from an acquaintance
with thee, and a conformity to
thee; who are alienated from thy
life, through the ignorance of
thee, which is in them, and rest
short of, or decline from, union
and communion with thee; that
say, if not in words, yet in
effect, “Depart from us, for we
desire not the knowledge of thy
ways.” Thou hast destroyed — And
thou wilt still certainly and
dreadfully destroy; all them
that go a whoring from thee —
Who, having professed subjection
to thee, shall afterward revolt
from thee, which is called
whoredom, or adultery
(figuratively speaking) in
Scripture. For none are more
hateful to God than wilful and
wicked apostates from the
principles and practice of the
true religion which they once
owned.
Verse 28
Psalms 73:28. But it is good for
me to draw near to God — But
whatsoever they do, I am
abundantly satisfied that it is,
as my duty, so my interest and
happiness, to cleave unto thee
by faith, love, and obedience,
and diligent attendance upon all
thy ordinances. I have put my
trust in the Lord God — I depend
on him alone, for all my comfort
and felicity; That I may declare
all thy works — From which
dependance, I know, I shall have
this benefit, that I shall have
many and great occasions to
declare God’s acts of mercy and
kindness to me. |