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Psalms 125:4 Bible in Basic English (BBE)

4 Do good, O Lord, to those who are good, and to those who are upright in heart.

Cross Reference

Psalms 7:10 BBE

God, who is the saviour of the upright in heart, is my breastplate.

Psalms 119:68 BBE

You are good, and your works are good; give me knowledge of your rules.

Psalms 32:2 BBE

Happy is the man in whom the Lord sees no evil, and in whose spirit there is no deceit.

Psalms 36:10 BBE

O let there be no end to your loving mercy to those who have knowledge of you, or of your righteousness to the upright in heart.

Psalms 41:1-3 BBE

<To the chief music-maker. A Psalm. Of David.> Happy is the man who gives thought to the poor; the Lord will be his saviour in the time of trouble. The Lord will keep him safe, and give him life; the Lord will let him be a blessing on the earth, and will not give him into the hand of his haters. The Lord will be his support on his bed of pain: by you will all his grief be turned to strength.

Psalms 51:18 BBE

Do good to Zion in your good pleasure, building up the walls of Jerusalem.

Psalms 73:1 BBE

Truly, God is good to Israel, even to such as are clean in heart.

Psalms 84:11 BBE

The Lord God is our sun and our strength: the Lord will give grace and glory: he will not keep back any good thing from those whose ways are upright.

Psalms 94:15 BBE

But decisions will again be made in righteousness; and they will be kept by all whose hearts are true.

Psalms 119:80 BBE

Let all my heart be given to your orders, so that I may not be put to shame.

Isaiah 58:10-11 BBE

And if you give your bread to those in need of it, so that the troubled one may have his desire; then you will have light in the dark, and your night will be as the full light of the sun: And the Lord will be your guide at all times; in dry places he will give you water in full measure, and will make strong your bones; and you will be like a watered garden, and like an ever-flowing spring.

Lamentations 3:25 BBE

The Lord is good to those who are waiting for him, to the soul which is looking for him.

John 1:47 BBE

Jesus saw Nathanael coming to him and said of him, See, here is a true son of Israel in whom there is nothing false.

Hebrews 6:10 BBE

For God is true, and will not put away from him the memory of your work and of your love for his name, in the help which you gave and still give to the saints.

1 John 3:17-24 BBE

But if a man has this world's goods, and sees that his brother is in need, and keeps his heart shut against his brother, how is it possible for the love of God to be in him? My little children, do not let our love be in word and in tongue, but let it be in act and in good faith. In this way we may be certain that we are true, and may give our heart comfort before him, When our heart says that we have done wrong; because God is greater than our heart, and has knowledge of all things. My loved ones, if our heart does not say that we have done wrong, we have no fear before him; And he gives us all our requests, because we keep his laws and do the things which are pleasing in his eyes. And this is his law, that we have faith in the name of his Son Jesus Christ, and love for one another, even as he said to us. He who keeps his laws is in God and God is in him. And the Spirit which he gave us is our witness that he is in us.

Revelation 14:5 BBE

And in their mouth there was no false word, for they are untouched by evil.

Worthy.Bible » Commentaries » Keil & Delitzsch Commentary » Commentary on Psalms 125

Commentary on Psalms 125 Keil & Delitzsch Commentary


Introduction

Israel's Bulwark against Temptation to Apostasy

The favourite word Israel furnished the outward occasion for annexing this Psalm to the preceding. The situation is like that in Psalms 123:1-4 and Psalms 124:1-8. The people are under foreign dominion. In this lies the seductive inducement to apostasy. The pious and the apostate ones are already separated. Those who have remained faithful shall not, however, always remain enslaved. Round about Jerusalem are mountains, but more important still: Jahve, of rocks the firmest, Jahve encompasses His people.

That this Psalm is one of the latest, appears from the circumstantial expression “the upright in their hearts,” instead of the old one, “the upright of heart,” from פעלי האון instead of the former פעלי און , and also from למען לא (beside this passage occurring only in Psalms 119:11, Psalms 119:80; Ezekiel 19:9; Ezekiel 26:20; Zechariah 12:7) instead of למען אשׁר לא or פּן .


Verse 1-2

The stedfastness which those who trust in Jahve prove in the midst of every kind of temptation and assault is likened to Mount Zion, because the God to whom they believingly cling is He who sits enthroned on Zion. The future ישׁב signifies: He sits and will sit, that is to say, He continues to sit, cf. Psalms 9:8; Psalms 122:5. Older expositors are of opinion that the heavenly Zion must be understood on account of the Chaldaean and the Roman catastrophes; but these, in fact, only came upon the buildings on the mountain, not upon the mountain itself, which in itself and according to its appointed destiny (vid., Micah 3:12; Micah 4:1) remained unshaken. in Psalms 125:2 also it is none other than the earthly Jerusalem that is meant. The holy city has a natural circumvallation of mountains, and the holy nation that dwells and worships therein has a still infinitely higher defence in Jahve, who encompasses it round (vid., on Psalms 34:8), as perhaps a wall of fire (Zechariah 2:5), or an impassably broad and mighty river ( Isaiah 33:21); a statement which is also now confirmed, for, etc. Instead of inferring from the clause Psalms 125:2 that which is to be expected with לכן , the poet confirms it with כי by that which is surely to be expected.


Verse 3

The pressure of the worldly power, which now lies heavily upon the holy land, will not last for ever; the duration of the calamity is exactly proportioned to the power of resistance of the righteous, whom God proves and purifies by calamity, but not without at the same time graciously preserving them. “The rod of wickedness” is the heathen sceptre, and “the righteous” are the Israelites who hold fast to the religion of their fathers. The holy land, whose sole entitled inheritors are these righteous, is called their “lot” ( גורל , κλῆρος = κληρονομία ). נוּח signifies to alight or settle down anywhere, and having alighted, to lean upon or rest (cf. Isaiah 11:2 with John 1:32, ἔμεινεν ). The lxx renders οὐκ ἀφφήσει , i.e., לא ינּיח (cf. on the other hand יניח , He shall let down, cause to come down, in Isaiah 30:32). Not for a continuance shall the sceptre of heathen tyranny rest upon the holy land, God will not suffer that: in order that the righteous may not at length, by virtue of the power which pressure and use exercises over men, also participate in the prevailing ungodly doings. שׁלח with Beth : to seize upon anything wrongfully, or even only (as in Job 28:9) to lay one's hand upon anything (frequently with על ). As here in the case of עולתה , in Psalms 80:3 too the form that is the same as the locative is combined with a preposition.


Verse 4-5

On the ground of the strong faith in Psalms 125:1. and of the confident hope in Psalms 125:3, the petition now arises that Jahve would speedily bestow the earnestly desired blessing of freedom upon the faithful ones, and on the other hand remove the cowardly lit. those afraid to confess God and those who have fellowship with apostasy, together with the declared wicked ones, out of the way. For such is the meaning of Psalms 125:4. טובים (in Proverbs alternating with the “righteous,” Proverbs 2:20, the opposite being the “wicked,” רשׁעים , Proverbs 14:19) are here those who truly believe and rightly act in accordance with the good will of God,

(Note: The Midrash here calls to mind a Talmudic riddle: There came a good one (Moses, Exodus 2:2) and received a good thing (the Tôra, Proverbs 4:2) from the good One (God, Psalms 145:9) for the good ones (Israel, Psalms 125:4).)

or, as the parallel member of the verse explains (where לישׁרים did not require the article on account of the addition), those who in the bottom of their heart are uprightly disposed, as God desires to have it. The poet supplicates good for them, viz., preservation against denying God and deliverance out of slavery; for those, on the contrary, who bend ( הטּה ) their crooked paths, i.e., turn aside their paths in a crooked direction from the right way ( עקלקלּותם , cf. Judges 5:6, no less than in Amos 2:7; Proverbs 17:23, an accusative of the object, which is more natural than that it is the accusative of the direction, after Numbers 22:23 extrem ., cf. Job 23:11; Isaiah 30:11) - for these he wishes that Jahve would clear them away ( הוליך like Arab. ahlk , perire facere = perdere ) together with the workers of evil, i.e., the open, manifest sinners, to whom these lukewarm and sly, false and equivocal ones are in no way inferior as a source of danger to the church. lxx correctly: τοὺς δὲ ἐκκλίνοντας εἰς τάς στραγγαλιὰς (Aquila διαπλοκάς , Symmachus σκολιότητας , Theodotion διεστραμμένα ) ἀπάξει κύριος μετὰ κ. τ. λ . . Finally, the poet, stretching out his hand over Israel as if pronouncing the benediction of the priest, gathers up all his hopes, prayers, and wishes into the one prayer: “Peace be upon Israel.” He means “the Israel of God,” Galatians 6:16. Upon this Israel he calls down peace from above. Peace is the end of tyranny, hostility, dismemberment, unrest, and terror; peace is freedom and harmony and unity and security and blessedness.