Verse 1
Psalms 74:1. O God, why hast
thou cast us off for ever — So
as to leave us no visible hopes
of restitution? Why doth thine
anger smoke? — That is, why doth
it rise to such a degree, that
all about us take notice of it,
and ask, What meaneth the heat
of this great anger? Deuteronomy
29:24. Compare Psalms 74:20,
where the anger of the Lord and
his jealousy are said to smoke
against sinners. Against the
sheep of thy pasture — Against
thy chosen people.
Verse 2
Psalms 74:2. Remember thy
congregation — That is, the
Israelites, who are thy church,
and whom at the expense of so
many miracles, thou didst make
thy peculiar people; show by
thine actions that thou hast not
utterly forgotten and forsaken
them; which thou hast purchased
— Hebrew, קנית, kanita, rendered
bought, Deuteronomy 32:6, but
which also signifies acquired or
procured, though without price,
as Ruth 4:9-10. Of old — When
thou didst bring them out of
Egypt, and form them into a
commonwealth; gavest them laws,
and didst enter into covenant
with them at Sinai. The rod of
thine inheritance — That people
which thou hast measured out, as
it were, by rod, to be thy
portion: or, the tribe (as the
word שׁבשׂ, shebet, here
rendered rod, commonly
signifies) of thine inheritance,
that is, the tribe of Judah,
which thou hast, in a special
manner, chosen for thine
inheritance, and for the seat of
thy church and kingdom, and the
birth of the Messiah. And thus
here is an elegant gradation
from the general to particulars:
First, the congregation,
consisting of all the tribes;
then the tribe of Judah; and
lastly, mount Zion. Nor is it
strange that he mentions this
tribe particularly, because the
calamity and captivity here
lamented principally befell this
tribe and Benjamin, which was
united with it, and subject to
it; and those who returned from
the captivity were generally of
this tribe. This mount Zion —
Which is often put for the
temple, or the hill of Moriah,
on which it was built.
Verse 3
Psalms 74:3. Lift up thy feet —
This is spoken after the manner
of men, and means, Come speedily
to our rescue, and do not delay,
as men do when they sit or stand
still; unto — Or rather, because
of, the perpetual desolations —
Namely, those ruins of the city
and country, which had lasted so
very long, and which, if God did
not come to their help, he
intimates, would be perpetual
and irrecoverable. Even all that
the enemy hath done wickedly,
&c. — God had deserted his
sanctuary, and the shechinah, or
cloud of glory, emblematical of
the divine presence, had gone up
from between the cherubim: see
Ezekiel 10:4. In consequence of
which the heathen people had
invaded that holy place, and
laid it waste. And the psalmist
here supplicates and urges God’s
return to them, as that which
alone could restore their
temple, city, and country to
their former happy state.
Verse 4
Psalms 74:4. Thine enemies roar
— Make loud outcries; either out
of rage and fury against the
conquered and captivated
Israelites, now in their power;
or rather, in the way of triumph
for their success and victory.
In the midst of thy
congregations — In the places
where thy people used to
assemble together for thy
worship; whereby they designed
to insult, not only over us, but
over thee also, as if their
idols had been too strong for
thee. They set up their ensigns
for signs — As trophies, in
token of their victory over us
and over thee. “No sound,” says
Dr. Horne, “can be more shocking
than the confused clamours of a
heathen army sacking the temple;
no sight so afflicting as that
of the abomination of desolation
standing in the holy place.
Turbulent passions are the
enemies which raise an uproar of
confusion in the heart; wealth,
power, and pleasure are the
idols which profane that
sanctuary.”
Verse 5-6
Psalms 74:5-6. A man was famous,
&c. — The meaning, according to
this translation, is this: The
temple was so noble a structure,
that it was a great honour to
any man to be employed in the
meanest part of the work, though
it were but in cutting down the
trees of Lebanon. And this
interpretation is favoured by
the opposition in the next
verse. But now, &c. — Some
learned expositors, however,
translate the first words of
this verse, יודע, not, He was
famous, but, as is more literal,
It is, or will be, well known;
and they interpret the two
verses thus: “It is, or rather,
will be, known or manifest; it
will be published to all
posterity, as matter of
astonishment and admiration,
that, as one lifteth up axes in
the thick wood, or upon thick
trees, to cut them down; so now
they, the enemies above
mentioned, break down the carved
wood thereof, namely, of the
sanctuary, with axes and
hammers.” It has been
ingeniously observed by some,
that the two words thus rendered
are not Hebrew, but Chaldee or
Syriac words, to point out the
time when this was done, even
when the Chaldeans brought in
their language, together with
their arms, among the
Israelites. Dr. Horne thinks
that the Hebrew word above
mentioned may be translated a
knowing, or skilful person; and
then the sense is, “As a skilful
person, who understands his
business, lifteth up the axe in
the thick wood, so now men set
themselves to work to demolish
the ornaments and timbers of the
sanctuary.” They neither regard
the sacredness of the place, nor
the exquisite curiosity and art
of the work, (here signified by
the term carved work,) but cut
it down as indifferently and
rashly as men cut down the thick
and entangled boughs of the
trees of the forest. “The
words,” adds Dr. H., “suggest
another reason why God should
arise and have mercy upon Zion,
lest his name should be
blasphemed among the nations,
when they saw and heard of the
sacrilegious and horrible
destruction wrought by the
enemy; whom neither the majesty
of the temple, nor the reverence
of its divine inhabitant, could
restrain from defacing the
beauty of holiness. The
ornaments of the internal and
spiritual temple sometimes
suffer as much from the fury of
inordinate affections, as the
carved work of the sanctuary
ever did from the armies of
Nebuchadnezzar or Antiochus.”
Verse 7-8
Psalms 74:7-8. They have cast
fire into thy sanctuary, &c. —
The Chaldeans first polluted,
and then set fire to Solomon’s
temple, and burned that stately
and costly fabric down to the
ground. And Antiochus set fire
to the gates of the second
temple, (1 Maccabees 4:28,) and
afterward the Romans razed it
from the foundation, and left
not one stone upon another. They
said, Let us destroy them
together — Root and branch, one
as well as another, or all at
once. So they desired, and so,
it seems, many of them intended,
although afterward they changed
their counsel, and carried some
away captive, and left others to
cultivate the ground. They have
burned up all the synagogues —
All the public places wherein
the Jews used to meet together
to worship God every sabbath
day, as is mentioned Acts 13:27,
and upon other occasions. That
the Jews had such synagogues is
manifest, both from these and
other places of Scripture, and
from the testimony of the Hebrew
doctors, and other ancient and
learned writers, who affirm it,
and particularly of Jerusalem,
in which they say there were
above four hundred; and from the
necessity of such places: for
seeing it is undeniable that
they did worship God publicly on
every sabbath, and at other holy
times, even when they could not
go up to Jerusalem, both
conscience and prudence must
needs have directed them to
appoint convenient places for
that purpose.
Verse 9
Psalms 74:9. We see not our
signs — Those tokens of God’s
gracious presence with us, which
we and our ancestors used to
enjoy. There is no more any
prophet — Either, 1st, Any
public teacher. We have few or
none left to instruct us in the
law of God, and in divine
things. Or, 2d, Any
extraordinary prophet, who can
foretel things to come, as the
next words explain it. For as
for Jeremiah and Ezekiel, they
might be dead when this Psalm
was composed; and Daniel was
involved in civil affairs, and
did not teach the people as a
prophet; and the prophetical
spirit, which sometimes came
upon him, and made those great
discoveries to him which we read
in his book, might possibly at
this time suspend his
influences. Besides, it is not
unusual, in Scripture, to say
there is none of a sort of
persons or things, when there is
a very great scarcity of them.
Bishop Patrick thinks what is
here said respecting there being
no prophet, to tell the Jews how
long the captivity would last,
is a proof that this Psalm was
written toward the end of that
captivity.
Verses 10-12
Psalms 74:10-12. How long shall
the adversary reproach — Namely,
thy name, (which is expressed in
the next clause,) by saying that
thou art either unkind to thy
people, or unfaithful in thy
covenant, or unable to deliver
us out of our miseries. Why
withdrawest thou thy hand? — Why
dost thou suspend or forbear the
exercise of that power which
thou hast so often exerted in
behalf of thy people? Pluck it
out of thy bosom — In which thou
now seemest to hide it, as idle
persons used to do. This is
spoken after the manner of men.
It means, Why art thou an
inactive spectator of our
miseries? Why dost thou not put
forth thy power and deliver us?
For God is my king of old — In a
singular manner. It belongs to
thine office to protect and save
us; working salvation in the
midst of the earth — In the view
of the world: saving thy people
so eminently and gloriously,
that all the nations around
observed and admired it.
Verse 13-14
Psalms 74:13-14. Thou didst
divide the sea, &c. — “The first
part of this verse alludes to
that marvellous act of
omnipotence which divided the
Red sea for Israel to pass over;
the second part to the return of
its waves upon the heads of the
Egyptians, who, like so many
sea-monsters, opening their
mouths to devour the people of
God, were overwhelmed, and
perished in the mighty waters.”
— Horne. Thou brakest the heads
of the dragons — The crocodiles,
meaning Pharaoh’s mighty men,
who were like these beasts in
strength and cruelty. Thou
brakest the heads — That is, the
head of Pharaoh himself. He says
heads, because of the several
princes who were and acted under
his influence. Dr. Waterland
renders the first word, which we
translate dragons, crocodiles,
and the latter, the crocodile,
meaning Pharaoh. And gavest him,
&c., to the people inhabiting
the wilderness — Hebrew, לעם
לציים, legnam letziim, populo
desertorum, locorum, (Buxtorf,)
to the people of desert places.
The Seventy render it, λαοις
τοις αιθιοψι, to the Ethiopian
people. Poole, Horne, and some
other commentators, suppose that
ravenous birds and beasts of the
desert, and not men, are here
intended; and that the sense of
the clause is, that the bodies
of Pharaoh and his captains were
thrown on shore by the sea, and
so became food for the wild
beasts of the neighbouring
deserts. We find the same word
ציים, used for wild beasts
haunting the deserts, Isaiah
13:21; Isaiah 34:14.
Verse 15
Psalms 74:15. Thou didst cleave
the fountain and the flood —
That is, thou didst, by cleaving
the rock, make a fountain in it,
and a flood or stream to flow
from it, for the refreshment of
thy people in those dry deserts.
Thou driedst up mighty rivers —
Hebrew, נהרות איתןrivers of
strength. The Seventy, however,
render it, ποταμους ηθαμ, taking
the latter word, eethan, for a
proper name. Undoubtedly Jordan
is meant: so that “two other
remarkable exertions of the
divine power, in favour of the
Israelites, are here referred
to. Water was brought out of the
rock to satisfy their thirst in
the time of drought; and the
river Jordan was dried up to
open the passage for them into
Canaan.”
Verse 16
Psalms 74:16. The day is thine,
the night also is thine — It is
not strange that thou hast done
these great and wonderful works,
for thou hast made the heavenly
bodies, and appointed the
vicissitudes of day and night,
depending upon them, which is a
far greater work. Thou hast
prepared — Hebrew, הכינות,
hachinota, thou hast
established, that is, not only
created, but settled in a
constant and orderly course, the
light and the sun — That
primitive light mentioned
Genesis 1:3, and the sun, in
which it was afterward condensed
and gathered: or the luminaries
in general, with their chief the
sun. Thus, “from the miraculous
interpositions of God in behalf
of his people, the psalmist
passes to those ordinary and
standing evidences of his
goodness toward us, the sweet
vicissitudes of light and
darkness, and the grateful
succession of times and seasons;
by which man is taught, in the
most sorrowful night, to look
for a joyful morning; and,
during the severest winter, to
expect a reviving spring. Thus
is the revolving year our
constant instructer and monitor;
incessantly inculcating the
duties of faith and hope, as
well as those of adoration,
gratitude, and praise.” — Horne.
Verse 17
Psalms 74:17. Thou hast set all
the borders of the earth — Thou
hast fixed the bounds, both of
the habitable world in general,
so that the seas, though they do
encompass and assault them, yet
are not, and never shall be,
able to remove them, and of all
the countries and people upon
earth, whom thou hast confined
within such bounds as thou hast
seen fit. Thou hast made summer
and winter — As the former
clause of the verse shows God’s
power and government over all
places, so this displays his
dominion over all times and
seasons. And both together are
fitly alleged as a motive to
God, that he would, at this
time, take care of his poor
people, and restore them to
their ancient land and borders,
in which he had been pleased to
set them.
Verse 18
Psalms 74:18. Remember this,
that the enemy hath reproached
thee — Though we deserve to be
forgotten and destroyed, yet
remember thyself, and do not
suffer thine and our enemies to
reproach and blaspheme the name
of that great and glorious
Being, the Creator and sovereign
Lord of the whole world, whom
they ought always to reverence
and adore; and that the foolish
people have blasphemed thy name
— Who, though they think
themselves, and are thought by
others, to be wise, yet in truth
are fools, and herein show their
stupendous folly, that they
vilify and provoke that God
whose powerful anger they can
neither resist, nor escape, nor
endure.
Verse 19
Psalms 74:19. O deliver not the
soul — That is, the life; of thy
turtle-dove — That is, thy
church; unto the multitude of
the wicked — Or, to the wild
beast, as חית, chajath, often
signifies: or, to the troop,
namely, of her enemies. As if he
had said, Thou hast delivered
thy people into captivity; do
not deliver them to death, nor
suffer their enemies utterly to
destroy them. The church is
fitly compared to a turtle-dove,
as resembling it in disposition,
being simple, harmless, meek,
faithful, solitary, timid,
mournful, exposed to manifold
injuries, and unable to defend
itself.
Verse 20
Psalms 74:20. Have respect unto
the covenant — Made with
Abraham, whereby thou didst give
the land of Canaan to him, and
to his seed for ever; and thou
didst further promise, that if
thy people were carried away
captive into a strange land, and
did there humble themselves and
pray, and turn unto thee, thou
wouldst mercifully restore them,
1 Kings 8:46-50. Do thou,
therefore, now restore us to
that pleasant land which thou
hast given us. For the dark
places of the earth — That is,
this dark and dismal land in
which we live, wherein there is
nothing but ignorance and
confusion, and all the works of
darkness; are full of the
habitations of cruelty — Here
are nothing but injustice, and
oppression, and tyranny, under
which we groan, in all the parts
of this great empire, where we
have our abode.
Verses 21-23
Psalms 74:21-23. O let not the
oppressed return ashamed — From
thee, and from the throne of thy
grace, to which they have
recourse in this their
distressed condition. “It is for
the honour of God that they who
apply to him for help should
not, by returning without it,
suffer shame and confusion in
the presence of their insulting
adversaries.” Let the poor and
needy praise thy name — Which
they will have a fresh motive to
do, if thou deliver us. O God,
plead thine own cause — Maintain
thy honour, worship, and
service, against those that
reproach thee, as it here
follows, and was observed
before, Psalms 74:10; Psalms
74:18. As we are reviled and
persecuted for thy sake, so thou
art injured in all our wrongs.
Forget not the voice of thine
enemies — Their insulting and
reproachful expressions against
thee, as well as against us. The
tumult — The tumultuous noise
and loud clamours; of those that
rise up against thee increaseth
— They grow worse and worse,
encouraging and hardening
themselves in their wicked
courses by their continual
success and prosperity, and by
thy patience extended to them. |