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Psalms 76:12 Bible in Basic English (BBE)

12 He puts an end to the wrath of rulers; he is feared by the kings of the earth.

Cross Reference

Psalms 68:12 BBE

Kings of armies quickly go in flight: and the women in the houses make a division of their goods.

Zephaniah 3:6 BBE

I have had the nations cut off, their towers are broken down; I have made their streets a waste so that no one goes through them: destruction has overtaken their towns, so that there is no man living in them.

2 Chronicles 32:21 BBE

And the Lord sent an angel who put to death all the men of war and the chiefs and the captains in the army of the king of Assyria. So he went back to his country in shame. And when he came into the house of his god, his sons, the offspring of his body, put him to death there with the sword.

Psalms 2:5 BBE

Then will his angry words come to their ears, and by his wrath they will be troubled:

Psalms 2:10 BBE

So now be wise, you kings: take his teaching, you judges of the earth.

Psalms 47:2 BBE

For the Lord Most High is to be feared; he is a great King over all the earth.

Psalms 48:4-6 BBE

For see! the kings came together by agreement, they were joined together. They saw it, and so were full of wonder; they were troubled, and went quickly away in fear. Shaking came on them and pain, as on a woman in childbirth.

Isaiah 13:6-8 BBE

Send out a cry of grief; for the day of the Lord is near; it comes as destruction from the Most High. For this cause all hands will be feeble, and every heart of man be turned to water; Their hearts will be full of fear; pains and sorrows will overcome them; they will be in pain like a woman in childbirth; they will be shocked at one another; their faces will be like flames.

Joshua 5:1 BBE

Now when the news came to all the kings of the Amorites on the west side of Jordan, and all the kings of the Canaanites living by the sea, how the Lord had made the waters of Jordan dry before the children of Israel, till they had gone across, their hearts became like water, and there was no more spirit in them, because of the children of Israel.

Psalms 68:35 BBE

O God, you are to be feared in your holy place: the God of Israel gives strength and power to his people. Praise be to God.

Isaiah 24:21 BBE

And in that day the Lord will send punishment on the army of the high ones on high, and on the kings of the earth on the earth.

Revelation 6:15 BBE

And the kings of the earth, and the rulers, and the chief captains, and the men of wealth, and the strong, and every servant and free man, took cover in the holes and the rocks of the mountains;

Revelation 19:17-21 BBE

And I saw an angel taking his place in the sun; and he was crying with a loud voice, saying to all the birds in flight in the heavens, Come together to the great feast of God; So that you may take for your food the flesh of kings, and of captains, and of strong men, and of horses and of those who are seated on them, and the flesh of all men, free and unfree, small and great. And I saw the beast, and the kings of the earth, and their armies, come together to make war against him who was seated on the horse and against his army. And the beast was taken, and with him the false prophet who did the signs before him, by which they were turned from the true way who had the mark of the beast, and who gave worship to his image: these two were put living into the sea of ever-burning fire. And the rest were put to death with the sword of him who was on the horse, even the sword which came out of his mouth: and all the birds were made full with their flesh.

Worthy.Bible » Commentaries » Keil & Delitzsch Commentary » Commentary on Psalms 76

Commentary on Psalms 76 Keil & Delitzsch Commentary


Introduction

Praise of God after His Judgment Has Gone Forth

No Psalm has a greater right to follow Psalms 75:1-10 than this, which is inscribed To the Precentor, with accompaniment of stringed instruments (vid., Psalms 4:1), a Psalm by Asaph, a song . Similar expressions ( God of Jacob , Psalms 75:10; Psalms 76:7; saints, wicked of the earth , Psalms 75:9; Psalms 76:10) and the same impress throughout speak in favour of unity of authorship. In other respects, too, they form a pair: Psalms 75:1-10 prepares the way for the divine deed of judgment as imminent, which Psalms 76:1-12 celebrates as having taken place. For it is hardly possible for there to be a Psalm the contents of which so exactly coincide with an historical situation of which more is known from other sources, as the contents of this Psalm confessedly (lxx πρὸς τὸν Ἀσσύριον ) does with the overthrow of the army of Assyria before Jerusalem and its results. The Psalter contains very similar Psalms which refer to a similar event in the reign of Jehoshaphat, viz., to the defeat at that time of the allied neighbouring peoples by a mutual massacre, which was predicted by the Asaphite Jahaziel (vid., on Psalms 46:1-11 and Ps 83). Moreover in Psalms 76:1-12 the “mountains of prey,” understood of the mountains of Seir with their mounted robbers, would point to this incident. But just as in Psalms 75:1-10 the reference to the catastrophe of Assyria in the reign of Hezekiah was indicated by the absence of any mention of the north, so in Psalms 76:1-12 both the שׁמּה in Psalms 76:4 and the description of the catastrophe itself make this reference and no other natural. The points of contact with Isaiah, and in part with Hosea (cf. Psalms 76:4 with Hosea 2:20) and Nahum, are explicable from the fact that the lyric went hand in hand with the prophecy of that period, as Isaiah predicts for the time when Jahve shall discharge His fury over Assyria, Isaiah 30:29, “Your song shall re-echo as in the night, in which the feast is celebrated.”

The Psalm is hexastichic, and a model of symmetrical strophe-structure.


Verses 1-3

In all Israel, and more especially in Judah, is Elohim known (here, according to Psalms 76:2 , participle, whereas in Psalms 9:17 it is the finite verb), inasmuch as He has made Himself known (cf. דּעוּ , Isaiah 33:13). His Name is great in Israel, inasmuch as He has proved Himself to be a great One and is praised as a great One. In Judah more especially, for in Jerusalem, and that upon Zion, the citadel with the primeval gates ( Psalms 24:7), He has His dwelling-place upon earth within the borders of Israel. שׁלם is the ancient name of Jerusalem; for the Salem of Melchizedek is one and the same city with the Jerusalem of Adonizedek, Joshua 10:1. In this primeval Salem God has סוּכּו , His tabernacle (= שׂכּו , Lamentations 2:6, = סכּתו , as in Psalms 27:5), there מעונתו , His dwelling-place, - a word elsewhere used of the lair of the lion (Psalms 104:22, Amos 3:4); cf. on the choice of words, Isaiah 31:9. The future of the result ויהי is an expression of the fact which is evident from God's being known in Judah and His Name great in Israel. Psalms 76:4 tells what it is by which He has made Himself known and glorified His Name. שׁמּה , thitherwards, in that same place (as in fact the accusative, in general, is used both in answer to the question where? and whither?), is only a fuller form for שׁם , as in Isaiah 22:18; Isaiah 65:9; 2 Kings 23:8, and frequently; Arab. ta̱mma ( tu̱mma ) and תּמּן (from תּמּה ) confirm the accusative value of the ah . רשׁפי־קשׁת (with Phe raphatum , cf. on the other hand, Song of Solomon 8:6)

(Note: The pointing is here just as inconsistent as in ילדוּת , and on the contrary מרדּוּת .))

are the arrows swift as lightning that go forth (Job 41:20-28) from the bow; side by side with these, two other weapons are also mentioned, and finally everything that pertains to war is gathered up in the word מלחמה (cf. Hosea 2:18). God has broken in pieces the weapons of the worldly power directed against Judah, and therewith this power itself (Isaiah 14:25), and consequently (in accordance with the prediction Hosea 1:7, and Isa 10, 14, Isaiah 17:1-14, 29, Isaiah 31:1-9, 33, 37, and more particularly Psalms 31:8) has rescued His people by direct interposition, without their doing anything in the matter.


Verses 4-6

The “mountains of prey,” for which the lxx has ὀρέων αἰωνίων ( טרם ?), is an emblematical appellation for the haughty possessors of power who also plunder every one that comes near them,

(Note: One verse of a beautiful poem of the Muḥammel which Ibn Dûchı̂ , the phylarch of the Beni Zumeir , an honoured poet of the steppe, dictated to Consul Wetzstein runs thus: The noble are like a very lofty hill-side upon which, when thou comest to it, thou findest an evening meal and protection (Arab. 'l - ‛š' w - ḏry ).)

or the proud and despoiling worldly powers. Far aloft beyond these towers the glory of God. He is נאור , illustris , prop. illumined; said of God: light-encircled, fortified in light, in the sense of Daniel 2:22; 1 Timothy 6:16. He is the אדּיר , to whom the Lebanon of the hostile army of the nations must succumb (Isaiah 10:34) According to Solinus ( ed. Mommsen , p. 124) the Moors call Atlas Addirim . This succumbing is described in Psalms 76:6. The strong of heart or stout-hearted, the lion-hearted, have been despoiled, disarmed, exuti ; אשׁתּוללוּ

(Note: With orthophonic Gaja , vid., Baer's Metheg-Setzung , §45.)

is an Aramaizing praet. Hithpo . (like אתחבּר , 2 Chronicles 20:35, cf. Daniel 4:16; Isaiah 63:3) with a passive signification. From Psalms 76:6 we see that the beginning of the catastrophe is described, and therefore נמוּ (perhaps on that account accented on the ult .) is meant inchoatively: they have fallen into their sleep, viz., the eternal sleep (Jeremiah 51:39, Jeremiah 51:57), as Nahum says (Nahum 3:18): thy shepherds sleep, O king of Assyria, thy valiant ones rest . In Psalms 76:6 we see them lying in the last throes of death, and making a last effort to spring up again. But they cannot find their hands, which they have lifted up threateningly against Jerusalem: these are lamed, motionless, rigid and dead; cf. the phrases in Joshua 8:20; 2 Samuel 7:27, and the Talmudic phrase, “he did not find his hands and feet in the school-house,” i.e., he was entirely disconcerted and stupefied.

(Note: Dukes, Rabbinische Blumenlese , S. 191.)

This field of corpses is the effect of the omnipotent energy of the word of the God of Jacob; cf. וגער בּו , Isaiah 17:13. Before His threatening both war-chariot and horse ( ו - ו ) are sunk into motionlessness and unconsciousness - an allusion to Ex. 15, as in Isaiah 43:17 : who bringeth out chariot and horse, army and heroes - together they faint away, they shall never rise; they have flickered out, like a wick they are extinguished.


Verses 7-9

Nahum also (Psalms 1:6) draws the same inference from the defeat of Sennacherib as the psalmist does in Psalms 76:8. מאז אפּך (cf. Ruth 2:7; Jeremiah 44:18), from the decisive turning-point onwards, from the אז in Psalms 2:5, when Thine anger breaks forth. God sent forth His judiciary word from heaven into the midst of the din of war of the hostile world: immediately (cf. on the sequence of the tenses Psalms 48:6, and on Habakkuk 3:10) it was silenced, the earth was seized with fear, and its tumult was obliged to cease, when, namely, God arose on behalf of His disquieted, suffering people, when He spoke as we read in Isaiah 33:10, and fulfilled the prayer offered in extreme need in Isaiah 33:2.


Verses 10-12

The fact that has just been experienced is substantiated in Psalms 76:10 from a universal truth, which has therein become outwardly manifest. The rage of men shall praise Thee, i.e., must ultimately redound to Thy glory, inasmuch as to Thee, namely ( Psalms 76:1 as to syntax like Psalms 73:3 ), there always remains a שׁארית , i.e., a still unexhausted remainder, and that not merely of חמה , but of חמת , with which Thou canst gird, i.e., arm, Thyself against such human rage, in order to quench it. שׁארית חמת is the infinite store of wrath still available to God after human rage has done its utmost. Or perhaps still better, and more fully answering to the notion of שׁארית : it is the store of the infinite fulness of wrath which still remains on the side of God after human rage ( חמה ) has spent itself, when God calmly, and laughing (Psalms 2:4), allows the Titans to do as they please, and which is now being poured out. In connection with the interpretation: with the remainder of the fury (of hostile men) wilt Thou gird Thyself, i.e., it serves Thee only as an ornament (Hupfeld), the alternation of חמה and חמת is left unexplained, and תּחגּר is alienated from its martial sense (Isaiah 59:17; Isaiah 51:9, Wisd. 5:21 [20]), which is required by the context. Ewald, like the lxx, reads תּחגּך , ἑορτάσει σοι , in connection with which, apart from the high-sounding expression, שׁארית חמת ( ἐγκατάλειμμα ἐνθυμίου ) must denote the remainder of malignity that is suddenly converted into its opposite; and one does not see why what Psalms 76:11 says concerning rage is here limited to its remainder. Such an inexhaustiveness in the divine wrath-power has been shown in what has just recently been experienced. Thus, then, are those who belong to the people of God to vow and pay, i.e., (inasmuch as the preponderance falls upon the second imperative) to pay their vows; and all who are round about Him, i.e., all the peoples dwelling round about Him and His people ( כּל־סביביו , the subject to what follows, in accordance with which it is also accented), are to bring offerings (Psalms 68:30) to God, who is מורא , i.e., the sum of all that is awe-inspiring. Thus is He called in Isaiah 8:13; the summons accords with Isaiah's prediction, according to which, in consequence of Jahve's deed of judgment upon Assyria, Aethiopia presents himself to Him as an offering (Isaiah 18:1-7), and with the fulfilment in 2 Chronicles 32:23. Just so does v. 13 a resemble the language of Isaiah; cf. Isaiah 25:1-12; Isaiah 33:1; Isaiah 18:5 : God treats the snorting of the princes, i.e., despots, as the vine-dresser does the wild shoots or branches of the vine-stock: He lops it, He cuts it off, so that it is altogether ineffectual. It is the figure that is sketched by Joel 3:13, then filled in by Isaiah, and embodied as a vision in Revelation 14:17-20, which is here indicated. God puts an end to the defiant, arrogant bearing of the tyrants of the earth, and becomes at last the feared of all the kings of the earth - all kingdoms finally becomes God's and His Christ's.