Verses 1-3
Psalms 81:1-3. Sing aloud unto
God our strength — Our refuge
and defence against all our
enemies. Bring hither the
timbrel, &c. — All which
instruments were then prescribed
and used in their solemn
meetings. Blow up the trumpet in
the new-moon — Which was a
sacred and festival time. But
this may be understood, either,
1st, Generally of every
new-moon; or, rather, 2d,
Specially of that new-moon which
began the seventh month, the
month Tisri, when a solemn feast
was kept, which was always
proclaimed by the sound of
trumpets. Compare this passage
with Leviticus 23:24, and
Numbers 29:1, where this day is
called a day of blowing of
trumpets; it being the first day
of the Jewish civil year, and
the time when the world was
supposed to have been created,
the fruits being then ripe. “The
fixing of the time of the
new-moon among the Jews, for
want of astronomical tables, was
done in this manner. The first
persons who observed, or thought
they observed, the new-moon,
were to repair immediately to
the grand council to give notice
of it. Inquiry was then made
into the credibility of the
informers, and whether their
information agreed with such
computations as they were then
able to make. After which the
president proclaimed the
new-moon, by saying, מקדשׁ,
mikdash, it is consecrated, or
holy. This word was twice
repeated aloud by the people,
after which it was ordered to be
proclaimed everywhere by the
sound of the trumpet.” — Univ.
Hist., vol. 3. p. 33.
Verse 4-5
Psalms 81:4-5. For this was a
statute for Israel — This is no
human device, but a divine
institution; God hath appointed
and commanded this solemn feast
to be announced and observed in
this manner. This — Namely, the
blowing of trumpets; he ordained
in Joseph — Among the posterity
of Joseph, namely, the people of
Israel, as is evident both from
the foregoing verse, where they
are called Israel, and from the
following words of this verse,
where they are described by
their coming out of Egypt, which
was common to all the tribes of
Israel, who are sometimes called
by the name of Joseph. For a
testimony — For a law, often
called a testimony; or, rather,
for a witness and memorial of
the glorious deliverance here
referred to. When he — That is,
he who ordained, as was now
said, namely, God; went out
through the land of Egypt — As a
captain at the head, or on the
behalf of his people, to execute
his judgments upon that land;
or, against that land, namely,
to destroy it. Or, as many
ancient and modern interpreters
read it, out of the land. And so
understood, this text signifies
the time when this and the other
feasts were instituted, namely,
soon after their coming out of
Egypt, even at Sinai. Where I
heard, &c. — That is, my
progenitors heard, for all the
successive generations of Israel
make one body, and are sometimes
spoken of as one person; a
language which I understood not
— Either the language of God
himself, speaking from heaven at
Sinai, which was strange and
terrible to them; or, rather,
the Egyptian language, which at
first was both very disagreeable
and unknown to the Israelites,
Genesis 42:23, and probably
continued so for some
considerable time, because they
were much separated, both in
place and conversation, from the
Egyptians, through Joseph’s
pious and prudent appointment.
This exposition of the passage
is confirmed by Psalms 114:1,
where this very thing is
mentioned as an aggravation of
their misery; and by other
places of Scripture, where it is
spoken of as a curse and
calamity to be with a people of
a strange language. See
Deuteronomy 28:49; Jeremiah
5:15.
Verse 6-7
Psalms 81:6-7. I removed his
shoulder — That is, the shoulder
of my people; from the burden —
I delivered them from the
burdensome slavery of Egypt. His
hands were delivered from the
pots — Hebrew, מדוד תעברנה, his
hands passed from the pots, or,
as Chandler renders it, his
hands from the pots, through
which they had passed. Thus God
reminds Israel of their
redemption, by his mercy and
power, from the burdens and
drudgery imposed on them in
Egypt. And from this verse to
the end of the Psalm, it is
evident God is the speaker. Thou
calledst in trouble — At the Red
sea, Exodus 14:10-12; and I
delivered thee — In an
unexpected and extraordinary
way, and disappointed the
designs of thy enemies. I
answered thee in the secret
place of thunder — From the dark
and cloudy pillar, whence I
thundered and fought against the
Egyptians: see Exodus 13:21; and
Exodus 14:19; Exodus 14:24. Some
refer this to the thunder at
Sinai; but at that time they
were not in trouble, but in a
safe and glorious condition. Be
assured, reader, that God is as
ready, at all times, to hear the
prayers and relieve the
distresses of his people, as he
was when the Israelites cried
unto him in Egypt, and in the
wilderness, and received answers
from the cloudy pillar. Believe
this, and apply to him in thy
troubles.
Verses 8-10
Psalms 81:8-10. Hear, O my
people — And who should hear me
if my people will not? I have
heard and answered thee, now
wilt thou hear me? Hear what is
said, with the greatest
solemnity, and the most
unquestionable certainty, for it
is what I, the God of truth and
love, thy lawgiver and thy
judge, declare for thy profit.
And I will testify unto thee —
Concerning my will and thy duty.
I will give thee statutes and
judgments, in the execution of
which thou mayest live and be
happy for ever. This God did
presently after he brought them
from Meribah, even at Sinai.
There shall no strange god be in
thee — Thou shalt renounce all
false gods, and false ways of
worship, and shalt worship me
only, and only in the manner
which I shall prescribe. Thus,
in effect, God addressed himself
to Israel at Sinai, and thus he
addressed himself to them when
this Psalm was written, and thus
he addresses his people in every
age. He thus put them in
remembrance of the first and
great command, Thou shalt have
no other gods before me; and of
his claim to their obedience as
their God and Saviour. Open thy
mouth wide — That Isaiah , 1 st,
Pray for my mercies; ask freely,
and abundantly, and boldly,
whatsoever you need, or in
reason can desire. 2d, Receive
the mercies which I am ready to
give you. And I will fill it — I
will grant them all upon
condition of your obedience.
Here then he testifies, that he
is both able and willing to
satisfy the utmost desires and
wishes of such as would apply to
him for blessings, especially
spiritual blessings and
comforts. “Behold then the
rebellion, the ingratitude, and
the folly of that man, who says
to any creature, ‘Thou art my
God;’ who bestoweth on the world
that fear, love, and adoration,
which are due only to its
Creator and Redeemer; who
wasteth his days in seeking
after happiness, where all, by
their inquietude, acknowledge
that it is not to be found.” —
Horne.
Verse 11
Psalms 81:11. My people would
not hearken to my voice — But
turned a deaf ear to all I said.
“Two things,” says Henry, “the
Lord complains of; 1st, Their
disobedience to his commands.
They did hear his voice, and
that in such a manner as no
people ever did; but they would
not hearken to it; they would
not be governed by it, neither
by the law, nor by the reason of
it, namely, that he was Jehovah
their God, who brought them out
of the land of Egypt. 2d, Their
dislike of his covenant-relation
to them: They would none of me.
They acquiesced not in my word:
so the Chaldee. God was willing
to be to them a God, but they
were not willing to be to him a
people. They did not like his
terms. I would have gathered
them, but they would not. They
had none of him; and why had
they not? It was not because
they might not; they were fairly
invited into covenant with God:
it was not because they could
not; for the word was nigh them,
even in their mouth, and in
their heart: it was purely
because they would not. Note,
the reason why people are not
religious is because they will
not be so.
Verse 12
Psalms 81:12. So I gave them up,
&c. — Upon their obstinate and
oft-repeated acts of
disobedience, and their
rejection of my grace and mercy
offered to them, I withdrew all
the restraints of my providence,
and my Holy Spirit and grace
from them, and wholly left them
to follow their own vain and
foolish imaginations, and wicked
lusts. And they walked in their
own counsels — The consequence
of my thus giving them up to
their own depraved inclinations
was, that they practised all
those things, both in common
conversation and in religious
worship, which were most
agreeable, not to my commands or
counsels, but to their own
fancies and lusts, as appeared
in the affair of the golden
calf, and many other things.
Verse 13
Psalms 81:13. O that my people
had hearkened unto me — In this
way does God testify his
good-will to, and concern for,
the welfare and happiness of
these most refractory,
disobedient, and obstinate
sinners. The expressions are
very affecting, and much like
those he uttered by Moses
concerning them, Deuteronomy
5:29, “O that there were such a
heart in them, that they would
fear me, and keep all my
commandments always, that it
might be well with them, and
with their children for ever.”
Or like those which Christ
breathed forth over the same
people, when, beholding the
city, he wept over it, and said,
“If thou hadst known in this thy
day the things which belong to
thy peace,” &c. Or those other
words of similar import, “O
Jerusalem! Jerusalem! how often
would I have gathered thy
children together,” &c. All
these, and such like passages,
manifest the tender mercies of
God, and show that he is not
only careful to provide for
mankind the means of salvation,
but that he grieves, speaking
after the manner of men, and
mourns, with paternal affection,
over them, when their
frowardness and obstinacy
disappoint the efforts of his
love. They demonstrate two
things; 1st, How unwilling he is
that any should perish, and how
desirous that all should come to
repentance; and, 2d, What
enemies sinners are to
themselves; and what an
aggravation it will be of their
misery, that they might have
been happy on such easy terms,
but would not.
Verse 14-15
Psalms 81:14-15. I would soon
have subdued their enemies —
Both those remaining Canaanites,
whom now, for their unbelief and
apostacy, I have left in the
land, to be snares and plagues
to them, and also all their
encroaching and vexatious
neighbours, who have so often
invaded and laid waste their
country. The haters of the Lord
— The enemies of God’s people,
such as the neighbouring nations
were; should have submitted
themselves — Should have owned
and professed their subjection
to them, if not also have become
proselytes to the true religion.
He terms them haters of the
Lord, partly because they hated
the Israelites for God’s sake,
and on account of the
singularity of their worship, as
the heathen often declared; and
partly to show the close union
and solemn league and covenant
which were between God and them,
by virtue of which God had
declared he would account their
friends to be his friends, and
their enemies to be his enemies.
But their time — That is,
Israel’s time, meaning, either,
1st, Their happy time, life
being often put for a happy life
or state; or, rather, 2d, The
duration of their commonwealth;
should have endured for ever —
Should have lasted for a long
time; whereas now their latter
and doleful end is hastening
toward them. It may be proper to
observe here the original
expression, rendered, should
have submitted themselves to
him, is, יכחשׁו לו, jecachashu
lo, which, as we have more than
once had occasion to observe,
signifies, should have lied unto
him, that is, spoken fair,
fawned, and pretended great
respect to the Jewish people and
their God, though in reality
they hated them both. In this
sense the words are understood
by Bishop Patrick, whose
paraphrase upon the verse is
well worth transcribing. “All
that maligned their prosperity,”
(the prosperity of Israel,) “and
set themselves against the
design of the Lord, to make them
victorious over their enemies,
should have been so daunted,
that they should have dissembled
their inward hatred, and been
forced, at least, to counterfeit
submission; but his people
should have seen blessed days,
and have enjoyed a substantial
and durable happiness without
any interruption.”
Verse 16
Psalms 81:16. He should have fed
them with the finest wheat — He
would have made their country
exceedingly fruitful and
productive, especially of wheat
and other grain, in the highest
perfection. And with honey out
of the rock should I have
satisfied thee — That is, with
all pleasant and precious
fruits, and with all delights;
as all necessaries may be
expressed in the former clause
under the name of wheat. Or
honey may be here taken
literally; for the land of
Canaan abounded with excellent
honey; and the bees used to be
collected in the clefts and
holes of the rocks, as in hives,
and there made their honey in
such plenty that it often flowed
down upon the ground in
considerable quantities: see
Deuteronomy 32:13; 1 Samuel
14:25-26. |