
Text -- Psalms 89:38 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Psa 89:38
Wesley: Psa 89:38 - -- Having hitherto declared the certainty of God's promises, he now humbly expostulates with God about it.
Having hitherto declared the certainty of God's promises, he now humbly expostulates with God about it.
Clarke -> Psa 89:38
Clarke: Psa 89:38 - -- But thou hast cast off - Hitherto the psalmist has spoken of the covenant of God with David and his family, which led them to expect all manner of p...
But thou hast cast off - Hitherto the psalmist has spoken of the covenant of God with David and his family, which led them to expect all manner of prosperity, and a perpetuity of the Jewish throne; now he shews what appears to him a failure of the promise, and what he calls in the next verse the making void the covenant of his servant. God cannot lie to David; how is it then that his crown is profaned, that it is cast down to the ground; the land being possessed by strangers, and the twelve tribes in the most disgraceful and oppressive captivity?
Calvin -> Psa 89:38
Calvin: Psa 89:38 - -- 38.But thou hast abhorred and rejected him Here the prophet complains that in consequence of the decayed state of the kingdom, the prophecy appeared ...
38.But thou hast abhorred and rejected him Here the prophet complains that in consequence of the decayed state of the kingdom, the prophecy appeared to have failed of its accomplishment. Not that he accuses God of falsehood; but he speaks in this manner, that he may with all freedom cast his cares and griefs into the bosom of God, who permits us to deal thus familiarly with him. It doubtless becomes us to frame our desires according to the divine will; but that person cannot be said to pass beyond due bounds who humbly laments that he is deprived of the tokens of the divine favor, provided be does not despair, or rebelliously murmur against God; and we shall afterwards see that the prophet, when he blesses God at the close of the psalm, affords a proof of tranquil submission, by which he corrects or qualifies his complaints. Whoever, therefore, that Rabbin was who maintained that it is unlawful to recite this psalm, he was led by a foolish and impious peevishness to condemn what God bears with in his children. In taking this liberty of expostulating with God, the prophet had no other object in view than that he might the more effectually resist distrust and impatience, by unburdening himself in the divine presence. Farther, the words, Thou hast abhorred and rejected him, if criticised according to the rules of the Greek and Latin language, will be pronounced inelegant; for the word which is most emphatic is put first, and then there is added another which is less emphatic. But as the Hebrews do not observe our manner of arrangement in this respect, the order here adopted is quite consistent with the idiom of the Hebrew language. The third verb contains the reason of this change on the part of God, teaching us that the king was rejected because God was incensed against him. It is thought by some that there is here a recital of the mockery in which the enemies of the chosen people indulged, an opinion which they adopt to avoid the difficulty arising from viewing this severe kind of complaint, as uttered by the Church, which proved such a stumbling-block to the Rabbin above referred to, that on account of it he condemned the whole psalm. But it is to be observed, that the prophet speaks according to the common feeling and apprehension of men; while at the same time he was fully convinced in his own mind, that the king who had been once chosen by God could not be rejected by him.
In the same sense we ought to understand what follows (verse 39) concerning the disannulling of the covenant — Thou hast made the covenant of thy servant to cease. The prophet does not charge God with levity and inconstancy: he only complains that those notable promises of which he had spoken had to appearance vanished and come to nought. Whenever the faithful put the question,
“How long wilt thou forget me, O Lord?” “Awake, why sleepest thou, O Lord?”
(Psa 13:1,)
they assuredly are not to be understood as attributing forgetfulness or sleep to him: they only lay before him the temptations which flesh and blood suggest to them in order to induce him speedily to succor them under the infirmity with which they are distressed. It is not then wonderful, though the prophet, amidst such horrible desolation, was affected by the infirmities to which human nature is so liable in such circumstances, and thus prompted to make the assertion, that what God promised was far from being manifestly realised. When he saw all things going contrary to the Divine promise, he was not a man so steel-hearted as to remain unmoved at so pitiable and confused a spectacle. But coming freely into the Divine presence, he seeks a remedy that he might not be swallowed up with sorrow, which would have been the case had he indulged in secret repining, and neglected this means of alleviation. What is added in the close of the verse, Thou hast cast his crown to the earth, does not seem to apply to the time of Rehoboam, unless, perhaps, the dismemberment of the kingdom may be denoted by the casting of the crown to the earth. The statements which are made immediately after must necessarily be referred to some greater calamity. If this is admitted, the author of the psalm must have been a different person from Ethan, who was one of the four wise men, of whom mention is made in the sacred history, (2Kg 4:31.) In so doubtful a case, I leave every one to adopt the conjecture which appears to him the most probable.
Defender -> Psa 89:38
Defender: Psa 89:38 - -- How could God be angry with His "anointed," the Messiah ? He had just promised that His seed and His throne would - like the sun - endure forever (Psa...
How could God be angry with His "anointed," the Messiah ? He had just promised that His seed and His throne would - like the sun - endure forever (Psa 89:36). The only rationale for such an anomaly would be that He had been "covered with shame" (Psa 89:45) that is, God "hath made him to be sin for us, who knew no sin" (2Co 5:21). In his persecution by Saul and other enemies even after being anointed as future king, David was a type of the Messiah but the ultimate fulfillment awaited the crucifixion of Christ."
TSK -> Psa 89:38
TSK: Psa 89:38 - -- But : Psa. 44:9-26, Psa 60:1, Psa 60:10, Psa 77:7; 1Ch 28:9; Jer 12:1; Hos 9:17
and : Psa 78:59, Psa 106:40; Deu 32:19; Lam 2:7; Zec 11:8
wroth : Psa ...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 89:38
Barnes: Psa 89:38 - -- But thou hast cast off - literally, Thou hast treated as a foul, offensive thing; thou hast treated him to whom these promises were made, as if...
But thou hast cast off - literally, Thou hast treated as a foul, offensive thing; thou hast treated him to whom these promises were made, as if he were a vile and detestable object - as that which one throws away because it is worthless or offensive.
And abhorred - Hast despised; that is, as if it were an object of aversion or contempt. Compare Psa 60:1, Psa 60:10.
Thou hast been wroth - literally, "Thou hast suffered (thine anger) to overflow,"or to pour itself forth. See Psa 78:21, Psa 78:59.
With thine anointed - With him who had been anointed as king - anointed as thine own - to administer justice, and to rule for thee. 1Sa 16:1, 1Sa 16:13. This might seem to refer to the time of Absalom, when David was driven from his throne and his kingdom; see, however, the Introduction to the Psalm.
Poole -> Psa 89:38
Poole: Psa 89:38 - -- Having hitherto declared the certainty of God’ s promises, he now proceeds to show the unsuitableness of the present dispensations of God’...
Having hitherto declared the certainty of God’ s promises, he now proceeds to show the unsuitableness of the present dispensations of God’ s providence thereunto, and humbly expostulates with God about it. Thine anointed ; that person and family which thou hast invested with the kingdom.
Gill -> Psa 89:38
Gill: Psa 89:38 - -- But thou hast cast off,.... Here begin objections to what is before said, and swore to; even to the everlasting love of God, to Christ, and to his see...
But thou hast cast off,.... Here begin objections to what is before said, and swore to; even to the everlasting love of God, to Christ, and to his seed, to the unchangeableness and unalterableness of the covenant, and to the continuance and perpetuity of the kingdom and church of Christ, taken from the dealings of the Lord with the Messiah and his people; which were made either by the psalmist, under a spirit of prophecy, foreseeing what would come to pass; or by the apostles and church of Christ, about the time of his sufferings and death, and after; when he seemed to be "cast off", and rejected by the Lord, particularly when he forsook him, and hid his face from him, Mat 27:46, as when he hides his face from his people, it is interpreted by them a casting them off; see Psa 44:22,
and abhorred; not that he abhorred the person of Christ, who was his own Son, his beloved Son; nor his afflictions and sufferings, which were a sacrifice of a sweet smelling savour to him; see Psa 22:24, though these might be interpreted by others as if the Lord abhorred or rejected him; because he suffered him to be used in the manner he was, and particularly to be abhorred by the Jews, even by the nation in general, Isa 49:7, though the sins of his people, which he had upon him, and for which he suffered, were an abhorring to the Lord; and when he was made sin, he was made a curse:
thou hast been wroth with thine Anointed; with thy Messiah; not Rehoboam, from whom the ten tribes were rent; nor Josiah, who was killed by Pharaohnecho; nor Zedekiah, carried captive into Babylon; but the true Messiah, the son of David, before said to be found by the Lord, and anointed with his holy oil, Psa 89:20, which is to be understood of him, not as his own son, who was always the object of his love, but as the sinner's surety, bearing the sins of his people, and all the wrath and punishment due unto them; and so is reconcilable to the promise, that lovingkindness should not be taken from him, Psa 89:33 and is no objection to it, though made one.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 89:1-52
TSK Synopsis: Psa 89:1-52 - --1 The psalmist praises God for his covenant;5 for his wonderful power;15 for the care of his church;19 for his favour to the kingdom of David.38 Then ...
MHCC -> Psa 89:38-52
MHCC: Psa 89:38-52 - --Sometimes it is not easy to reconcile God's providences with his promises, yet we are sure that God's works fulfil his word. When the great Anointed O...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 89:38-52
Matthew Henry: Psa 89:38-52 - -- In these verses we have, I. A very melancholy complaint of the present deplorable state of David's family, which the psalmist thinks hard to be reco...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 89:38-45
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 89:38-45 - --
Now after the poet has turned his thoughts towards the beginnings of the house of David which were so rich in promise, in order that he might find c...
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 89:1-52 - --Psalm 89
The writer of this royal psalm was Ethan, another wise Levitical musician in David's service (1...
