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Text -- Psalms 74:10-23 (NET)

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Context
74:10 How long, O God, will the adversary hurl insults? Will the enemy blaspheme your name forever? 74:11 Why do you remain inactive? Intervene and destroy him! 74:12 But God has been my king from ancient times, performing acts of deliverance on the earth. 74:13 You destroyed the sea by your strength; you shattered the heads of the sea monster in the water. 74:14 You crushed the heads of Leviathan; you fed him to the people who live along the coast. 74:15 You broke open the spring and the stream; you dried up perpetually flowing rivers. 74:16 You established the cycle of day and night; you put the moon and sun in place. 74:17 You set up all the boundaries of the earth; you created the cycle of summer and winter. 74:18 Remember how the enemy hurls insults, O Lord, and how a foolish nation blasphemes your name! 74:19 Do not hand the life of your dove over to a wild animal! Do not continue to disregard the lives of your oppressed people! 74:20 Remember your covenant promises, for the dark regions of the earth are full of places where violence rules. 74:21 Do not let the afflicted be turned back in shame! Let the oppressed and poor praise your name! 74:22 Rise up, O God! Defend your honor! Remember how fools insult you all day long! 74:23 Do not disregard what your enemies say, or the unceasing shouts of those who defy you.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Leviathan a twisting aquatic monster, possibly the crocodile of the Nile, and used symbolically of Assyria and Babylonia (by the twisting Euphrates River IBD).
 · sea the Dead Sea, at the southern end of the Jordan River,the Mediterranean Sea,the Persian Gulf south east of Babylon,the Red Sea


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Whale | Turtle, Turtle-dove | Psalms | Prayer | PSALMS, BOOK OF | Nation | Music | JACKAL | INTERCESSION | GOD, 2 | GESTURE | FORGET; FORGETFUL | DOVE | CRUEL; CRUELTY | CLEAVE | CAT | BOSOM | BORDER; BORDERS | Asaph | Afflictions and Adversities | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Psa 74:11 - -- Why dost thou forebear the exercise of thy power? Bosom - In which thou now seemest to hide it.

Why dost thou forebear the exercise of thy power? Bosom - In which thou now seemest to hide it.

Wesley: Psa 74:12 - -- It belongs therefore to thy office to protect and save me.

It belongs therefore to thy office to protect and save me.

Wesley: Psa 74:12 - -- In the view of the world.

In the view of the world.

Wesley: Psa 74:13 - -- He means Pharaoh and his mighty men.

He means Pharaoh and his mighty men.

Wesley: Psa 74:14 - -- Pharaoh.

Pharaoh.

Wesley: Psa 74:14 - -- To the ravenous birds and beasts of the desert. These creatures are significantly called the people of the wilderness, because they are the only peopl...

To the ravenous birds and beasts of the desert. These creatures are significantly called the people of the wilderness, because they are the only people that inhabit it.

Wesley: Psa 74:15 - -- Thou didst by cleaving the rock, make a fountain and a stream to flow from it, for the refreshment of thy people in those dry deserts.

Thou didst by cleaving the rock, make a fountain and a stream to flow from it, for the refreshment of thy people in those dry deserts.

Wesley: Psa 74:15 - -- Jordan and the Red Sea; for the sea itself; yea, a greater sea than that, is called a river, Jon 2:3, where the Hebrew word is the same which is here ...

Jordan and the Red Sea; for the sea itself; yea, a greater sea than that, is called a river, Jon 2:3, where the Hebrew word is the same which is here used. And the same title is expressly given to the sea, by Homer, and other ancient writers.

Wesley: Psa 74:16 - -- The moon, the lesser light.

The moon, the lesser light.

Wesley: Psa 74:17 - -- Thou hast fixed the bounds of the habitable world in general, and of all the countries and people upon the earth. And as this clause shews God's power...

Thou hast fixed the bounds of the habitable world in general, and of all the countries and people upon the earth. And as this clause shews God's power over all places, so the next displays his dominion over all times and seasons.

Wesley: Psa 74:18 - -- Though we deserve to be forgotten, yet do not suffer our enemies to reproach the name of the great and glorious God.

Though we deserve to be forgotten, yet do not suffer our enemies to reproach the name of the great and glorious God.

Wesley: Psa 74:19 - -- The life.

The life.

Wesley: Psa 74:19 - -- dove - Of thy church, which is fitly compared to a turtle - dove, because simple and harmless, and meek, and faithful.

dove - Of thy church, which is fitly compared to a turtle - dove, because simple and harmless, and meek, and faithful.

Wesley: Psa 74:20 - -- Made with Abraham, whereby thou didst give the land of Canaan to him, and to his seed for ever.

Made with Abraham, whereby thou didst give the land of Canaan to him, and to his seed for ever.

Wesley: Psa 74:20 - -- This dark and dismal land in which we live.

This dark and dismal land in which we live.

Wesley: Psa 74:21 - -- From the throne of thy grace, to which they make their resort.

From the throne of thy grace, to which they make their resort.

JFB: Psa 74:10 - -- (Compare Psa 31:1).

(Compare Psa 31:1).

JFB: Psa 74:10 - -- Us, as deserted of God.

Us, as deserted of God.

JFB: Psa 74:10 - -- Or, "perfections," as power, goodness, &c. (Psa 29:2).

Or, "perfections," as power, goodness, &c. (Psa 29:2).

JFB: Psa 74:11 - -- Why cease to help us? (Compare Psa 3:7; Psa 7:6; Psa 60:5).

Why cease to help us? (Compare Psa 3:7; Psa 7:6; Psa 60:5).

JFB: Psa 74:12 - -- Literally, "And," in an adversative sense.

Literally, "And," in an adversative sense.

JFB: Psa 74:13-15 - -- Examples of the "salvation wrought" are cited.

Examples of the "salvation wrought" are cited.

JFB: Psa 74:13-15 - -- That is, Red Sea.

That is, Red Sea.

JFB: Psa 74:13-15 - -- Pharaoh and his host (compare Isa 51:9-10; Eze 29:3-4).

Pharaoh and his host (compare Isa 51:9-10; Eze 29:3-4).

JFB: Psa 74:14 - -- The word is a collective, and so used for many.

The word is a collective, and so used for many.

JFB: Psa 74:14 - -- That is, wild beasts, as conies (Pro 30:25-26), are called a people. Others take the passages literally, that the sea monsters thrown out on dry land ...

That is, wild beasts, as conies (Pro 30:25-26), are called a people. Others take the passages literally, that the sea monsters thrown out on dry land were food for the wandering Arabs.

JFB: Psa 74:15 - -- That is, the rocks of Horeb and Kadesh; for fountains.

That is, the rocks of Horeb and Kadesh; for fountains.

JFB: Psa 74:15 - -- Jordan, and, perhaps, Arnon and Jabbok (Num 21:14).

Jordan, and, perhaps, Arnon and Jabbok (Num 21:14).

JFB: Psa 74:16-17 - -- The fixed orders of nature and bounds of earth are of God.

The fixed orders of nature and bounds of earth are of God.

JFB: Psa 74:18 - -- That such a God should be thus insulted!

That such a God should be thus insulted!

JFB: Psa 74:19 - -- Literally, "beast," their flock or company of men (Psa 68:10).

Literally, "beast," their flock or company of men (Psa 68:10).

JFB: Psa 74:19 - -- That is, the meek and lonely Church.

That is, the meek and lonely Church.

JFB: Psa 74:19 - -- Literally, "the company," as above--thus the Church is represented as the spoiled and defeated remnant of an army, exposed to violence.

Literally, "the company," as above--thus the Church is represented as the spoiled and defeated remnant of an army, exposed to violence.

JFB: Psa 74:20 - -- And the prevalence of injustice in heathen lands is a reason for invoking God's regard to His promise (compare Num 14:21; Psa 7:16; Psa 18:48).

And the prevalence of injustice in heathen lands is a reason for invoking God's regard to His promise (compare Num 14:21; Psa 7:16; Psa 18:48).

JFB: Psa 74:21 - -- Broken (Psa 9:9).

Broken (Psa 9:9).

JFB: Psa 74:21 - -- From seeking God.

From seeking God.

JFB: Psa 74:21 - -- (Psa 35:4).

JFB: Psa 74:22-23 - -- (Compare Psa 3:7; Psa 7:6). God hears the wicked to their own ruin (Gen 4:10; Gen 18:20).

(Compare Psa 3:7; Psa 7:6). God hears the wicked to their own ruin (Gen 4:10; Gen 18:20).

Clarke: Psa 74:11 - -- Why withdrawest thou thy hand - It has been remarked, that as the outward habit of the easterns had no sleeves, the hands and arms were frequently c...

Why withdrawest thou thy hand - It has been remarked, that as the outward habit of the easterns had no sleeves, the hands and arms were frequently covered with the folds of the robe; and in order to do any thing, the hand must be disentangled and drawn out. The literal version of the Hebrew is: "To what time wilt thou draw back thy hand; yea, thy right hand, from within thy bosom?"Consomme; that is, manifest thy power, and destroy thy adversaries. I have, in the introduction to the book of Psalms, spoken of the old metrical version by Sternhold and Hopkins, and have stated that it was formed from the original text. A proof of this may be seen by the learned reader in this and the preceding verse; where, though their version is harsh, and some of their expressions quaint almost to ridicule, yet they have hit the true mean ing which our prose translators have missed: -

Psa 74:10     When wilt thou once, Lord, end this shame,
And cease thine en’ mies strong?
Shall they always blaspheme thy name,
And rail on thee so long

Psa 74:11     Why dost thou draw thy hand aback,
And hide it in thy lap?
O pluck it out, and be not slack
To give thy foes a rap!

Clarke: Psa 74:12 - -- For God is my King of old - We have always acknowledged thee as our sovereign; and thou hast reigned as a king in the midst of our land, dispensing ...

For God is my King of old - We have always acknowledged thee as our sovereign; and thou hast reigned as a king in the midst of our land, dispensing salvation and deliverance from the center to every part of the circumference.

Clarke: Psa 74:13 - -- Thou didst divide the sea - When our fathers came from Egypt

Thou didst divide the sea - When our fathers came from Egypt

Clarke: Psa 74:13 - -- Thou brakest the heads of the dragons in the waters - Pharaoh, his captains, and all his hosts were drowned in the Red Sea, when attempting to pursu...

Thou brakest the heads of the dragons in the waters - Pharaoh, his captains, and all his hosts were drowned in the Red Sea, when attempting to pursue them.

Clarke: Psa 74:14 - -- The heads of leviathan - Leviathan might be intended here as a personification of the Egypttan government; and its heads, Pharaoh and his chief capt...

The heads of leviathan - Leviathan might be intended here as a personification of the Egypttan government; and its heads, Pharaoh and his chief captains

Clarke: Psa 74:14 - -- To the people inhabiting the wilderness - Probably meaning the birds and beasts of prey. These were the people of the wilderness, which fed on the d...

To the people inhabiting the wilderness - Probably meaning the birds and beasts of prey. These were the people of the wilderness, which fed on the dead bodies of the Egyptians, which the tides had cast ashore. The Vulgate, Septuagint, Ethiopic, and Arabic read, "Thou hast given him for meat to the Ethiopians,"or Abyssinians.

Clarke: Psa 74:15 - -- Thou didst cleave the fountain - Thou didst cleave the rock in the wilderness, of which all the congregation drank

Thou didst cleave the fountain - Thou didst cleave the rock in the wilderness, of which all the congregation drank

Clarke: Psa 74:15 - -- Thou driedst up mighty rivers - Does not this refer to the cutting off the waters of the Jordan, so that the people passed over dryshod?

Thou driedst up mighty rivers - Does not this refer to the cutting off the waters of the Jordan, so that the people passed over dryshod?

Clarke: Psa 74:16 - -- The day is thine, the night also is thine - Thou art the Author of light, and of the sun, which is the means of dispensing it.

The day is thine, the night also is thine - Thou art the Author of light, and of the sun, which is the means of dispensing it.

Clarke: Psa 74:17 - -- Thou hast set all the borders of the earth - Thou alone art the Author of all its grand geographical divisions

Thou hast set all the borders of the earth - Thou alone art the Author of all its grand geographical divisions

Clarke: Psa 74:17 - -- Thou hast made summer and winter - Thou hast appointed that peculiarity in the poise and rotation of the earth, by which the seasons are produced.

Thou hast made summer and winter - Thou hast appointed that peculiarity in the poise and rotation of the earth, by which the seasons are produced.

Clarke: Psa 74:18 - -- Remember this - The heathen not only deny these things, but give the honor of them to their false gods, and thus blaspheme thy name.

Remember this - The heathen not only deny these things, but give the honor of them to their false gods, and thus blaspheme thy name.

Clarke: Psa 74:19 - -- Deliver not the soul of thy turtle-dove - Thy people Israel are helpless, defenceless, miserable, and afflicted: O deliver them no longer into the p...

Deliver not the soul of thy turtle-dove - Thy people Israel are helpless, defenceless, miserable, and afflicted: O deliver them no longer into the power of their brutal adversaries.

Clarke: Psa 74:20 - -- Have respect unto the covenant - הבט לברית habbet labberith . Pay attention to the covenant sacrifice; to that offered by Abraham, Gen 15:...

Have respect unto the covenant - הבט לברית habbet labberith . Pay attention to the covenant sacrifice; to that offered by Abraham, Gen 15:9, etc., when the contracting parties, God and Abram, passed through between the separated parts of the covenant sacrifice. An indisputable type of Jesus Christ; and of God and man meeting in his sacrificed humanity

Clarke: Psa 74:20 - -- The dark places of the earth - The caves, dens, woods, etc., of the land are full of robbers, cut-throats, and murderers, who are continually destro...

The dark places of the earth - The caves, dens, woods, etc., of the land are full of robbers, cut-throats, and murderers, who are continually destroying thy people, so that the holy seed seems as if it would be entirely cut off and the covenant promise thus be rendered void

The words may either apply to Chaldea or Judea. Judea was at this time little else than a den of robbers, its own natural inhabitants being removed. Chaldea was infested with hordes of banditti also.

Clarke: Psa 74:21 - -- Let not the oppressed return ashamed - Do not permit thy people to be so diminished, that when, according to thy promise, they are restored to their...

Let not the oppressed return ashamed - Do not permit thy people to be so diminished, that when, according to thy promise, they are restored to their own land, they may appear to be but a handful of men.

Clarke: Psa 74:22 - -- Plead thine own cause - Thy honor is concerned, as well as our safety and salvation. The fool - the idolater, reproacheth thee daily - he boasts of ...

Plead thine own cause - Thy honor is concerned, as well as our safety and salvation. The fool - the idolater, reproacheth thee daily - he boasts of the superiority of his idols, by whose power, he asserts, we are brought under their domination.

Clarke: Psa 74:23 - -- Forget not the voice - While we pray to thee for our own salvation, we call upon thee to vindicate thy injured honor: and let all the nations see th...

Forget not the voice - While we pray to thee for our own salvation, we call upon thee to vindicate thy injured honor: and let all the nations see that thou lovest thy followers, and hatest those who are thy enemies. Let not man prevail against thee or thine

Calvin: Psa 74:10 - -- 10.How long, O God! shall the adversary reproach? Here it is intimated that nothing inflicted upon them greater anguish than when they saw the name o...

10.How long, O God! shall the adversary reproach? Here it is intimated that nothing inflicted upon them greater anguish than when they saw the name of God blasphemed by the ungodly. By this manner of praying, the object of the inspired writer was to kindle in our hearts a zeal for maintaining the Divine glory. We are naturally too delicate and tender for bearing calamities; but it is a decided proof of genuine godliness, when the contumely which is cast upon God grieves and disquiets our minds more than all our own personal sufferings. The poor Jews, there can be no doubt, were assailed with more kinds of reproach than one under a most cruel tyrant, and amongst a barbarous nation. But the prophet, speaking in the person of the whole Church, makes almost no account of the reproaches cast upon the people in comparison of the execrable blasphemies directed against God; according to the statement contained in Psa 69:9, “The reproaches of them that reproached thee are fallen upon me.” The phrase for ever is again added; for when the ungodly continue long unpunished, this has a hardening effect, and renders them more audacious, especially when the revilings which they pour forth against God seem to pass unnoticed by him. It is, therefore, added immediately after in the 11th verse,

Calvin: Psa 74:11 - -- 11.How long wilt thou withdraw thy hand? It is easy to see what the prophet here intends, and yet interpreters are not agreed as to the words. Some b...

11.How long wilt thou withdraw thy hand? It is easy to see what the prophet here intends, and yet interpreters are not agreed as to the words. Some by the word hand, in the first part of the verse, understand the left hand, to distinguish it from the right hand, mentioned in the last clause of the verse. But this is mere trifling; for when he uses the term right hand, he simply repeats the same thing according to his usual manner. Some translate the verb כלה , kalah, the last word of the verse, by hinder or restrain, as if the prophet had said, Do thou at length stretch forth thy hand, which has been kept too long in thy bosom. But this is a forced sense, to which they have recourse without any color of reason. Those who translate it consume understand the midst of God’s bosom, as denoting allegorically his temple, 228 an interpretation of which I cannot approve. It will be better to continue the interrogation to the last word in this way: “How long wilt thou withdraw thy hand? Yea, wilt thou withdraw it from the midst of thy bosom? Consume, therefore, these ungodly men who so proudly despise thee.” We may also not improperly view the words as a prayer that as God’s enemies persuaded themselves that he was slothful and idle, because he did not bestir himself, nor openly lift up his hand; he would cause them to feel that he was perfectly able to destroy them with his nod alone, although he should not move so much as a finger.

Calvin: Psa 74:12 - -- 12.But God is my King from the beginning In this verse, as we have often seen to be the case in other places, the people of God intermingle meditatio...

12.But God is my King from the beginning In this verse, as we have often seen to be the case in other places, the people of God intermingle meditations with their prayers, thereby to acquire renewed vigor to their faith, and to stir up themselves to greater earnestness in the duty of prayer. We know how difficult it is to rise above all doubts, and boldly to persevere in a free and unrestrained course of prayer. Here, then, the faithful call to remembrance the proofs of God’s mercy and working, by which he certified, through a continued series of ages, that he was the King and Protector of the people whom he had chosen. By this example we are taught, that as it is not enough to pray with the lips unless we also pray in faith, we ought always to remember the benefits by which God has given a confirmation of his fatherly love towards us, and should regard them as so many testimonies of his electing love. It is quite clear that the title King, which is here applied to God, ought not to be restricted merely to his sovereignty. He is addressed by this appellation because he had taken upon him the government of the Jewish people, in order to preserve and maintain them in safety. We have already stated what is implied in the words, from the beginning. By the midst of the earth some think that Judea is intended, because it was situated as it were in the midst of the habitable globe. There is no doubt that it is to be understood of a place which stands prominently in view. We find the expression used in this sense in these words which God commanded Moses to speak to Pharaoh,

“And I will sever in that day the land of Goshen, in which my people dwell, that no swarms of flies shall be there; to the end thou mayest know that I am the Lord in the midst of the earth,”
(Exo 8:22.)

The simple and natural meaning, therefore, is, that God had wrought in behalf of the chosen people many deliverances, which were as open and manifest as if they had been exhibited on a conspicuous theater.

Calvin: Psa 74:13 - -- 13.Thou hast divided the sea by thy power The prophet now collects together certain kinds of deliverances highly worthy of remembrance; all of them, ...

13.Thou hast divided the sea by thy power The prophet now collects together certain kinds of deliverances highly worthy of remembrance; all of them, however, belonging to the first deliverance by which God emancipated his people from the tyranny of Egypt. We will find him afterwards descending to the general commendation of the goodness of God which is diffused through the whole world. Thus from the special grace which God vouchsafes to his Church, he passes on to speak of the good-will which he displays towards all mankind. In the first place, he says, Thou hast divided, or cleaved, the sea. Some think that the following clause is subjoined as an effect of what is stated in the first clause, — God, by drying up the sea, having caused the whales and other great fishes to die. I am, however, of opinion, that it is to be taken metaphorically for Pharaoh and his army; this mode of expression being very common among the prophets, especially when they speak of the Egyptians, whose country was washed by a sea abounding with fish, and divided by the Nile. Pharaoh is, therefore, not improperly termed Leviathan, 235 on account of the advantages of the sea possessed by his country, and because, in reigning over that land with great splendor, he might be compared to a whale moving up and down at its ease in the midst of the waters of the mighty ocean. 236 As God put forth his power at that time for the deliverance of the people, to assure the Church that he would always be her protector and the guardian of her welfare, the encouragement afforded by this example ought not to be limited exclusively to one age. It is, therefore, with good reason applied to the descendants of that ancient race, that they might improve it as a means of confirming and establishing their faith. The prophet does not here recount all the miracles which God had wrought at the departure of the people from the land of Egypt; but in adverting to some of them, he comprehends by the figure synecdoche, all that Moses has narrated concerning them at greater length. When he says that leviathan was given for food to the Israelites, and that even in the wilderness, 237 there is a beautiful allusion to the destruction of Pharaoh and his host. It is as if he had said, that then a bountiful provision of victuals was laid up for the nourishment of the people; for when their enemies were destroyed, the quiet and security which the people in consequence enjoyed served, so to speak, as food to prolong their life. By the wilderness, is not meant the countries lying on the sea coast, though they are dry and barren, but the deserts at a great distance from the sea. The same subject is prosecuted in the following verse, where it is declared, that the fountain was cleaved or divided, that is, it was so when God caused a stream of water to gush from the rock to supply the wants of the people. 238 Finally, it is added, that mighty rivers 239 were dried up, an event which happened when God caused the waters of the Jordan to turn back to make a way for his people to pass over. Some would have the Hebrew word איתן , ethan, which signifies mighty, to be a proper name, as if the correct translation were rivers of Ethan; but this interpretation is altogether without foundation.

Calvin: Psa 74:16 - -- 16.The day is thine, the night also is thine The prophet now descends to the consideration of the divine benefits which are extended in common to all...

16.The day is thine, the night also is thine The prophet now descends to the consideration of the divine benefits which are extended in common to all mankind. Having commenced with the special blessings by which God manifested himself to be the Father of his chosen people, he now aptly declares that God exercises his beneficence towards the whole human family. He teaches us, that it is not by chance that the days and nights succeed each other in regular succession, but that this order was established by the appointment of God. The secondary cause of these phenomena is added, being that arrangement by which God has invested the sun with the power and office of illuminating the earth; for after having spoken of the light he adds the sun, as the principal means of communicating it, and, so to speak, the chariot in which it is brought when it comes to show itself to men. 240 As then the incomparable goodness of God towards the human race clearly shines forth in this beautiful arrangement, the prophet justly derives from it an argument for strengthening and establishing his trust in God.

Calvin: Psa 74:17 - -- 17.Thou hast fixed 241 all the boundaries of the earth. What is here stated concerning the boundaries or limits assigned to the earth, and concerni...

17.Thou hast fixed 241 all the boundaries of the earth. What is here stated concerning the boundaries or limits assigned to the earth, and concerning the regular and successive recurrence of summer and winter every year, is to the same effect as the preceding verse. It is doubtful whether the prophet means the uttermost ends of the world, or whether he speaks of the particular boundaries by which countries are separate from each other. Although the latter are often disturbed by the violence of men, whose insatiable cupidity and ambition cannot be restrained by any of the lines of demarcation which exist in the world, but are always endeavoring to break through them; 242 yet God manifests his singular goodness in assigning to each nation its own territory upon which to dwell. I am, however, rather of opinion, that the clause is to be understood of those bounds which cannot be confounded at the will of men, and consider the meaning to be, that God has allotted to men as much space of earth as he has seen to be sufficient for them to dwell upon. Farther, the well regulated successions of summer and winter clearly indicate with what care and benignity God has provided for the necessities of the human family. From this, the prophet justly concludes, that nothing is more improbable than that God should neglect to act the part of a father towards his own flock and household.

Calvin: Psa 74:18 - -- 18.Remember this The prophet having encouraged the hearts of the godly by magnifying the divine power and goodness, now returns to the prosecution of...

18.Remember this The prophet having encouraged the hearts of the godly by magnifying the divine power and goodness, now returns to the prosecution of his prayer. He first complains that the enemies of his people revile God, and yet continue unpunished. When he says, Remember this, the manner of expression is emphatic; and the occasion demanded it, for it is not a crime of small magnitude to treat with contumely the sacred name of God. For the sake of contrast, he states that it was a worthless or foolish people who thus presumed insolently to pour forth their reproaches against God. The Hebrew word נבל , nabal, denotes not only a foolish man, but also a wicked and infamous person. The prophet, therefore, justly describes the despisers of God as people who are vile and worthless.

Calvin: Psa 74:19 - -- 19.Give not to the beast the soul of thy turtle dove The Hebrew word חית , chayath, which we translate beast, signifies sometimes the soul ...

19.Give not to the beast the soul of thy turtle dove The Hebrew word חית , chayath, which we translate beast, signifies sometimes the soul or life, and so some explain it in the second clause of this verse, where it again occurs. But it is here unquestionably to be taken either for a wild beast or for a multitude. Understood in either of these ways, this form of expression will contain a very apposite comparison between the life of a weak and timorous bird, and a powerful army of men, or a cruel beast. The Church is compared to a turtle dove 243 for, although the faithful consisted of a considerable number, yet so far were they from matching their enemies, that, on the contrary, they were exposed to them as a prey. It is next added, Forget not the soul or congregation of thy poor ones The Hebrew word חית , chayath, is again employed, and there is an elegance when, on account of its ambiguity, it is used twice in the same verse, but in different senses. I have preferred translating it congregation, rather than soul, because the passage seems to be a prayer that it would please God to watch over and defend his own small flock from the mighty hosts of their enemies.

Calvin: Psa 74:20 - -- 20.Have regard to thy covenant That God may be the more inclined to show mercy, the prophet brings to his remembrance the Divine covenant; even as th...

20.Have regard to thy covenant That God may be the more inclined to show mercy, the prophet brings to his remembrance the Divine covenant; even as the refuge of the saints, when they have found themselves involved in extreme dangers, has always been to hope for deliverance, because God had promised, in the covenant which he made with them, to be a father to then, From this we learn, that the only firm support on which our prayers can rest is, that God has adopted us to be his people by his free choice. Whence, also, it appears how devilish was the phrensy of that filthy dog Servetus, who was not ashamed to affirm that it is foolish, and gross mockery, to lay before God his own promises when we are engaged in prayer. Farther, the godly Jews again show us how severely they were afflicted, when they declare that violence and oppression were everywhere prevalent; as if all places were the haunts of cut-throats and the dens of robbers. 244 It is said the dark places of the earth; for, whenever God seems to hide his face, the wicked imagine that whatever wickedness they may commit, they will find, wherever they may be, hiding-places by which to cover it all.

Calvin: Psa 74:21 - -- 21.Let not him who is oppressed return with shame The word return, as it has a reference to God, is equivalent to the expression, to go away empty...

21.Let not him who is oppressed return with shame The word return, as it has a reference to God, is equivalent to the expression, to go away empty. The faithful, then, beseech Him that they may not be put to shame by suffering a repulse at his hands. They call themselves afflicted, poor, and needy, as an argument to obtain the Divine favor and mercy. It is, however, to be observed, that they do not speak insincerely, nor give an exaggerated representation of their distresses, but intimate, that by so many calamities they were brought to such a low condition, that there no longer remained for them any quarter in the world from which they could expect any help. By this example, we are taught that when we are reduced to the greatest extremity, there is a remedy always ready for our misery, in calling upon God.

Calvin: Psa 74:22 - -- 22.Arise, O God! plead thy cause The pious Jews again supplicate God to ascend into his judgment-seat. He is then said to arise, when, after having...

22.Arise, O God! plead thy cause The pious Jews again supplicate God to ascend into his judgment-seat. He is then said to arise, when, after having long exercised forbearance, he shows, in very deed, that he has not forgotten his office as judge. To induce him to undertake this cause the more readily, they call upon him to maintain his own right. Lord, as if they had said, since the matter in hand is what peculiarly concerns thyself; it is not time for thee to remain inactive. They declare, at the same time, how this was, in a special sense, the cause of God. It was so, because the foolish people daily cast reproaches upon him. We may here again translate the word נבל , nabal, the worthless people, instead of the foolish people. The wickedness charged against the persons spoken of is aggravated from the circumstance, that, not content with reproaching God on one occasion, they continued their derision and mockery without intermission. For this reason, the faithful conclude by invoking God that he would not forget such heaven-daring conduct in men who not only had the audacity to reproach his majesty, but who fiercely and outrageously poured forth their blasphemies against him. They seemed, it is true, to do this indirectly; but, as they despised God, it is asserted that they rose up against him with reckless and infatuated presumption, after the manner of the Giants of old, and that their haughtiness was carried to the greatest excess.

Defender: Psa 74:13 - -- Psa 74:13-17 is best understood as a commentary on Psa 74:12 : "For God is my king of old, working salvation in the midst of the earth." The psalmist ...

Psa 74:13-17 is best understood as a commentary on Psa 74:12 : "For God is my king of old, working salvation in the midst of the earth." The psalmist vividly recalls the ancient judgment of the great Flood as assurance that He will eventually bring righteousness and peace out of sin and turmoil in this present world.

Defender: Psa 74:13 - -- The mighty "dragons" in the waters, the same as "leviathan" (Job 41:1-34; Isa 27:1) were invulnerable to human weapons (probably great marine reptiles...

The mighty "dragons" in the waters, the same as "leviathan" (Job 41:1-34; Isa 27:1) were invulnerable to human weapons (probably great marine reptiles, like dinosaurs) but were broken and buried in the mighty waters and rushing sediments of the Flood."

Defender: Psa 74:14 - -- The "people" mentioned here may refer to the fish and other marine creatures whose habitats were overwhelmed in the Flood, but were not preserved on t...

The "people" mentioned here may refer to the fish and other marine creatures whose habitats were overwhelmed in the Flood, but were not preserved on the ark (which contained only land animals). The Hebrew word usually refers to human tribes but can also be used for animal flocks (Pro 30:25). The carcasses of the mighty leviathans could have provided sustenance to sustain marine life through the cataclysm."

Defender: Psa 74:15 - -- This must refer to the breaking open of all "the fountains of the great deep" (Gen 7:11) at the beginning of the Flood.

This must refer to the breaking open of all "the fountains of the great deep" (Gen 7:11) at the beginning of the Flood.

Defender: Psa 74:15 - -- The great flood-rivers were gradually dried up, leaving their evidences in the great valleys and alluvia of all the earth's rivers. Almost all present...

The great flood-rivers were gradually dried up, leaving their evidences in the great valleys and alluvia of all the earth's rivers. Almost all present-day rivers give evidence of much greater depths and flows in the past."

Defender: Psa 74:16 - -- Note that the "light" prepared by God is distinct from "the sun." God first called for light energy, then light generators (Gen 1:5, Gen 1:14)."

Note that the "light" prepared by God is distinct from "the sun." God first called for light energy, then light generators (Gen 1:5, Gen 1:14)."

Defender: Psa 74:17 - -- God established both the boundaries of the lands and the nations to occupy those lands and even the inclination of the earth's axis to control their s...

God established both the boundaries of the lands and the nations to occupy those lands and even the inclination of the earth's axis to control their seasons."

TSK: Psa 74:10 - -- Psa 13:1, Psa 13:2, Psa 79:4, Psa 79:5, Psa 89:46, Psa 89:50, Psa 89:51; Dan 12:6; Rev 6:10

TSK: Psa 74:11 - -- withdrawest : Isa 64:12; Lam 2:3 pluck it out : As the outward habit of the easterns has no sleeves, the hands and arms are frequently covered with th...

withdrawest : Isa 64:12; Lam 2:3

pluck it out : As the outward habit of the easterns has no sleeves, the hands and arms are frequently covered with the folds of the robe; and, in order to do anything, the hand must be disentangled, and drawn out. Psa 44:23, Psa 78:65, Psa 78:66

TSK: Psa 74:12 - -- God : Psa 44:4; Exo 19:5, Exo 19:6; Num 23:21, Num 23:22; Isa 33:22 working : Exo 15:2-15; Jdg 4:23, Jdg 4:24; 1Sa 19:5; Isa 63:8; Hab 3:12-14

TSK: Psa 74:13 - -- divide : Heb. break, Psa 66:6, Psa 78:13, Psa 106:8, Psa 106:9, Psa 136:13-18; Exo 14:21; Neh 9:11; Isa 11:15, Isa 11:16 brakest : Exo 14:28; Isa 51:9...

TSK: Psa 74:14 - -- leviathan : Psa 104:25, Psa 104:26; Job 3:8 *marg. Job 41:1-34; Isa 27:1; Rev 20:2 meat : Psa 72:9; Exo 12:35, Exo 12:36, Exo 14:30; Num 14:9

TSK: Psa 74:15 - -- cleave : Psa 105:41; Exo 17:5, Exo 17:6; Num 20:11; Isa 48:21 flood : Jos 3:13-17; 2Ki 2:8, 2Ki 2:14; Isa 11:16, Isa 44:27; Hab 3:9 *marg. Rev 16:12 m...

cleave : Psa 105:41; Exo 17:5, Exo 17:6; Num 20:11; Isa 48:21

flood : Jos 3:13-17; 2Ki 2:8, 2Ki 2:14; Isa 11:16, Isa 44:27; Hab 3:9 *marg. Rev 16:12

mighty rivers : Heb. rivers of strength

TSK: Psa 74:16 - -- The day : Psa 136:7-9; Gen 1:3-5 prepared : Psa 8:3, Psa 19:1-6, Psa 136:7-9; Gen 1:14-18; Mat 5:45

TSK: Psa 74:17 - -- set : Psa 24:1, Psa 24:2; Deu 32:8; Act 17:26 made summer : Heb. made them summer, Gen 8:22; Act 14:17

set : Psa 24:1, Psa 24:2; Deu 32:8; Act 17:26

made summer : Heb. made them summer, Gen 8:22; Act 14:17

TSK: Psa 74:18 - -- Remember : Psa 74:22, Psa 89:50, Psa 89:51, Psa 137:7; Isa 62:6, Isa 62:7 *marg. Rev 16:19 the foolish : Psa 41:1, Psa 39:8, Psa 94:2-8; Deu 32:27; Is...

TSK: Psa 74:19 - -- turtledove : Psa 68:13; Son 2:14, Son 4:1, Son 6:9; Isa 60:8; Mat 10:16 forget : Psa 68:10, Psa 72:2; Zep 3:12; Jam 2:5, Jam 2:6

TSK: Psa 74:20 - -- Have : Psa 89:28, Psa 89:34-36, Psa 89:39, Psa 105:8, Psa 106:45; Gen 17:7, Gen 17:8; Exo 24:6-8; Lev 26:40-45; Deu 9:27; 2Sa 23:5; Jer 33:20-26; Luk ...

TSK: Psa 74:21 - -- O let not : Psa 9:18, Psa 12:5, Psa 102:19-21, Psa 109:22; Isa 45:17 poor : Psa 102:21; Ezr 3:11; Jer 33:11

TSK: Psa 74:22 - -- Arise : Psa 9:19, Psa 9:20, Psa 79:9, Psa 79:10 remember : Psa 74:18, Psa 75:4, Psa 75:5, Psa 89:50, Psa 89:51; Isa 52:5

TSK: Psa 74:23 - -- Forget : Psa 10:11, Psa 10:12, Psa 13:1 tumult : Psa 74:4, Psa 2:1, Psa 2:2; Isa 37:29; Lam 2:16; Rev 17:14 increaseth : Heb. ascendeth, Jon 1:2

Forget : Psa 10:11, Psa 10:12, Psa 13:1

tumult : Psa 74:4, Psa 2:1, Psa 2:2; Isa 37:29; Lam 2:16; Rev 17:14

increaseth : Heb. ascendeth, Jon 1:2

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Psa 74:10 - -- O God, how long shall the adversary reproach?... - How long shall this state of things be allowed to continue? Is there to be no end to it? Are...

O God, how long shall the adversary reproach?... - How long shall this state of things be allowed to continue? Is there to be no end to it? Are these desolations never to be repaired - these ruins never to be rebuilt? It "seemed"so; and hence, this earnest appeal. So to us it often appears as if our trials were never to come to an end. One calamity succeeds another; and there comes no relief. Yet there is relief. Deliverance may come, and soon come, in the present life; or if not in the present life, yet to all those who are the children of God it will soon come by their removal to a world where trial will be forever unknown.

Barnes: Psa 74:11 - -- Why withdrawest thou thy hand, even thy right hand? - Why dost thou not stretch forth thy hand for our deliverance? The hand, especially the ri...

Why withdrawest thou thy hand, even thy right hand? - Why dost thou not stretch forth thy hand for our deliverance? The hand, especially the right hand, is the instrument by which we wield a sword, or strike a blow; and the expression here is equivalent to asking why God did not interfere and save them.

Pluck it out of thy bosom - As if God had hidden his hand beneath the folds of his garment, or had wrapped his robe tightly around him. It "seemed"as if he had done this, as if he looked calmly on, and saw the temple fired, the synagogues burned up, the land laid waste, and the people slaughtered, without an attempt to interpose. How often are we constrained to use similar language - to ask a similar question - when iniquity abounds, when crime prevails, when sinners are perishing, when the church mourns - for God seems to have withdrawn his hand, and to be looking on with unconcern! No one can tell why this is so; and, without irreverence, or a spirit of complaining, but deeply affected with the mystery of the fact, we may ask "Why"this is so.

Barnes: Psa 74:12 - -- For God is my King of old - That is, the king, or ruler of his people. The people had acknowledged him as their king and ruler, and he had show...

For God is my King of old - That is, the king, or ruler of his people. The people had acknowledged him as their king and ruler, and he had showed himself to be such. This is given as a reason why he should now interpose in their behalf. It is an argument, proper always to be urged, drawn from the faithfulness and unchangeableness of God.

Working salvation in the midst of the earth - Salvation for his people. The reference here particularly is to what he had done for his people in delivering them from bondage in Egypt, and conducting them to the promised land, as is stated in the following verses.

Barnes: Psa 74:13 - -- Thou didst divide the sea by thy strength - Margin, as in Hebrew, "break."That is, he had by his power "broken up"the strength of the sea so th...

Thou didst divide the sea by thy strength - Margin, as in Hebrew, "break."That is, he had by his power "broken up"the strength of the sea so that it offered no resistance to their passing through it. The allusion is evidently to the passage through the Red Sea, Exo 14:21.

Thou brakest the heads of the dragons - Margin, "whales."On the meaning of the word used here - תנין tannı̂yn - see the notes at Isa 13:22; notes at Job 30:29. It refers here, undoubtedly, to crocodiles or sea monsters. The language here is used to denote the absolute power of God as manifested over the sea when the people of Israel passed through it. It was as if by slaying all the mighty monsters of the deep that would have resisted their passage, he had made their transit entirely safe.

In the waters - That reside in the waters of the sea.

Barnes: Psa 74:14 - -- Thou brakest the heads of leviathan in pieces - On the meaning of the word "leviathan,"see the notes at Job 41:1. The word is used here as desc...

Thou brakest the heads of leviathan in pieces - On the meaning of the word "leviathan,"see the notes at Job 41:1. The word is used here as descriptive of sea monsters.

And gavest him to be meat - Gavest him for "food."

To the people inhabiting the wilderness - That is, the sea monsters were killed, and, being thrown on shore, were gathered for food. The "inhabitants of the wilderness"or the desert, may refer either to the wild and savage tribes of men that lived on the shores of the sea, and that subsisted mainly on fish, or it may refer to the wild animals of the desert that consumed such sea monsters as they were cast up on the shore. There is no allusion to the Israelites considered as passing through the desert, as if they had fed on these sea monsters. The essential idea is, that these monsters were put to death, or were so removed but of the way as to offer no obstruction to the passage of the Israelites through the sea. It was as if they had been killed. The image is entirely poetic, and there is no necessity for supposing that such a thing literally occurred.

Barnes: Psa 74:15 - -- Thou didst cleave the fountain and the flood - That is, the source of the streams and the streams themselves. The main allusion is probably to ...

Thou didst cleave the fountain and the flood - That is, the source of the streams and the streams themselves. The main allusion is probably to the Jordan, and the idea is, that God had, as it were, divided all the waters, or prevented any obstruction to his people from the river in any respect; as if the waters in the very springs and fountains, and the waters in the channel of the river flowing from those springs and fountains, had been so restrained and divided that there was a safe passage through them. Jos 3:14-17.

Thou driedst up mighty rivers - Margin, "rivers of strength."The Hebrew - איתן 'êythân - (compare Deu 21:4; Amo 5:24; 1Ki 8:2) - means rather perennial, constant, ever-flowing. The allusion is to rivers or streams that flow constantly, or that do not dry up. It was this which made the miracle so apparent. It could not be pretended that they had gone over the bed of a stream which was accustomed to be dry at certain seasons of the year. They passed over rivers that never dried up; and, therefore, it could have been only by miracle. The main allusion is undoubtedly to the passage of the Jordan.

Barnes: Psa 74:16 - -- The day is thine, the night also is thine - Thou hast universal dominion. All things are under thy control. Thou hast power, therefore, to gran...

The day is thine, the night also is thine - Thou hast universal dominion. All things are under thy control. Thou hast power, therefore, to grant what we desire of thee.

Thou hast prepared the light and the sun - He who has made the sun - that greatest and noblest object of creation to the view of man - must have almighty power, and must be able to give what we need.

Barnes: Psa 74:17 - -- Thou hast set all the borders of the earth - Thou hast established all the boundaries of the world; that is, the boundaries of the earth itself...

Thou hast set all the borders of the earth - Thou hast established all the boundaries of the world; that is, the boundaries of the earth itself; or the natural bonndaries of nations and people, made by seas, mountains, rivers, and deserts. The language in regard to the first of these - the earth itself - would be derived from the prevalent mode of speaking, as if the earth were a plane, and had limits - a common mode of expression in the Scriptures, as it is in all ancient writings, and in the common language of men, even of philosophers. In regard to the latter idea, the language would imply that God had fixed, by his own power and will, all the natural boundaries of nations, or that his dominion is over all the earth. There are natural boundaries, or arrangements in nature, which tend to break up the one great family of man into separate nations, and which seem to have been designed for that. Compare Act 17:26. Over all these God presides, and he has his own great plans to accomplish by the arrangement.

Thou hast made summer and winter - literally, as in the margin, "Summer and winter, thou hast made them."That is, he has so made the earth that these various seasons will occur. The fact that there are different seasons of the year, or that the year is divided into seasons, is to be traced to the agency of God. He has so made the world that these changes will take place. Nothing is the result of chance; all things in the arrangements of nature are by his design.

Barnes: Psa 74:18 - -- Remember this, that the enemy hath reproached - Has used opprobrious and abusive words in regard to thee, and to thy people. The idea is, that ...

Remember this, that the enemy hath reproached - Has used opprobrious and abusive words in regard to thee, and to thy people. The idea is, that religion - the true religion - had been reproached by the foe. They had treated that religion as if it were false; they had reproached God as if he were a false God, and as if he were unable to defend his people. Compare Isa 36:4-10, Isa 36:13-20; Isa 37:10-13, Isa 37:23. The prayer here is, that God would remember that these words of reproach were against himself, and that he would regard them as such.

And that the foolish people have blasphemed thy name - Have blasphemed thee - the name often being put for the person himself. The word "foolish"here may refer to them as "wicked"as well as foolish. Wickedness and folly are so connected - they are so commonly combined, that the word may be used to describe the enemies of God in either sense - characterising their conduct as either the one or the other. Compare the notes at Psa 14:1.

Barnes: Psa 74:19 - -- O deliver not the soul of thy turtle-dove - The "life"of thy turtle-dove; or, thy turtle-dove itself. The turtle-dove is a name of endearment f...

O deliver not the soul of thy turtle-dove - The "life"of thy turtle-dove; or, thy turtle-dove itself. The turtle-dove is a name of endearment for one beloved, in Son 2:12, and is thus applied here to the people of Israel. The leading idea in such an application of the word is that of innocence, harmlessness, timidity, gentleness. The thought here is that of a people dear to God, now timid and alarmed. It is the prayer of a people beloved by God that he would not deliver them to their enemies. The prayer may be regarded as one which was used on the occasion referred to in the psalm; or, as a general prayer for the people of God, considered as exposed to ravening enemies.

Unto the multitude of the wicked - The words "of the wicked"are not in the original. The word rendered "multitude"- חיה chayâh - (compare the notes at Psa 68:10) - is the same which in the other member of the sentence is rendered "congregation."It may be applied to a herd of cattle, tame or wild; and then to a "people"- a band, a troop, a host - whether of orderly and civilized, or of wild and savage people. It seems to be used in this double sense in the verse before us; in the first member of the verse, "deliver not thy turtle-dove "to the multitude"- to the wild beast, or to the savage hosts; in the latter, "forget not the congregation of thy poor"- thy flock - thy people - considered as timid or alarmed. Save the timid and trembling flock from beasts of prey.

Barnes: Psa 74:20 - -- Have respect unto the covenant - The covenant which thou hast made with thy people, promising, on thy part, to protect them, and to be their Go...

Have respect unto the covenant - The covenant which thou hast made with thy people, promising, on thy part, to protect them, and to be their God. Compare Deu 4:13; Deu 5:2; Deu 26:18-19. The prayer here is, that God would remember, in the day of national calamity, the solemn promise implied in that covenant, and that he would interpose to save his people. Compare Gen 9:15; Lev 26:42; Eze 16:60; Luk 1:72. This may be regarded as the language which the people did use when these calamities were about to come upon them.

For the dark places of the earth - The allusion here is to the lands from whence came the armies that had invaded Judea, and that threatened desolation. They were dark regions of paganism and idolatry.

Are full of the habitations of cruelty - The abodes of violence, or of violent and cruel men. They had sent forth their armies from such places for purposes of conquest and rapine, and no compassion could be expected from them. Their numbers were so great, and their character was so fierce and warlike, that the people of Israel could find defense and security only in God; and they, therefore, plead with him that he would interpose in their behalf. The prayer in this passage may with propriety be used by the people of God now. It is still true that "the dark parts of the earth are full of the habitations of cruelty;"and in view of this fact, and of the utter hopelessness of the renovation of the world by any human means, or by any progress which society can make of itself, it is proper to seek God’ s interposition. And it is proper in such prayers to him now, as in ancient times, to make the ground of our appeal to him his own gracious covenant; his promises made to his church; his solemn assurances that this state of things shall not always continue, but that the time will arrive when the earth shall be filled with the knowledge of the Lord.

Barnes: Psa 74:21 - -- O let not the oppressed return ashamed - Ashamed by being disappointed, as if they had trusted in that which had no claims to confidence. Compa...

O let not the oppressed return ashamed - Ashamed by being disappointed, as if they had trusted in that which had no claims to confidence. Compare the notes at Job 6:20. The word rendered "oppressed,"means "trodden down, crushed, broken, afflicted."It refers to the people as attacked by foreign armies, or as crushed by those who had gained power over them. The word "return"refers to their coining back from God - from the throne of mercy. Let them not come back from thee with no assurance of thy favor; with no evidence that their prayers have been heard; let them not come back, subject to the reproach that they had made their appeal to thee in vain.

Let the poor and needy praise thy name - The people who are oppressed and helpless. Let them have occasion to praise thee because their prayer has been heard, and because thou dost save them.

Barnes: Psa 74:22 - -- Arise, O God - As if God were now insensible to the wrongs and sufferings of his people; as if he were inattentive and indisposed to come to th...

Arise, O God - As if God were now insensible to the wrongs and sufferings of his people; as if he were inattentive and indisposed to come to their help. See the notes at Psa 3:7.

Plead thine own cause - literally, "Contend thine own contention."That is, Maintain a cause which is really thine own. Thine own honor is concerned; thine own law and authority are assailed; the war is really made on "thee."This is always the true idea in the prayers which are offered for the conversion of sinners, for the establishment of truth, and for the spread of the Gospel in the world. It is not originally the cause of the church; it is the cause of God. Everything in regard to truth, to justice, to humanity, to temperance, to liberty, to religion, is the cause of God. All the assaults made on these, are assaults made on God.

Remember how the foolish man reproacheth thee daily - Constantly. He does not cease. The word "foolish"refers to the wicked. The idea is, that the wicked constantly reproach God - either by their language or their conduct; and this is a reason for calling on him to interpose. No better reason for asking his interposition can be given, than that such conduct is a real reproach to God, and reflects on his honor in the world.

Barnes: Psa 74:23 - -- Forget not the voice of thine enemies - The voice of thine enemies clamoring for the destruction of thy people. Compare Psa 137:7. The prayer i...

Forget not the voice of thine enemies - The voice of thine enemies clamoring for the destruction of thy people. Compare Psa 137:7. The prayer is, that God would bring deserved chastisement upon them for their purposes and their aims against his people. It is not necessarily a prayer for vengeance; it is a prayer for just retribution.

The tumult of those that rise up against thee - Of those that make war on thee, and on thy people. The word ""tumult"here means clamor or shout - as the shout of battle. The reference is to the movement of a host pressing on to conquest, encouraging and exciting each other, and endeavoring to intimidate their enemies by the loud clamor of the war-cry. It is a description of what had occurred among the main events referred to in the psalm, when the enemy came in to lay waste the capital, and to spread desolation throughout the land.

Increaseth continually - Margin, as in Hebrew, "Ascendeth."That is, it seems to go up; it is the swelling clamor of a great multitude of warriors intent on conquest. A cry or clamor thus seems to swell or rise on the air, and (as it were) to ascend to God. The prayer here is, that God would regard that cry, not in the sense that he would grant them the fulfillment of their wishes, but in the sense that he would recompense them as they deserved. It is in this sense that the clamors of the wicked ascend to heaven - in this sense that God will regard them, as if they were a prayer for just retribution.

Poole: Psa 74:10 - -- Reproach understand here thy name, which is expressed in the next clause of the verse, by saying that thou art either unkind to thy people, or unfait...

Reproach understand here thy name, which is expressed in the next clause of the verse, by saying that thou art either unkind to thy people, or unfaithful in thy covenant, or unable to deliver thine out of their miseries.

Poole: Psa 74:11 - -- Why withdrawest thou thy hand? why dost thou suspend or forbear the exercise of that power, which thou hast so oft put forth on the behalf of thy peo...

Why withdrawest thou thy hand? why dost thou suspend or forbear the exercise of that power, which thou hast so oft put forth on the behalf of thy people?

Pluck it out of thy bosom in which thou now seemest to hide it, as idle persons use to do, Pro 19:24 26:15 . Bestir thyself on the behalf of thy people.

Poole: Psa 74:12 - -- My King in a singular manner: it belongs therefore to thine office to protect and save me. In the midst of the earth in the view of the world; so s...

My King in a singular manner: it belongs therefore to thine office to protect and save me.

In the midst of the earth in the view of the world; so saving thy people so eminently and gloriously, that all people round about them observed and admired it.

Poole: Psa 74:13 - -- The dragons or, the crocodiles . He means Pharaoh and all his mighty men, who were like these beasts in strength and cruelty. The waters to wit, o...

The dragons or, the crocodiles . He means Pharaoh and all his mighty men, who were like these beasts in strength and cruelty.

The waters to wit, of the sea, where they were drowned.

Poole: Psa 74:14 - -- The heads i.e. the head; called heads , partly for the greatness of this beast, as that great monster is called beasts , Job 40:20 , for the same r...

The heads i.e. the head; called heads , partly for the greatness of this beast, as that great monster is called beasts , Job 40:20 , for the same reason; and partly for the several heads or princes who were and acted under his influence.

Leviathan Pharaoh.

To the people inhabiting the wilderness Heb. to the people in or of the desert ; either,

1. To the Israelites then in the wilderness, to whom the destruction of Pharaoh and his host was meat , i.e. matter of great support and refreshment. Or,

2. To those savage people to whom they were meat , because they lived upon fishes, and might eat those very fishes which had devoured Pharaoh’ s host in the bottom of the sea. Or rather,

3. To those ravenous birds and beasts of the desert, which after their manner fed and feasted themselves upon the carcasses of the Egyptians, who were cast upon the sea-shore, Exo 14:30 , which were properly and immediately meat unto them. And when words can be taken properly, we ought to prefer that before the metaphorical sense, as is agreed by interpreters. And this was a very suitable punishment for this proud and insolent people, that they who were so haughty, that they would not own nor submit to the Lord himself, Exo 5:2 , should be devoured by these contemptible creatures, which was a great reproach, 1Sa 17:44,46 , and oft threatened by God as a grievous curse, as Deu 28:26 Jer 7:33 16:4 , &c. Neither let any think it strange that the name of

people is given to these creatures, for it is given to conies, grasshoppers, pismires, &c., both in Scripture, as Pro 30:25,26 Joe 1:6 , and in Homer, and other ancient profane writers. Nay, here is an elegancy in the expression; for these creatures are significantly called the people of the wilderness, because they are the only people that inhabited it, this being a wilderness wherein was no man , as is said, Job 38:26 .

Poole: Psa 74:15 - -- Thou didst cleave the fountain and the flood i.e. thou didst by cleaving the rock make a fountain in it, and a flood or stream to flow from it, for t...

Thou didst cleave the fountain and the flood i.e. 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. The phrase is like that Isa 47:2 , grind meal , i.e. by grinding the corn make meal.

Mighty rivers either,

1. Jordan, which was then more mighty than ordinarily, as having overflowed all his banks, and therefore may be called rivers , because it was now equivalent to two or three such rivers; or it is only an ensilage of the plural number for the singular, whereof I have given many instances formerly. Or rather,

2. Both Jordan and the Red Sea; for the sea itself, yea, a greater sea than that, is called a river, Jon 2:3 ; for the Hebrew word is the same which is here used, though there it be rendered floods. And the same title is expressly given to the sea by Homer and other ancient writers. To these the ancient Chaldee interpreter addeth the rivers of Amen and Jabbok, in or about which some extraordinary work was wrought, yea, something which was like God’ s work at the Red Sea, as may seem by the conjunction of these together, Num 21:14 .

Poole: Psa 74:16 - -- It is not strange nor incredible that thou hast done these great and wonderful works, for thou hast made the heavenly bodies, and the vicissitudes o...

It is not strange nor incredible that thou hast done these great and wonderful works, for thou hast made the heavenly bodies, and the vicissitudes of day and night, depending upon them, which is a far greater work.

Prepared or rather, established , as this word oft signifies; not only created, but settled in a constant and orderly course.

The light either,

1. That primitive light, Gen 1:3 , which afterwards was condensed and gathered into the sun. Or rather,

2. The moon, as divers, both ancient and modern, interpreters understand it, called here the light , to wit, the lesser luminary or light; wherein there is either a synecdoche of the general for the particular, or an ellipsis of the adjective, both which figures are very usual. And that the lesser light is here meant, may seem probable, both because it is opposed to the greater light, the sun here following; and because this is to rule the night, as the sun is to rule the day, Gen 1:16 ; and so this clause answereth to and explains the former, wherein both day and night are mentioned.

Poole: Psa 74:17 - -- Thou hast set all the borders of the earth: thou hast fixed the bounds, both of the habitable world in general; so as the seas, though they do encomp...

Thou hast set all the borders of the earth: thou hast fixed the bounds, both of the habitable world in general; so as the seas, though they do encompass and assault them, yet they shall never be able to remove them; and of all the countries and people upon earth, whom thou hast confined to such bounds as thou seest fit. And as this clause of the verse showeth God’ s power and government over all places, so the next clause 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.

Poole: Psa 74:18 - -- 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...

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 God, the Creator and sovereign Lord of the whole world, whom they ought always to reverence and adore.

The foolish people 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.

Poole: Psa 74:19 - -- The soul i.e. the life. Thou hast delivered thy people into captivity; do not deliver them to death, nor suffer their enemies utterly to destroy them...

The soul i.e. the life. Thou hast delivered thy people into captivity; do not deliver them to death, nor suffer their enemies utterly to destroy them.

Of thy turtle-dove i.e. of thy church, which is fitly compared to a turtle-dove, because of the great resemblance of their dispositions and conditions, being simple, and harmless, and meek, and faithful, and mournful, and exposed to manifold injuries, and unable to defend itself from them.

Unto the multitude of the wicked or, to the wild beast, as this word oft signifies; or, to the troop , to wit, of her enemies.

Poole: Psa 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...

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 captive into strange lands and did there humble themselves, and pray and turn unto thee, thou wouldst mercifully restore them, 1Ki 8:46-50 : do thou therefore now restore us to that pleasant and lightsome land which thou hast given to us.

The dark places of the earth i.e. this dark and dismal land in which we live, wherein there is nothing but ignorance and confusion, and all the works of darkness; of which the psalmist speaks in general terms, out of a principle of prudence, because the particular designation of the place was unnecessary, and might have been of ill consequence.

Are full of the habitations of cruelty here is nothing but injustice, and oppression, and tyranny, under which we groan in all the parts of this great empire, where we have our abode.

Poole: Psa 74:21 - -- Return ashamed from thee, and from the throne of thy grace, to which they make their resort in this their distressed condition.

Return ashamed from thee, and from the throne of thy grace, to which they make their resort in this their distressed condition.

Poole: Psa 74:22 - -- Plead thine own cause maintain thy honour, and worship, and service against those that reproach thee, as it here follows, and was noted before, Psa 7...

Plead thine own cause maintain thy honour, and worship, and service against those that reproach thee, as it here follows, and was noted before, Psa 74:10,18 . As we are reviled and persecuted for thy sake, so thou art injured in all our wrongs.

Poole: Psa 74:23 - -- The voice their insulting and reproachful expressions against time, as well as against us. The tumult i.e. the tumultuous noise of the loud clamour...

The voice their insulting and reproachful expressions against time, as well as against us.

The tumult i.e. the tumultuous noise of the loud clamours.

Increaseth Heb. ascendeth , to wit, into heaven, being either directed thither by them; their mouth being set against heaven, as theirs was, Psa 73:9 ; or at least being perceived there by God, whose ears were pierced with the loud cry of their sins. See Gen 4:10 18:20 . Or ascending may be here put for increasing, as it is Isa 55:13 Jer 46:7 . So the sense is, 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.

Haydock: Psa 74:10 - -- Declare. Septuagint, "rejoice;" as St. Augustine, &c., read, contrary to the Hebrew. (Calmet) --- Jacob. Christ did all for the glory of his Fat...

Declare. Septuagint, "rejoice;" as St. Augustine, &c., read, contrary to the Hebrew. (Calmet) ---

Jacob. Christ did all for the glory of his Father. (Berthier)

Haydock: Psa 74:11 - -- Just. Zorobabel, (Theodoret) the figure of the Messias. The Jews were shortly after set at liberty by Cyrus, who was the scourge of their oppressor...

Just. Zorobabel, (Theodoret) the figure of the Messias. The Jews were shortly after set at liberty by Cyrus, who was the scourge of their oppressors. (Calmet) ---

The virtuous, who use well their free-will, are thus rewarded. (Worthington)

Gill: Psa 74:10 - -- O God, how long shall the adversary reproach?.... The name of God, as in the next clause, the divine Persons and perfections, the purposes and provide...

O God, how long shall the adversary reproach?.... The name of God, as in the next clause, the divine Persons and perfections, the purposes and providence of God, his people, ways, worship, truths, and ordinances:

shall the enemy blaspheme thy name for ever? The "adversary" and "enemy" being in the singular number, may intend some particular one, as antichrist; who is emphatically and eminently "the enemy" of God, he opposing himself to, and exalting himself above, all that is called God; and the adversary of Christ, as his name shows; not only setting himself in his room and stead, but undermining him in all his offices; changing his laws as a King, dishonouring his sacrifice and intercession as a priest, and doing injury to his word and ordinances as a Prophet; and who has a mouth speaking blasphemies against God, his name, and tabernacle, heaven, and they that dwell therein, angels and saints, Rev 13:5. He reproaches and blasphemes God himself, by showing himself to be God, by suffering himself to be so called, and to be worshipped as if he was God; by taking infallibility to himself, and setting up image worship, and obliging persons to it: he reproaches and blasphemes the Son of God, in whom the name of God is, by pretending to be his vicar on earth, and head of the church; to transubstantiate the bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ; and to offer him up again in the blasphemous service of the mass: he reproaches and blasphemes his Gospel, which is his name, Act 9:15, by introducing doctrines contrary to it, as the doctrines of merit, of works of supererogation, and justification by works; and the Scriptures, which bear the name and authority of God, by making them a nose of wax, taking upon himself to be the infallible interpreter of Scripture, and sole judge of controversies; by setting up his own unwritten traditions upon an equality with them, and forbidding the use of them to the people in their mother tongue: and he reproaches and blasphemes his name and authority by assuming it to himself in civil things, deposing and setting up kings at his pleasure; in religious affairs, dispensing with the laws of God, and teaching for doctrines the commandments of men; yea, in matters of salvation, giving out pardons and indulgences, pretending to open and shut heaven at pleasure. Moreover, these terms may be understood of many enemies and adversaries, even of all the enemies of the grace of God, and person of Christ; such reproach and blaspheme the name of God the Father; by denying some of his perfections, as his sovereignty, omniscience, and punitive justice, and by charging his decrees with injustice, insincerity, and cruelty; they reproach and blaspheme the name of Christ, by denying his deity, eternal sonship, and distinct personality, and by speaking contemptuously of his righteousness, blood, and sacrifice; and they do despight unto the Spirit of grace, and speak evil of his person, and the operations of his grace on the souls of men; and such a day of rebuke and blasphemy is the present one: and these things give good men that observe them a great concern for the name of God, who are ready to fear there will be no end to these reproaches and blasphemies; but there will, the time is coming when the name of the Lord will be excellent in all the earth, and the Lord alone shall be exalted; but it is not known how long it will be to it.

Gill: Psa 74:11 - -- Why withdrawest thou thy hand, even that right hand?.... By which is meant the power of God; by which he made the heavens and the earth, and all thing...

Why withdrawest thou thy hand, even that right hand?.... By which is meant the power of God; by which he made the heavens and the earth, and all things therein, and supports them in their beings; by which the work of his grace is wrought in the hearts of his people, and they are upheld; and by which he conquers their enemies, and saves them: this may be said to be withdrawn when he denies his people the help and succour they have had from him; when he seems to have forsaken the work of his hands; when there is not that success in the ministry of the word there formerly was, his arm being not revealed and made bare; and when the enemies of religion prosper and get ground; and when the Lord seems to be altogether inactive and unconcerned, like a man that folds up his arms under his arm holes, or hides his hands in his bosom, see Psa 44:23 wherefore it follows:

pluck it out of thy bosom; as he will one day, and strike with a home blow, antichrist and his followers, and destroy them with his rod of iron, with which he will break them in shivers as a potter's vessel; and all his enemies shall feel the lighting down of his arm with the indignation of his anger; and then this request will be fulfilled: the word used signifies to "consume" a; and Kimchi interprets it, consume the enemy out of thy bosom, which is the house of the sanctuary; his secret place, as the bosom is to man; but both senses of the word maybe retained, and the meaning be, pluck it out of thy bosom to consume them b: also it signifies to restrain c; and the sense may be, as the above writer observes, restrain it, that it may not return to thy bosom, till thou hast executed judgment on the wicked.

Gill: Psa 74:12 - -- For God is my King of old,.... Or "but God", or "verily God", &c. d; for these words contain the church's consolation under all the above melancholy c...

For God is my King of old,.... Or "but God", or "verily God", &c. d; for these words contain the church's consolation under all the above melancholy circumstances, taken from what God was, and had been to her, even Christ, who is God over all; he was her King by the constitution and designation of his Father, and so he had been of old, even from everlasting; for so early was he set up as King; and he had in all ages been exercising his kingly office for the good of his church, and continued to do so; and this was her comfort, and is the comfort of saints in the worst of times, that Zion's King reigneth, see Psa 46:1.

working salvation in the midst of the earth; it is "salvations" e in the plural number, and means both spiritual and eternal salvation, which the Lord has wrought out; and is continually applying to his people; and temporal salvation, which the Lord has been and is daily working out; he continually protecting his people, and saving them from their enemies, and delivering them out of their afflictions and temptations; and which the church considers and improves into an argument to encourage her faith, and expect the time when her walls would be salvation, and her gates praise; and she should have reason to say, now is come salvation and strength, and the kingdom of our God and the power of his Christ; and give him all the glory of it; see Isa 60:18, which salvation, as it has been, so will be wrought

in the midst of the earth; meaning not in the midst of the land of Judea, or in Judea, the middle of the world, but openly and publicly in all the earth; though Cyril of Jerusalem says f Golgotha is the midst of the earth, where Christ suffered and wrought out salvation; and that it is here referred to.

Gill: Psa 74:13 - -- Thou didst divide the sea by thy strength,.... This and the following instances from hence to Psa 74:18 are proofs of God's working salvation in the m...

Thou didst divide the sea by thy strength,.... This and the following instances from hence to Psa 74:18 are proofs of God's working salvation in the midst of the earth; some of them seem peculiar to the people of Israel, and others are benefits common to mankind in general; which the church makes use of to encourage her faith and hope, in expectation of salvation, and deliverance out of her present distressed and melancholy circumstances. This seems to refer to the Lord's dividing of the Red sea into parts by a strong east wind, while Moses lifted up his rod and stretched out his hand as he was ordered, as a token of the divine power, and so the children of Israel passed through it as on dry land, Exo 14:21, and he that did this can make way for his redeemed ones to return to Zion with everlasting joy, Isa 51:10. Some render the words, "thou hast broken the sea by thy strength" g; subdued and conquered it, and so hast the dominion over it, rulest the raging of it, settest bounds to it, and hast ordered its proud waves to go so far and no farther; and thus the Arabic version, "thou hast made it to stand"; and the Septuagint and Vulgate Latin versions, "thou hast confirmed it": but our version is best, which refers it to the work of God at the Red sea, and with which the Targum agrees; and Aben Ezra observes, that some refer it to the dividing of the Red sea:

thou breakest the heads of the dragons in the waters: or great whales, as the word is rendered in Gen 1:21, by which are meant Pharaoh and his generals, his captains and chief men, who were destroyed in the waters of the Red sea; comparable to dragons for their strength, for their cruelty to the children of Israel, and for their wrath and malice against them; and so, for the same reason, another Pharaoh, king of Egypt, in later times, is called the great dragon, that lies in the midst of his rivers, Eze 29:3 and the king of Babylon or of Egypt, Isa 27:1. So the Targum paraphrases it:

"thou hast broken the heads of dragons, and hast suffocated the Egyptians in the sea.''

Rome Pagan is compared to a great red dragon with seven heads and ten horns, which have been broken and destroyed, Rev 12:3, and Rome Papal has the power, seat, and great authority of the dragon; and though the Romish antichrist has two horns like a lamb, he speaks as a dragon, who also has seven heads and ten horns, and which ere long will be broke in pieces, see Rev 13:1, in the faith of which the church might be strengthened, by considering what God had done to the heads of the dragon in the Red sea; to which may be added that Satan is called a dragon, Psa 91:13, whose head was bruised, and his principalities and powers spoiled, by Christ at his death, and will be utterly destroyed at his second coming.

Gill: Psa 74:14 - -- Thou breakest the heads of leviathan in pieces,.... A large fish, generally thought to be the whale, by some the crocodile, described in Job 41:1 to w...

Thou breakest the heads of leviathan in pieces,.... A large fish, generally thought to be the whale, by some the crocodile, described in Job 41:1 to which the king of Egypt or Babylon is compared, Isa 27:1 and so the Romish antichrist in one of his characters is represented as a sea beast with many heads, which will all be broken in pieces in due time, Rev 13:1, as here is one "leviathan" with heads in the plural number. Aben Ezra thinks the word כל is wanting, and may be supplied thus, "thou hast broken the heads of every leviathan"; it may be interpreted as before of Pharaoh and his chief men; so the Targum,

"thou hast broken the heads of the mighty men of Pharaoh:''

and gavest him to be meat to the people inhabiting the wilderness; either to the wild beasts, called "tziim", the word here used, Isa 13:21 and may be called a people, as the ants and coneys are, Pro 30:25, to whom the dead bodies of Pharaoh and his host, drowned in the Red sea, were given for food, when they were cast upon the shore, where the Israelites saw them dead, Exo 14:28, or to the "Ichthyophagy", a sort of people that dwelt by the Red sea, and lived on fishes; and so the Egyptians became their food, they living upon the fish which devoured their bodies, at least some of them: the Septuagint, Vulgate Latin, Ethiopic, and Arabic versions, render it, "to the people", the Ethiopians; who, it seems, living upon the borders of Egypt, took this opportunity, when Pharaoh and his host were drowned, and seized upon their country; but others refer it to the people of Israel themselves, as the Targum,

"thou hast given them for destruction to the people of the house of Israel, and their bodies to the dragons;''

and so Jarchi,

"thou hast given his mammon or riches to the people of Israel, to feed their companies and armies;''

and Kimchi interprets it of the spoil of the sea which the Israelites took from them; and they may be truly called the people inhabiting the wilderness, since they were in one forty years; so the Romish "leviathan", or antichristian whore, will be given to the Christian kings, who will hate her, eat her flesh, and burn her with fire; and to the Christian church, which now is in the wilderness, where it is nourished for a time and times, and half a time.

Gill: Psa 74:15 - -- Thou didst cleave the fountain and the flood,.... That is, the rocks at Horeb and at Kadesh, from whence water flowed as out of a fountain, and became...

Thou didst cleave the fountain and the flood,.... That is, the rocks at Horeb and at Kadesh, from whence water flowed as out of a fountain, and became a flood, whereby the people of Israel were supplied with water in the wilderness, and also their beasts; and from this instance it may be concluded that God will not leave his people, nor suffer them to want, but will supply all their need while they are in the wilderness, and will open fountains and rivers for them, Isa 41:17 he himself is a fountain of living water; Christ is the fountain of gardens, and the Spirit and his grace a well of living water springing up unto everlasting life:

thou driedst up mighty rivers; the river of Jordan, called "mighty", as Kimchi says, because by its strength it overflowed all its banks and "rivers", and because other rivers flowed into it; this was dried up, or way was made through it, as on dry land, for the people of Israel to pass into Canaan, Jos 3:14, the Targum is,

"thou hast dried up the fords and brooks of Hermon, and the fords of Jabbok and Jordan;''

see Num 21:14, and the Lord, that did this, is able to dry up, and will dry up, the river Euphrates, as is foretold, Rev 16:12, that is, destroy the Turkish empire, and make way for the spread of the Gospel in the eastern parts of the world; to which reference is had in Isa 11:15.

Gill: Psa 74:16 - -- The day is thine, and the night also is thine,.... He made the one and the other, and divided the one from the other; and can make them longer or shor...

The day is thine, and the night also is thine,.... He made the one and the other, and divided the one from the other; and can make them longer or shorter, clear or cloudy, as he pleases: and the day of prosperity and night of adversity are at his disposal; all the times of his people and of his church are in his hands; sometimes it is a night of darkness, deadness, sleepiness, and security, as it now is; ere long there will be no more night, but bright day; the light of the moon will be as the light of the sun, and the light of the sun will be seven fold as the light of seven days; and this is to be expected from him whose is the day and the night also, Rev 21:25. Jarchi interprets the day, of the redemption of Israel; and the night, of distresses and afflictions:

thou hast prepared the light and the sun; first the light, and then the sun; for the light was before the sun; or the luminary, even the sun. Aben Ezra interprets the "light" of the moon, and so the Targum; and Kimchi, both of the moon and of the stars; Jarchi takes the light figuratively to be meant of the light of the law; but it is much better to understand it of the light of the Gospel, which God has prepared, and will send forth more largely in the latter day, whereby the whole earth shall be lightened; and when Christ the "sun" of righteousness will arise with healing in his wings, and who gives both the light of grace and glory to his people.

Gill: Psa 74:17 - -- Thou hast set all the borders of the earth,.... Of the whole world, and each of the nations, as of the land of Canaan, so of others, Deu 32:8, and eve...

Thou hast set all the borders of the earth,.... Of the whole world, and each of the nations, as of the land of Canaan, so of others, Deu 32:8, and even has fixed and settled the bounds of every man's habitation, Act 17:26,

thou hast made summer and winter; see Gen 8:22, which, taken literally, are great benefits to the world; and, figuratively understood, may represent the two dispensations of the law and Gospel; see Son 2:11, and the different frames of God's people when under temptations, and clouds, and darkness, and when they enjoy peace and comfort; and the different state of the church, when affected with affliction, persecution, false doctrine, deadness, and formality, which is now greatly the case; but there is a summer coming, when it will be otherwise; see Luk 21:30.

Gill: Psa 74:18 - -- Remember this, that the enemy hath reproached, O Lord,.... Or "hath reproached the Lord", as the Septuagint version and others render it, and very rig...

Remember this, that the enemy hath reproached, O Lord,.... Or "hath reproached the Lord", as the Septuagint version and others render it, and very rightly; though not so well the former part of the clause, which it renders, or rather paraphrases, thus: "remember this thy creation", or "creature"; as if it referred to what goes before, as day and night, light and sun, the borders of the earth, summer and winter; whereas it is to be connected with what follows, the reproach of the Lord by the enemy; and it is a prayer of the church, that God would remember the enemy and his reproaches, which seemed to be forgotten, and inflict deserved punishments on him, which will be done in due time, Rev 16:19, and that

the foolish people have blasphemed thy name; the "foolish people" are not such as want common sense, or are idiots; the blasphemers of God and Christ, and the blessed Spirit, are generally the wise and prudent of this world, from whom the things of the Gospel are hidden; but wicked and profane men: scoffers at religion, and blasphemers of Christ, his truths and ordinances, are commonly such who walk after their own ungodly lusts, who, though wise to do evil, are foolish in matters of religion: perhaps the Gentiles, which know not God, are here meant, and are so called, Deu 32:21, and it is observable, that the Papists bear the name of Gentiles in Rev 11:2, and may be the foolish people here chiefly designed, who worship images of gold, silver, brass, and wood, and are notorious for their blasphemies; See Gill on Psa 74:10.

Gill: Psa 74:19 - -- O deliver not the soul of thy turtledove,.... By which is meant the church, see Son 2:14, which is comparable to this creature for its cleanness and p...

O deliver not the soul of thy turtledove,.... By which is meant the church, see Son 2:14, which is comparable to this creature for its cleanness and purity, for its amiableness and beauty, for its harmlessness and innocence, for its modesty and meekness, for its affection and chastity to its mate, for its mournful and bemoaning voice for the loss of it, for its being a timorous and fearful creature, a weak one, and exposed to the prey of others; all which is true of the church, and may be applied to it: the Targum is,

"do not deliver the souls of them that teach thy law;''

the word having some affinity with "torah", the law; but Jarchi says, that Jonathan, in his Targum (which is not now extant) interprets it a turtle; the Syriac version, by the change of a letter, renders it, "the soul that confesseth thee": and the Arabic version, by a like change, and the addition of a letter, "the soul that knows thee"; all which, indeed, is applicable to the church of God; but our version expresses the true sense of the word, with which agree Jarchi, Kimchi, Ben Melech, and others: and it is a prayer of the church for herself; that the life of her members, their corporeal life (for not the soul, the better part, and its eternal concerns, are meant, which are safe in Christ's hands), might not be delivered

unto the multitude of the wicked, or "to the beast" g; to persecutors comparable to lions and bears, and particularly the Romish antichrist, often called the beast in Rev 11:8, do not deliver

"to the people, who are like to the beasts of the field, the souls of, &c.:''

forget not the congregation of thy poor for ever; the church of God is a congregation of men gathered out of the world by effectual grace, and consists chiefly of such who are literally poor, and all of them are spiritually so, and are sensible of it; for the most part they are a poor and "afflicted" h people, as the word may be also rendered, which the church is made up of; and may seem by themselves and others to be forgotten of God, when under divine desertions, or under afflictions, and immediate help is not given; but they are not forgotten, and still less for ever; see Isa 49:14.

Gill: Psa 74:20 - -- Have respect unto the covenant,.... The Targum adds, "which thou hast made with our fathers;'' meaning not the covenant of works, which being br...

Have respect unto the covenant,.... The Targum adds,

"which thou hast made with our fathers;''

meaning not the covenant of works, which being broken, no good thing was to be expected from it, not liberty, life, nor eternal salvation, but all the reverse; but the covenant of grace, made with Christ before the world was, and made manifest to Adam, to Noah, to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, to David, and others: this God has a respect unto, and does look unto it; he looks to the surety and Mediator of it, which is Christ, for the fulfilment of all conditions in it; to the promises of it, that they may be made good; to the blessings of it, that they be bestowed upon the persons to whom they belong; to the blood of it, for the delivering of the church's prisoners, and the salvation of them from wrath to come; and to the persons interested in it, that they be all called and brought safe to glory; and particularly to the things in it, respecting the glory of the church in the latter day, and increase of its members, and of its light, which seem chiefly designed here; and therefore it follows:

for the dark places of the earth are full of the habitations of cruelty; many places of the earth are in gross darkness as to the knowledge of spiritual and divine things; even all those places which are inhabited by Pagans, Mahometans, and Papists, which make a great part of the globe; and in these dark places cruelty reigns, and especially in the antichristian states; wherefore the church pleads the covenant of God and his promises, that he would send forth his light and his truth, and cover the earth with the knowledge of the Lord, which is now covered with gross darkness, and under the tyranny and oppression of the man of sin.

Gill: Psa 74:21 - -- O let not the oppressed return ashamed,.... From the throne of grace, not having an answer of their prayer, but still continuing under the oppressions...

O let not the oppressed return ashamed,.... From the throne of grace, not having an answer of their prayer, but still continuing under the oppressions of their enemies:

let the poor and needy praise thy name; let them have occasion for it, by the destruction of their enemies, and their deliverance from them, as they will have ere long; see Rev 19:1.

Gill: Psa 74:22 - -- Arise, O God, plead thine own cause,.... The church's cause being the cause of God; and therefore she desires that he would arise and exert himself, a...

Arise, O God, plead thine own cause,.... The church's cause being the cause of God; and therefore she desires that he would arise and exert himself, and take vengeance on his and her enemies: this is an interesting argument, and a forcible one:

remember how the foolish man reproacheth thee daily; this being so frequently repeated, as in Psa 74:10, shows how much the name and glory of God lay near her heart; the Targum is,

"remember the reproach of thy people by a foolish king all the day;''

perhaps the man of sin is meant, the king of the locusts, and angel of the bottomless pit.

Gill: Psa 74:23 - -- Forget not the voice of thine enemies,.... Their roaring in the midst of the sanctuary and the congregation, Psa 74:4, their reproaching and blasphemi...

Forget not the voice of thine enemies,.... Their roaring in the midst of the sanctuary and the congregation, Psa 74:4, their reproaching and blaspheming voice, Psa 74:10,

the tumult of those that rise up against thee increaseth continually, or "ascendeth" i; goes up to God, and is taken notice of by him; the cry of their sins, like that of Sodom and Gomorrah, and of the city of Nineveh, Gen 18:20, was continually going up to God; wherefore it might be hoped and expected that vengeance in a little time would come down; see Rev 18:5, the Septuagint, and the versions that follow that, render it, "the pride of those", &c. all these petitions are prayers of faith, and are, or will be, heard and answered; upon which will follow thanksgivings, with which the next psalm begins.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Psa 74:11 Heb “Why do you draw back your hand, even your right hand? From the midst of your chest, destroy!” The psalmist pictures God as having pla...

NET Notes: Psa 74:12 Heb “in the midst of the earth.”

NET Notes: Psa 74:13 The Hebrew text has the plural form, “sea monsters” (cf. NRSV “dragons”), but it is likely that an original enclitic mem has b...

NET Notes: Psa 74:14 You fed him to the people. This pictures the fragments of Leviathan’s dead corpse washing up on shore and being devoured by those who find them....

NET Notes: Psa 74:15 Perpetually flowing rivers are rivers that contain water year round, unlike the seasonal streams that flow only during the rainy season. Perhaps the p...

NET Notes: Psa 74:16 Heb “you established [the] light and [the] sun.”

NET Notes: Psa 74:17 Heb “summer and winter, you, you formed them.”

NET Notes: Psa 74:18 Or “[how] the enemy insults the Lord.”

NET Notes: Psa 74:19 Heb “do not forget forever.”

NET Notes: Psa 74:20 Heb “for the dark places of the earth are full of dwelling places of violence.” The “dark regions” are probably the lands wher...

NET Notes: Psa 74:21 Let the oppressed and poor praise your name! The statement is metonymic. The point is this: May the oppressed be delivered from their enemies! Then th...

NET Notes: Psa 74:22 Heb “remember your reproach from a fool all the day.”

NET Notes: Psa 74:23 Heb “the roar of those who rise up against you, which ascends continually.”

Geneva Bible: Psa 74:11 Why withdrawest thou thy hand, even thy right hand? ( g ) pluck [it] out of thy bosom. ( g ) They join their deliverance with God's glory and power, ...

Geneva Bible: Psa 74:12 For God [is] my King of old, working salvation ( h ) in the midst of the earth. ( h ) Meaning in the sight of all the world.

Geneva Bible: Psa 74:13 Thou didst divide the sea by thy strength: thou brakest the heads of the ( i ) dragons in the waters. ( i ) That is, Pharaoh's army.

Geneva Bible: Psa 74:14 Thou brakest the heads of ( k ) leviathan in pieces, [and] gavest him [to be] ( l ) meat to the people inhabiting the wilderness. ( k ) Which was a g...

Geneva Bible: Psa 74:16 The ( m ) day [is] thine, the night also [is] thine: thou hast prepared the light and the sun. ( m ) Seeing that God by his providence governs and di...

Geneva Bible: Psa 74:19 O deliver not the soul of thy ( n ) turtledove unto the multitude [of the wicked]: forget not the congregation of thy poor for ever. ( n ) He means t...

Geneva Bible: Psa 74:20 Have respect unto the covenant: for ( o ) the dark places of the earth are full of the habitations of cruelty. ( o ) That is, all places where your w...

Geneva Bible: Psa 74:22 Arise, O God, plead thine ( p ) own cause: remember how the foolish man reproacheth thee daily. ( p ) He shows that God cannot permit his Church to b...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Psa 74:1-23 - --1 The prophet complains of the desolation of the sanctuary.10 He moves God to help in consideration of his power;18 of his reproachful enemies, of his...

MHCC: Psa 74:1-11 - --This psalm appears to describe the destruction of Jerusalem and the temple by the Chaldeans. The deplorable case of the people of God, at the time, is...

MHCC: Psa 74:12-17 - --The church silences her own complaints. What God had done for his people, as their King of old, encouraged them to depend on him. It was the Lord's do...

MHCC: Psa 74:18-23 - --The psalmist begs that God would appear for the church against their enemies. The folly of such as revile his gospel and his servants will be plain to...

Matthew Henry: Psa 74:1-11 - -- This psalm is entitled Maschil - a psalm to give instruction, for it was penned in a day of affliction, which is intended for instruction; and t...

Matthew Henry: Psa 74:12-17 - -- The lamenting church fastens upon something here which she calls to mind, and therefore hath she hope (as Lam 3:21), with which she encourages her...

Matthew Henry: Psa 74:18-23 - -- The psalmist here, in the name of the church, most earnestly begs that God would appear fro them against their enemies, and put an end to their pres...

Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 74:9-11 - -- The worst thing the poet has to complain of is that God has not acknowledged His people during this time of suffering as at other times. "Our signs"...

Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 74:12-17 - -- With this prayer for the destruction of the enemies by God's interposition closes the first half of the Psalm, which has for its subject-matter the ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 74:18-23 - -- The poet, after he has thus consoled himself by the contemplation of the power of God which He has displayed for His people's good as their Redeemer...

Constable: Psa 73:1--89:52 - --I. Book 3: chs 73--89 A man or men named Asaph wrote 17 of the psalms in this book (Pss. 73-83). Other writers w...

Constable: Psa 74:1-23 - --Psalm 74 The writer appears to have written this psalm after one of Israel's enemies destroyed the sanct...

Constable: Psa 74:10-17 - --3. An appeal for divine help 74:10-17 The psalmist pleaded for God to help His people and to sub...

Constable: Psa 74:18-23 - --4. An appeal to the covenant 74:18-23 The writer also appealed for action because of God's reput...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Psalms (Book Introduction) The Hebrew title of this book is Tehilim ("praises" or "hymns"), for a leading feature in its contents is praise, though the word occurs in the title ...

JFB: Psalms (Outline) ALEPH. (Psa 119:1-8). This celebrated Psalm has several peculiarities. It is divided into twenty-two parts or stanzas, denoted by the twenty-two let...

TSK: Psalms (Book Introduction) The Psalms have been the general song of the universal Church; and in their praise, all the Fathers have been unanimously eloquent. Men of all nation...

TSK: Psalms 74 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Psa 74:1, The prophet complains of the desolation of the sanctuary; Psa 74:10, He moves God to help in consideration of his power; Psa 74...

Poole: Psalms (Book Introduction) OF PSALMS THE ARGUMENT The divine authority of this Book of PSALMS is so certain and evident, that it was never questioned in the church; which b...

MHCC: Psalms (Book Introduction) David was the penman of most of the psalms, but some evidently were composed by other writers, and the writers of some are doubtful. But all were writ...

MHCC: Psalms 74 (Chapter Introduction) (Psa 74:1-11) The desolations of the sanctuary. (Psa 74:12-17) Pleas for encouraging faith. (Psa 74:18-23) Petitions for deliverances.

Matthew Henry: Psalms (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Book of Psalms We have now before us one of the choicest and most excellent parts of all the Old Te...

Matthew Henry: Psalms 74 (Chapter Introduction) This psalm does so particularly describe the destruction of Jerusalem and the temple, by Nebuchadnezzar and the army of the Chaldeans, and can so i...

Constable: Psalms (Book Introduction) Introduction Title The title of this book in the Hebrew Bible is Tehillim, which means...

Constable: Psalms (Outline) Outline I. Book 1: chs. 1-41 II. Book 2: chs. 42-72 III. Book 3: chs. 73...

Constable: Psalms Psalms Bibliography Allen, Ronald B. "Evidence from Psalm 89." In A Case for Premillennialism: A New Consensus,...

Haydock: Psalms (Book Introduction) THE BOOK OF PSALMS. INTRODUCTION. The Psalms are called by the Hebrew, Tehillim; that is, hymns of praise. The author, of a great part of ...

Gill: Psalms (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO PSALMS The title of this book may be rendered "the Book of Praises", or "Hymns"; the psalm which our Lord sung at the passover is c...

Gill: Psalms 74 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO PSALM 74 Maschil of Asaph. Some think that Asaph, the penman of this psalm, was not the same that lived in the times of David, but ...

Advanced Commentary (Dictionaries, Hymns, Arts, Sermon Illustration, Question and Answers, etc)


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