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Psalms 94:2 Bible in Basic English (BBE)

2 Be lifted up, O judge of the earth; let their reward come to the men of pride.

Cross Reference

Psalms 31:23 BBE

O have love for the Lord, all you his saints; for the Lord keeps safe from danger all those who are true to him, and gives the workers of pride their right reward.

Psalms 7:6 BBE

Come up, Lord, in your wrath; be lifted up against my haters; be awake, my God, give orders for the judging.

Genesis 18:25 BBE

Let such a thing be far from you, to put the upright to death with the sinner: will not the judge of all the earth do right?

Jeremiah 50:31-32 BBE

See, I am against you, O pride, says the Lord, the Lord of armies, for your day has come, the time when I will send punishment on you. And pride will go with uncertain steps and have a fall, and there will be no one to come to his help: and I will put a fire in his towns, burning up everything round about him.

Revelation 18:6-8 BBE

Give to her as she gave, even an increased reward for her works; in the cup which was mixed by her, let there be mixed as much again for herself. As she gave glory to herself, and became more evil in her ways, in the same measure give her pain and weeping: for she says in her heart, I am seated here a queen, and am no widow, and will in no way see sorrow. For this reason in one day will her troubles come, death and sorrow and need of food; and she will be completely burned with fire; for strong is the Lord God who is her judge.

1 Peter 5:5 BBE

And in the same way, let the younger men be ruled by the older ones. Let all of you put away pride and make yourselves ready to be servants: for God is a hater of pride, but he gives grace to those who make themselves low.

2 Corinthians 5:10 BBE

For we all have to come before Christ to be judged; so that every one of us may get his reward for the things done in the body, good or bad.

John 5:22-23 BBE

The Father is not the judge of men, but he has given all decisions into the hands of the Son; So that all men may give honour to the Son even as they give honour to the Father. He who gives no honour to the Son gives no honour to the Father who sent him.

Micah 5:9 BBE

And it will come about in that day, says the Lord, that I will take away your horses from you, and will give your war-carriages to destruction:

Daniel 5:22-24 BBE

And you, his son, O Belshazzar, have not kept your heart free from pride, though you had knowledge of all this; But you have been lifting yourself up against the Lord of heaven, and they have put the vessels of his house before you, and you and your lords, your wives and your women, have taken wine in them; and you have given praise to gods of silver and gold, of brass and iron and wood and stone, who are without the power of seeing or hearing, and without knowledge: and to the God in whose hand your breath is, and whose are all your ways, you have not given glory; Then the part of the hand was sent out from before him, and this writing was recorded.

Daniel 4:37 BBE

Now I, Nebuchadnezzar, give worship and praise and honour to the King of heaven; for all his works are true and his ways are right: and those who go in pride he is able to make low.

Job 40:11-12 BBE

His strength is in his body, and his force in the muscles of his stomach. His tail is curving like a cedar; the muscles of his legs are joined together.

Isaiah 37:36-38 BBE

And the angel of the Lord went out and put to death in the army of the Assyrians a hundred and eighty-five thousand men: and when the people got up early in the morning, there was nothing to be seen but dead bodies. Sennacherib, king of Assyria, went back to his place at Nineveh. And it came about, when he was worshipping in the house of Nisroch his god, that his sons Adrammelech and Sharezer put him to death with the sword, and they went in flight into the land of Ararat. And Esar-haddon, his son, became king in his place.

Isaiah 37:29 BBE

Because your wrath against me and your pride have come to my ears, I will put my hook in your nose and my cord in your lips, and I will make you go back by the way you came.

Isaiah 37:23 BBE

Against whom have you said evil and bitter things? and against whom has your voice been loud and your eyes lifted up? even against the Holy One of Israel.

Isaiah 10:12 BBE

For this cause it will be that, when the purpose of the Lord against Mount Zion and Jerusalem is complete, I will send punishment on the pride of the heart of the king of Assyria, and on the glory of his uplifted eyes.

Isaiah 2:17 BBE

And the high looks of man will be put to shame, and the pride of men will be made low: and only the Lord will be lifted up in that day.

Isaiah 2:11-12 BBE

The high looks of man will be put to shame, and the pride of men will be made low, and only the Lord will be lifted up in that day. For the day of the Lord of armies is coming on all the pride of men, and on all who are high and lifted up;

Psalms 74:22 BBE

Up! O God, be the judge of your cause; keep in mind the bitter things which the man of evil behaviour says against you every day.

Psalms 68:1 BBE

<To the chief music-maker. Of David. A Psalm. A Song.> Let God be seen, and let his haters be put to flight; let those who are against him be turned back before him.

Psalms 50:6 BBE

And let the heavens make clear his righteousness; for God himself is the judge. (Selah.)

Worthy.Bible » Commentaries » Keil & Delitzsch Commentary » Commentary on Psalms 94

Commentary on Psalms 94 Keil & Delitzsch Commentary


Introduction

The Consolation of Prayer under the Oppression of Tyrants

This Psalm, akin to Psalms 92:1-15 and Psalms 93:1-5 by the community of the anadiplosis, bears the inscription Ψαλμὸς ᾠδῆς τῷ Δαυίδ, τετράδι σαββάτου in the lxx. It is also a Talmudic tradition

(Note: According to B. Erachin 11 a , at the time of the Chaldaean destruction of Jerusalem the Levites on their pulpits were singing this 94th Psalm, and as they came to the words “and He turneth back upon them their iniquity” (Psalms 94:23), the enemies pressed into the Temple, so that they were not able to sing the closing words, “Jahve, our God, will destroy them.” To the scruple that Ps 94 is a Wednesday, not a Sunday, Psalm (that fatal day, however, was a Sunday, מוצאי שׁבת ), it is replied, it may have been a lamentation song that had just been put into their mouths by the circumstances of that time ( אלייא בעלמא דעלמא דנפל להו בפומייהו ).)

that it was the Wednesday song in the Temple liturgy ( τετράδι σαββάτου = ברביעי בשׁבת ). Athanasius explains it by a reference to the fourth month (Jeremiah 39:2). The τῳ Δαυίδ , however, is worthless. It is a post-Davidic Psalm; for, although it comes out of one mould, we still meet throughout with reminiscences of older Davidic and Asaphic models. The enemies against whom it supplicates the appearing of the God of righteous retribution are, as follows from a comparison of Psalms 94:5, Psalms 94:8, Psalms 94:10, Psalms 94:12, non-Israelites, who despise the God of Israel and fear not His vengeance, Psalms 94:7; whose barbarous doings, however, call forth, even among the oppressed people themselves, foolish doubts concerning Jahve's omniscient beholding and judicial interposition. Accordingly the Psalm is one of the latest, but not necessarily a Maccabaean Psalm. The later Persian age, in which the Book of Ecclesiastes was written, could also exhibit circumstances and moods such as these.


Verses 1-3

The first strophe prays that God would at length put a judicial restraint upon the arrogance of ungodliness. Instead of חופיע (a less frequent form of the imperative for הופע , Ges. §53, rem. 3) it was perhaps originally written הופיעה (Psalms 80:2), the He of which has been lost owing to the He that follows. The plural נקמות signifies not merely single instances of taking vengeance (Ezekiel 25:17, cf. supra Psalms 18:48), but also intensively complete revenge or recompense (Judges 11:36; 2 Samuel 4:8). The designation of God is similar to אל גּמלות in Jeremiah 51:56, and the anadiplosis is like Psalms 94:3, Psalms 94:23, Psalms 93:1, Psalms 93:3. הנּשׂא , lift Thyself up, arise, viz., in judicial majesty, calls to mind Psalms 7:7. השׁיב גּמוּל is construed with על (cf. ל , Psalms 28:4; 59:18) as in Joel 3:4. With גּאים accidentally accord ἀγαυός and κύδεΐ γαίων in the epic poets.


Verses 4-7

The second strophe describes those over whom the first prays that the judgment of God may come. הבּיע (cf. הטּיף ) is a tropical phrase used of that kind of speech that results from strong inward impulse and flows forth in rich abundance. The poet himself explains how it is here (cf. Psalms 59:8) intended: they speak עתק , that which is unrestrained, unbridled, insolent (vid., Psalms 31:19). The Hithpa . התאמּר Schultens interprets ut Emiri (Arab. 'mı̂r , a commander) se gerunt ; but אמיר signifies in Hebrew the top of a tree (vid., on Isaiah 17:9); and from the primary signification to tower aloft, whence too אמר , to speak, prop. effere = effari , התאמּר , like התימּר in Isaiah 61:6, directly signifies to exalt one's self, to carry one's self high, to strut. On ודכּאוּ cf. Proverbs 22:22; Isaiah 3:15; and on their atheistical principle which ויּאמרוּ places in closest connection with their mode of action, cf. Psalms 10:11; Psalms 59:8 extrem . The Dagesh in יּהּ , distinct from the Dag . in the same word in Psalms 94:12, Psalms 118:5, Psalms 118:18, is the Dag. forte conjunct. according to the rule of the so-called דחיק .


Verses 8-11

The third strophe now turns from those bloodthirsty, blasphemous oppressors of the people of God whose conduct calls forth the vengeance of Jahve, to those among the people themselves, who have been puzzled about the omniscience and indirectly about the righteousness of God by the fact that this vengeance is delayed. They are called בערים and כסילים in the sense of Psalms 73:21. Those hitherto described against whom God's vengeance is supplicated are this also; but this appellation would be too one-sided for them, and בּעם refers the address expressly to a class of men among the people whom those oppress and slay. It is absurd that God, the planter of the ear ( הנּטע , like שׁסע in Leviticus 11:7, with an accented ultima , because the praet. Kal does not follow the rule for the drawing back of the accent called נסוג אחור ) and the former of the eye (cf. Psalms 40:7; Exodus 4:11), should not be able to hear and to see; everything that is excellent in the creature, God must indeed possess in original, absolute perfection.

(Note: The questions are not: ought He to have no ear, etc.; as Jerome pertinently observes in opposition to the anthropomorphites, membra tulit, efficientias dedit .)

The poet then points to the extra-Israelitish world and calls God יסר גּוים , which cannot be made to refer to a warning by means of the voice of conscience; יסר used thus without any closer definition does not signify “warning,” but “chastening” (Proverbs 9:7). Taking his stand upon facts like those in Job 12:23, the poet assumes the punitive judicial rule of God among the heathen to be an undeniable fact, and presents for consideration the question, whether He who chasteneth nations cannot and will not also punish the oppressors of His church (cf. Genesis 18:25), He who teacheth men knowledge, i.e., He who nevertheless must be the omnipotent One, since all knowledge comes originally from Him? Jahve - thus does the course of argument close in Psalms 94:11 - sees through ( ידע of penetrative perceiving or knowing that goes to the very root of a matter) the thoughts of men that they are vanity. Thus it is to be interpreted, and not: for they (men) are vanity; for this ought to have been כּי הבל המּה , whereas in the dependent clause, when the predicate is not intended to be rendered especially prominent, as in Ps 9:21, the pronominal subject may precede, Isaiah 61:9; Jeremiah 46:5 (Hitzig). The rendering of the lxx (1 Corinthians 3:20), ὅτι εἰσὶ μάταιοι (Jerome, quoniam vanae sunt ), is therefore correct; המּה , with the customary want of exactness, stands for הנּה . It is true men themselves are הבל ; it is not, however, on this account that He who sees through all things sees through their thoughts, but He sees through them in their sinful vanity.


Verses 12-15

The fourth strophe praises the pious sufferer, whose good cause God will at length aid in obtaining its right. The “blessed” reminds one of Psalms 34:9; Psalms 40:5, and more especially of Job 5:17, cf. Proverbs 3:11. Here what are meant are sufferings like those bewailed in Psalms 94:5., which are however, after all, the well-meant dispensations of God. Concerning the aim and fruit of purifying and testing afflictions God teaches the sufferer out of His Law (cf. e.g., Deuteronomy 8:5.), in order to procure him rest, viz., inward rest (cf. Jeremiah 49:23 with Isaiah 30:15), i.e., not to suffer him to be disheartened and tempted by days of wickedness, i.e., wicked, calamitous days (Ew. §287, b ), until (and it will inevitably come to pass) the pit is finished being dug into which the ungodly falls headlong (cf. Psalms 112:7.). יּהּ has the emphatic Dagesh , which properly does not double, and still less unite, but requires an emphatic pronunciation of the letter, which might easily become inaudible. The initial Jod of the divine name might easily lose it consonantal value here in connection with the preceding toneless ,

(Note: If it is correct that, as Aben-Ezra and Parchon testify, the וּ , as being compounded of o ( u ) + i , was pronounced ü like the u in the French word pur by the inhabitants of Palestine, then this Dagesh , in accordance with its orthophonic function, is the more intelligible in cases like תיסרנו יּה and קראתי יּה , cf. Pinsker, Einleitung , S. 153, and Geiger, Urschrift , S. 277. In קומו צּאו , Genesis 19:14; Exodus 12:31, קומו סּעו , Deuteronomy 2:24, Tsade and Samech have this Dagesh for the same reason as the Sin in תשׁביתו שּׁאור , Exodus 12:15 (vid., Heidenheim on that passage), viz., because there is a danger in all these cases of slurring over the sharp sibilant. Even Chajug' (vid., Ewald and Dukes' Beiträge , iii. 23) confuses this Dag. orthophonicum with the Dag. forte conjunctivum .)

and the Dag . guards against this: cf. Psalms 118:5, Psalms 118:18. The certainty of the issue that is set in prospect by עד is then confirmed with כּי . It is impossible that God can desert His church - He cannot do this, because in general right must finally come to His right, or, as it is here expressed, משׁפּט must turn to צדק , i.e., the right that is now subdued must at length be again strictly maintained and justly administered, and “after it then all who are upright in heart,” i.e., all such will side with it, joyously greeting that which has been long missed and yearned after. משׁפּט is fundamental right, which is at all times consistent with itself and raised above the casual circumstances of the time, and צדק , like אמת in Isaiah 42:3, is righteousness (justice), which converts this right into a practical truth and reality.


Verses 16-19

In the fifth strophe the poet celebrates the praise of the Lord as his sole, but also trusty and most consolatory help. The meaning of the question in Psalms 94:16 is, that there is no man who would rise and succour him in the conflict with the evil-doers; ל as in Exodus 14:25; Judges 6:31, and עם (without נלחם or the like) in the sense of contra , as in Psalms 55:19, cf. 2 Chronicles 20:6. God alone is his help. He alone has rescued him from death. היה is to be supplied to לוּלי : if He had not been, or: if He were not; and the apodosis is: then very little would have been wanting, then it would soon have come to this, that his soul would have taken up its abode, etc.; cf. on the construction Psalms 119:92; Psalms 124:1-5; Isaiah 1:9, and on כּמעט with the praet . Psalms 73:2; Psalms 119:87; Genesis 26:10 (on the other hand with the fut . Psalms 81:15). דּוּמה is, as in Psalms 115:17, the silence of the grave and of Hades; here it is the object to שׁכנה , as in Psalms 37:3, Proverbs 8:12, and frequently. When he appears to himself already as one that has fallen, God's mercy holds him up. And when thoughts, viz., sad and fearful thoughts, are multiplied within him, God's comforts delight him, viz., the encouragement of His word and the inward utterances of His Spirit. שׁרעפּים , as in Psalms 139:23, is equivalent to שעפּים , from שׂעף , סעף , Arab. š‛b , to split, branch off ( Psychology , S. 181; tr. p. 214). The plural form ישׁעשׁעוּ , like the plural of the imperative in Isaiah 29:9, has two Pathachs , the second of which is the “independentification” of the Chateph of ישׁעשׁע .


Verses 20-23

In the sixth strophe the poet confidently expects the inevitable divine retribution for which he has earnestly prayed in the introduction. יחברך is erroneously accounted by many (and by Gesenius too) as fut. Pual = יחבּרך = יחבּר עמּך , a vocal contraction together with a giving up of the reduplication in favour of which no example can be advanced. It is fut. Kal = יחברך , from יחבּר = יחבּר , with the same regression of the modification of the vowel

(Note: By means of a similar transposition of the vowel as is to be assumed in תּאהבוּ , Proverbs 1:22, it also appears that מדוּבּין = מוּסבּין (lying upon the table, ἀνακείμενοι ) of the Pesach-Haggada has to be explained, which Joseph Kimchi finds so inexplicable that he regards it as a clerical error that has become traditional.)

as in יחנך = יחנך in Genesis 43:29; Isaiah 30:19 (Hupfeld), but as in verbs primae gutturalis , so also in כּתבם , כּתבם , inflected from כּתב , Ew. §251, d . It might be more readily regarded as Poel than as Pual (like תּאכלנוּ , Job 20:26), but the Kal too already signifies to enter into fellowship (Genesis 14:3; Hosea 4:17), therefore (similarly to יגרך , Psalms 5:5) it is : num consociabitur tecum . כּסּא is here the judgment-seat, just as the Arabic cursi directly denotes the tribunal of God (in distinction from Arab. 'l - ‛arš , the throne of His majesty). With reference to הוּות vid., on Psalms 5:10. Assuming that חק is a divine statute, we obtain this meaning for עלי־חק : which frameth (i.e., plots and executes) trouble, by making the written divine right into a rightful title for unrighteous conduct, by means of which the innocent are plunged into misfortune. Hitzig renders: contrary to order, after Proverbs 17:26, where, however, על־ישׁר is intended like ἕνεκεν δικαιοσύνης , Matthew 5:10. Olshausen proposes to read יגוּרוּ (Psalms 56:7; Psalms 59:4) instead of יגודּוּ , just as conversely Aben-Ezra in Psalms 56:7 reads יגודּוּ . But גּדד , גּוּד , has the secured signification of scindere, incidere (cf. Arab. jdd , but also chd , supra , p. 255), from which the signification invadere can be easily derived (whence גּדוּד , a breaking in, invasion, an invading host). With reference to דּם נקי vid., Psychology , S. 243 (tr. p. 286): because the blood is the soul, that is said of the blood which applies properly to the person. The subject to יגודו are the seat of corruption (by which a high council consisting of many may be meant, just as much as a princely throne) and its accomplices. Prophetic certainty is expressed in ויהי and ויּשׁב . The figure of God as משׂגּב is Davidic and Korahitic. צוּר מחסּי צוּר is explained from Psalms 18:2. Since השׁיב designates the retribution as a return of guilt incurred in the form of actual punishment, it might be rendered “requite” just as well as “cause to return;” עליהם , however, instead of להם (Psalms 54:7) makes the idea expressed in Psalms 7:17 more natural. On ברעתם Hitzig correctly compares 2 Samuel 14:7; 2 Samuel 3:27. The Psalm closes with an anadiplosis, just as it began with one; and אלהינוּ affirms that the destruction of the persecutor will follow as surely as the church is able to call Jahve its God.