Verse 1
Psalms 75:1. Unto thee, O God,
do we give thanks — I, in my
own, and in thy people’s name;
for that thy name — Thy self, or
thy power; is near — That is, is
present with us, and most ready
to help us when we cry unto
thee; thou art not departed from
us; thou dost not now stand afar
off, as once thou didst, Psalms
10:1, as thy wondrous works
declare — Wrought for the good
of thy people. “Upon whatever
occasion,” says Dr. Horne,
“these words were originally
endited, the Christian Church
now celebrates in them that
great deliverance which, by so
many miracles of mercy and
power, hath been accomplished
for her through the Messiah, who
is, in Scripture, frequently
styled the NAME of Jehovah.”
Verse 2
Psalms 75:2. When I shall
receive the congregation — The
first verse was spoken by many
persons, We give thanks, &c.;
here the speaker is one, and
that one is plainly a ruler, who
promises that when he shall have
received the congregation, or,
as מועדmay be properly rendered,
an appointed, or fit time, or
season; that is, when he shall
be established in power and
authority, at a fit time and
place, he will judge uprightly,
and introduce a thorough
reformation into a kingdom
which, as the following verse
makes manifest, stood greatly in
need of it. From these
circumstances Dr. Horne, with
several other commentators,
thinks it probable “David is
speaking here of his advancement
to the throne of Israel, and the
intended rectitude of his
administration when he should be
settled thereon.”
Verse 3
Psalms 75:3. The earth — Or
land; and all the inhabitants
thereof are dissolved — Or
melted, as נמגים, nemogim, may
be rendered. It seems to mean,
either that the Israelitish
affairs were thrown into
confusion, and the frame of the
government dissolved by their
civil distractions, or that the
people were consumed and
destroyed by the continual
irruptions of foreign enemies. I
bear up the pillars of it — How
much soever I am traduced by
mine enemies, as the great
disturber of the land, I must do
myself this right to affirm
that, under God, I do support
and establish it, by maintaining
religion and justice, by
appointing, countenancing, and
supporting good magistrates, and
by encouraging the Lord’s
prophets and servants, and all
good men, who are indeed the
pillars of a nation.
Verse 4-5
Psalms 75:4-5. I said — With
authority and command; unto the
fools — The wicked: I charged
them; Deal not foolishly —
Desist from your impious and
injurious practices, which shall
not now go unpunished as they
have done. Lift not up your
horn, &c. — Do not carry
yourselves with pride and
arrogance, boasting of your own
strength; or with scorn and
contempt toward me or any others
of God’s people. It is a
metaphor taken from untamed
oxen, which will not bow their
heads to receive the yoke, but
lift up their heads and horns to
avoid it. Or, למרום, lammarom,
rendered, on high, means,
against the high one, that is,
against God, who is mentioned
under this same title, Psalms
56:2; Isaiah 57:15. Speak not —
Against me and my government;
with a stiff neck — With pride
and contempt of my person, and
with rebellion against God’s
will declared concerning my
advancement, of which you are
not ignorant: see 2 Samuel
3:17-18.
Verse 6-7
Psalms 75:6-7. For promotion
cometh not, &c. — Though you
envy and oppose my advancement,
because I was but a poor
shepherd, and of a mean family;
yet you ought to know and
consider what is notorious and
visible in the world, that the
dignities and sceptres of the
earth are not always conferred
according to human expectations
and probabilities, but by God’s
sovereign will and providence,
as it follows. But God is judge
— Namely, the righteous Judge,
and supreme Lord and Governor of
all the kingdoms of the earth;
giving them to whomsoever he
pleaseth. He putteth down one
and setteth up another — It is
he who hath rejected Saul and
his family, and put me in his
stead: and who art thou that
disputest against God, and
resistest his declared will?
Verse 8
Psalms 75:8. For, &c. — This
verse is added, either, 1st, As
a reason or confirmation of the
assertion, Psalms 75:7, and to
show that God, in removing one
king to make way for another,
did not proceed in a way of
absolute sovereignty, but in a
way of justice and equity. Or,
2d, As another argument to
enforce his advice given Psalms
75:4-5, which he had already
pressed by one argument, Psalms
75:6-7. In the hand of the Lord
there is a cup — God is here
compared to the master of a
feast, who, in those days, used
to distribute portions of meats
or drinks to the several guests,
as he thought fit. A cup, in
Scripture, is sometimes taken in
a good sense for God’s
blessings, as Psalms 16:5;
Psalms 23:5, and sometimes, and
more frequently, in a bad sense,
for his vengeance and judgments,
Psalms 11:6; Isaiah 51:22;
Jeremiah 49:12; Matthew 20:23;
and so it is here understood, as
the following words show. And
the wine is red —
Such as the best wine in Judea
was, (Deuteronomy 32:14;
Proverbs 23:31,) and therefore
strong and intoxicating. Or, is
troubled, as חמר, chamar, more
properly signifies, and is
rendered by divers learned men.
Thus he expresses the power and
fierceness of God’s wrath and
judgments. It is full of mixture
— The wine is mingled, not with
water, but with strengthening
and intoxicating ingredients.
“Calamity and sorrow, fear and
trembling, infatuation and
despair, the evils of the
present life, and of that which
is to come, are the bitter
ingredients of this cup of
mixture.” And he poureth out of
the same — As it is entirely in
the hand and disposal of God,
so, through every age, he has
been pouring out, and
administering of its contents,
more or less, in proportion to
the sins of men; but the dregs
thereof — The worst and most
dreadful part of those
tribulations; all the wicked of
the earth shall wring them out —
Shall be compelled to squeeze
out every drop of wrath and
misery which they contain; and
drink them — For the curse shall
enter into their bowels like
water, and like oil into their
bones. They shall be compelled
to endure the utmost effects of
the divine vengeance upon their
sins, partly in this life, but
more fully in the life to come,
when the cup of the Lord’s
indignation will be to them in
an especial manner a cup of
trembling, of everlasting
trembling; when burning coals,
fire and brimstone, and a
horrible eternal tempest shall
be the portion of their cup,
Psalms 11:6. And they shall be
thus tormented in the presence
of the holy angels, and in the
presence of the Lamb, and shall
have no rest day nor night, and
the smoke of their torment shall
ascend up for ever and ever,
Revelation 14:10-11.
Verse 9-10
Psalms 75:9-10. But I will
declare for ever — These
dispensations of mercy and
judgment to the world. I will
sing praises to the God of Jacob
— He will praise God, and give
him glory for the power to which
he had advanced him, and that
not only at first, while the
mercy was fresh, but for ever;
as long as he lives he will
remember, and be grateful for,
this instance of the Lord’s
goodness. Thus the exaltation of
the Son of David will be the
subject of the saints’
everlasting praises. And he will
give glory to God, not only as
his God, but as the God of
Jacob, knowing it was for his
servant Jacob’s sake, and
because he loved his people
Israel, that he made him king
over them. All the horns of the
wicked — Their honour and power,
which they made instruments of
mischief to oppress good men; a
metaphor taken from horned and
mischievous beasts; will I cut
off — I will humble their pride
and break their power; I will
disable them to do mischief. But
the horns of the righteous shall
be exalted — Good men shall be
encouraged and promoted, and
intrusted with the management of
all public affairs, which will
be a great blessing to all my
people. Thus he determines to
use the power wherewith he was
intrusted for the great ends for
which it was put into his hands,
as every governor ought to do,
and as every good governor will
do. And herein David was a type
of Christ, who, with the breath
of his lips, slays the wicked,
Isaiah 11:4; but exalts with
honour the horn of the
righteous, Psalms 112:9. |