Worthy.Bible » STRONG » Psalms » Chapter 66 » Verse 11

Psalms 66:11 King James Version with Strong's Concordance (STRONG)

11 Thou broughtest H935 us into the net; H4686 thou laidst H7760 affliction H4157 upon our loins. H4975

Cross Reference

Lamentations 3:2-66 STRONG

He hath led H5090 me, and brought H3212 me into darkness, H2822 but not into light. H216 Surely against me is he turned; H7725 he turneth H2015 his hand H3027 against me all the day. H3117 My flesh H1320 and my skin H5785 hath he made old; H1086 he hath broken H7665 my bones. H6106 He hath builded against H1129 me, and compassed H5362 me with gall H7219 and travail. H8513 He hath set H3427 me in dark places, H4285 as they that be dead H4191 of old. H5769 He hath hedged H1443 me about, that I cannot get out: H3318 he hath made my chain H5178 heavy. H3513 Also when I cry H2199 and shout, H7768 he shutteth out H5640 my prayer. H8605 He hath inclosed H1443 my ways H1870 with hewn stone, H1496 he hath made my paths H5410 crooked. H5753 He was unto me as a bear H1677 lying in wait, H693 and as a lion H738 in secret places. H4565 He hath turned aside H5493 my ways, H1870 and pulled me in pieces: H6582 he hath made H7760 me desolate. H8074 He hath bent H1869 his bow, H7198 and set H5324 me as a mark H4307 for the arrow. H2671 He hath caused the arrows H1121 of his quiver H827 to enter H935 into my reins. H3629 I was a derision H7814 to all my people; H5971 and their song H5058 all the day. H3117 He hath filled H7646 me with bitterness, H4844 he hath made me drunken H7301 with wormwood. H3939 He hath also broken H1638 my teeth H8127 with gravel stones, H2687 he hath covered H3728 me with ashes. H665 And thou hast removed H2186 my soul H5315 far off H2186 from peace: H7965 I forgat H5382 prosperity. H2896 And I said, H559 My strength H5331 and my hope H8431 is perished H6 from the LORD: H3068 Remembering H2142 mine affliction H6040 and my misery, H4788 the wormwood H3939 and the gall. H7219 My soul H5315 hath them still H2142 in remembrance, H2142 and is humbled H7743 in me. This I recall H7725 to my mind, H3820 therefore have I hope. H3176 It is of the LORD'S H3068 mercies H2617 that we are not consumed, H8552 because his compassions H7356 fail H3615 not. They are new H2319 every morning: H1242 great H7227 is thy faithfulness. H530 The LORD H3068 is my portion, H2506 saith H559 my soul; H5315 therefore will I hope H3176 in him. The LORD H3068 is good H2896 unto them that wait H6960 for him, to the soul H5315 that seeketh H1875 him. It is good H2896 that a man should both hope H3175 H2342 and quietly wait H1748 for the salvation H8668 of the LORD. H3068 It is good H2896 for a man H1397 that he bear H5375 the yoke H5923 in his youth. H5271 He sitteth H3427 alone H910 and keepeth silence, H1826 because he hath borne H5190 it upon him. He putteth H5414 his mouth H6310 in the dust; H6083 if so be there may be H3426 hope. H8615 He giveth H5414 his cheek H3895 to him that smiteth H5221 him: he is filled full H7646 with reproach. H2781 For the Lord H136 will not cast off H2186 for ever: H5769 But though he cause grief, H3013 yet will he have compassion H7355 according to the multitude H7230 of his mercies. H2617 For he doth not afflict H6031 willingly H3820 nor grieve H3013 the children H1121 of men. H376 To crush H1792 under his feet H7272 all the prisoners H615 of the earth, H776 To turn aside H5186 the right H4941 of a man H1397 before the face H6440 of the most High, H5945 To subvert H5791 a man H120 in his cause, H7379 the Lord H136 approveth H7200 not. Who is he that saith, H559 and it cometh to pass, when the Lord H136 commandeth H6680 it not? Out of the mouth H6310 of the most High H5945 proceedeth H3318 not evil H7451 and good? H2896 Wherefore doth a living H2416 man H120 complain, H596 a man H1397 for the punishment of his sins? H2399 Let us search H2664 and try H2713 our ways, H1870 and turn again H7725 to the LORD. H3068 Let us lift up H5375 our heart H3824 with our hands H3709 unto God H410 in the heavens. H8064 We H5168 have transgressed H6586 and have rebelled: H4784 thou hast not pardoned. H5545 Thou hast covered H5526 with anger, H639 and persecuted H7291 us: thou hast slain, H2026 thou hast not pitied. H2550 Thou hast covered H5526 thyself with a cloud, H6051 that our prayer H8605 should not pass through. H5674 Thou hast made H7760 us as the offscouring H5501 and refuse H3973 in the midst H7130 of the people. H5971 All our enemies H341 have opened H6475 their mouths H6310 against us. Fear H6343 and a snare H6354 is come upon us, desolation H7612 and destruction. H7667 Mine eye H5869 runneth down H3381 with rivers H6388 of water H4325 for the destruction H7667 of the daughter H1323 of my people. H5971 Mine eye H5869 trickleth down, H5064 and ceaseth H1820 not, without any intermission, H2014 Till the LORD H3068 look down, H8259 and behold H7200 from heaven. H8064 Mine eye H5869 affecteth H5953 mine heart H5315 because of all the daughters H1323 of my city. H5892 Mine enemies H341 chased H6679 me sore, H6679 like a bird, H6833 without cause. H2600 They have cut off H6789 my life H2416 in the dungeon, H953 and cast H3034 a stone H68 upon me. Waters H4325 flowed over H6687 mine head; H7218 then I said, H559 I am cut off. H1504 I called H7121 upon thy name, H8034 O LORD, H3068 out of the low H8482 dungeon. H953 Thou hast heard H8085 my voice: H6963 hide H5956 not thine ear H241 at my breathing, H7309 at my cry. H7775 Thou drewest near H7126 in the day H3117 that I called H7121 upon thee: thou saidst, H559 Fear H3372 not. O Lord, H136 thou hast pleaded H7378 the causes H7379 of my soul; H5315 thou hast redeemed H1350 my life. H2416 O LORD, H3068 thou hast seen H7200 my wrong: H5792 judge H8199 thou my cause. H4941 Thou hast seen H7200 all their vengeance H5360 and all their imaginations H4284 against me. Thou hast heard H8085 their reproach, H2781 O LORD, H3068 and all their imaginations H4284 against me; The lips H8193 of those that rose up H6965 against me, and their device H1902 against me all the day. H3117 Behold H5027 their sitting down, H3427 and their rising up; H7012 I am their musick. H4485 Render H7725 unto them a recompence, H1576 O LORD, H3068 according to the work H4639 of their hands. H3027 Give H5414 them sorrow H4044 of heart, H3820 thy curse H8381 unto them. Persecute H7291 and destroy H8045 them in anger H639 from under the heavens H8064 of the LORD. H3068

Worthy.Bible » Commentaries » Keil & Delitzsch Commentary » Commentary on Psalms 66

Commentary on Psalms 66 Keil & Delitzsch Commentary


Introduction

Thanksgiving for a National and Personal Deliverance

From Psalms 65:1-13 onwards we find ourselves in the midst of a series of Psalms which, with a varying arrangement of the words, are inscribed both מזמור and שׁיר (Ps 65-68). The two words שׁיר מזמור stand according to the accents in the stat. constr . (Psalms 88:1), and therefore signify a Psalm-song .

(Note: If it were meant to be rendered canticum psalmus (not psalmi ) it would surely have been accented למנצּח שׁיר מזמור (for למנצח שׁיר מזמור , according to section xviii. of the Accentuationssystem ).)

This series, as is universally the case, is arranged according to the community of prominent watchwords. In Psalms 65:2 we read: “To Thee is the vow paid,” and in Psalms 66:13 : “I will pay Thee my vows;” in Psalms 66:20 : “Blessed be Elohim,” and in Psalms 67:8: “Elohim shall bless us.” Besides, Ps 66 and Psalms 67:1-7 have this feature in common, that למנצח , which occurs fifty-five times in the Psalter, is accompanied by the name of the poet in every instance, with the exception of these two anonymous Psalms. The frequently occurring Sela of both Psalms also indicates that they were intended to have a musical accompaniment. These annotations referring to the temple-music favour the pre-exilic rather than the post-exilic origin of the two Psalms. Both are purely Elohimic; only in one instance (Psalms 6:1-10 :18) does אדני , equally belonging to this style of Psalm, alternate with Elohim .

On the ground of some deliverance out of oppressive bondage that has been experienced by Israel arises in Psalms 66 the summons to the whole earth to raise a shout of praise unto God. The congregation is the subject speaking as far as Psalms 66:12. From Psalms 66:13 the person of the poet appears in the foreground; but that which brings him under obligation to present a thank-offering is nothing more nor less than that which the whole congregation, and he together with it, has experienced. It is hardly possible to define this event more minutely. The lofty consciousness of possessing a God to whom all the world must bow, whether cheerfully or against its will, became strong among the Jewish people more especially after the overthrow of Assyria in the reign of Hezekiah. But there is no ground for conjecturing either Isaiah or Hezekiah to be the composer of this Psalm. If עולם in Psalms 66:7 signified the world (Hitzig), then he would be (vid., Psalms 24:9) one of the latest among the Old Testament writers; but it has the same meaning here that it has everywhere else in Old Testament Hebrew.

In the Greek Church this Psalm is called Ψαλμὸς ἀναστάσεως ; the lxx gives it this inscription, perhaps with reference to Psalms 66:12, ἐξήγαγες ἡμᾶς εἰς ἀναψυχήν .


Verses 1-4

The phrase שׂים כבוד ל signifies “to give glory to God” in other passages (Joshua 7:19; Isaiah 42:12), here with a second accusative, either (1) if we take תּהלּתו as an accusative of the object: facite laudationem ejus gloriam = gloriosam (Maurer and others), or (2) if we take כבוד as an accusative of the object and the former word as an accusative of the predicate: reddite honorem laudem ejus (Hengstenberg), or (3) also by taking תהלתו as an apposition: reddite honorem, scil. laudem ejus (Hupfeld). We prefer the middle rendering: give glory as His praise, i.e., to Him as or for praise. It is unnecessary, with Hengstenberg, to render: How terrible art Thou in Thy works! in that case אתּה ought not to be wanting. מעשׂיך might more readily be singular (Hupfeld, Hitzig); but these forms with the softened Jod of the root dwindle down to only a few instances upon closer consideration. The singular of the predicate (what a terrible affair) here, as frequently, e.g., Psalms 119:137, precedes the plural designating things. The song into which the Psalmist here bids the nations break forth, is essentially one with the song of the heavenly harpers in Revelation 15:3., which begins, Μεγάλα καὶ θαυμαστὰ τὰ ἔργα σου .


Verses 5-7

Although the summons: Come and see... (borrowed apparently from Psalms 46:9), is called forth by contemporary manifestations of God's power, the consequences of which now lie open to view, the rendering of Psalms 66:6 , “then will we rejoice in Him,” is nevertheless unnatural, and, rightly looked at, neither grammar nor the matter requires it. For since שׁם in this passage is equivalent to אז , and the future after אז takes the signification of an aorist; and since the cohortative form of the future can also (e.g., after עד , Psalms 73:7, and in clauses having a hypothetical sense) be referred to the past, and does sometimes at least occur where the writer throws himself back into the past (2 Samuel 22:38), the rendering: Then did we rejoice in Him, cannot be assailed on syntactical grounds. On the “we,” cf. Joshua 5:1, Chethîb , Hosea 12:1-14 :54. The church of all ages is a unity, the separate parts being jointly involved in the whole. The church here directs the attention of all the world to the mighty deeds of God at the time of the deliverance from Egypt, viz., the laying of the Red Sea and of Jordan dry, inasmuch as it can say in Psalms 66:7, by reason of that which it has experienced ibn the present, that the sovereign power of God is ever the same: its God rules in His victorious might עולם , i.e., not “over the world,” because that ought to be בּעולם , but “in eternity” (accusative of duration, as in Psalms 89:2., Psalms 45:7), and therefore, as in the former days, so also in all time to come. His eyes keep searching watch among the peoples; the rebellious, who struggle agaisnt His yoke and persecute His people, had better not rise, it may go ill with them. The Chethîb runs ירימוּ , for which the Kerî is ירוּמוּ . The meaning remains the same; הרים can (even without יד , ראשׁ , קרן , Psalms 65:5) mean “to practise exaltation,” superbire . By means of למו this proud bearing is designated as being egotistical, and as unrestrainedly boastful. Only let them not imagine themselves secure in their arrogance! There is One more exalted, whose eye nothing escapes, and to whose irresistible might whatever is not conformed to His gracious will succumbs.


Verses 8-12

The character of the event by which the truth has been verified that the God who redeemed Israel out of Egypt still ever possesses and exercises to the full His ancient sovereign power, is seen from this reiterated call to the peoples to share in Israel's Gloria . God has averted the peril of death and overthrow from His people: He has put their soul in life ( בּחיּים , like בּישׁע in Psalms 12:6), i.e., in the realm of life; He has not abandoned their foot to tottering unto overthrow (mowT the substantive, as in Psalms 121:3; cf. the reversed construction in Psalms 55:23). For God has cast His people as it were into a smelting-furnace or fining-pot in order to purify and to prove them by suffering; - this is a favourite figure with Isaiah and Jeremiah, but is also found in Zechariah 13:9; Malachi 3:3. Ezekiel 19:9 is decisive concerning the meaning of מצוּדה , where הביא במצודות signifies “to bring into the holds or prisons;” besides, the figure of the fowling-net (although this is also called מצוּדה as well as מצודה ) has no footing here in the context. מצוּדה (vid., Psalms 18:3) signifies specula , and that both a natural and an artificial watch-post on a mountain; here it is the mountain-hold or prison of the enemy, as a figure of the total loss of freedom. The laying on of a heavy burden mentioned by the side of it in Psalms 66:11 also accords well with this. מוּעקה , a being oppressed, the pressure of a burden, is a Hophal formation, like מטּה , a being spread out, Isaiah 8:8; cf. the similar masculine forms in Psalms 69:3; Isaiah 8:13; Isaiah 14:6; Isaiah 29:3. The loins are mentioned because when carrying heavy loads, which one has to stoop down in order to take up, the lower spinal region is called into exercise. אנושׁ is frequently (Psalms 9:20., Psalms 10:18; Psalms 56:2, Isaiah 51:12; 2 Chronicles 14:10) the word used for tyrants as being wretched mortals, perishable creatures, in contrast with their all the more revolting, imperious, and self-deified demeanour. God so ordered it, that “wretched men” rode upon Israel's head. Or is it to be interpreted: He caused them to pass over Israel (cf. Psalms 129:3; Isaiah 51:23)? It can scarcely mean this, since it would then be in dorso nostro , which the Latin versions capriciously substitute. The preposition ל instead of על is used with reference to the phrase ישׁב ל : sitting upon Israel's head, God caused them to ride along, so that Israel was not able to raise its head freely, but was most ignominiously wounded in its self-esteem. Fire and water are, as in Isaiah 43:2, a figure of vicissitudes and perils of the most extreme character. Israel was nigh to being burnt up and drowned, but God led it forth לרויה , to an abundant fulness, to abundance and superabundance of prosperity. The lxx, which renders εἰς ἀναψυχήν (Jerome absolutely: in refrigerium ), has read לרוחה ; Symmachus, εἰς εὐρυχωρίαν , probably reading לרחבה (Psalms 119:45; Psalms 18:20). Both give a stronger antithesis. But the state of straitness or oppression was indeed also a state of privation.


Verses 13-15

From this point onwards the poet himself speaks, but, as the diversity and the kind of the sacrifices show, as being a member of the community at large. The עולות stand first, the girts of adoring homage; בּ is the Beth of the accompaniment, as in Leviticus 16:3; 1 Samuel 1:24, cf. Hebrews 9:25. “My vows” refer more especially to פּצה פּה ׃שׁלמי נדר also occurs elsewhere of the involuntary vowing to do extraordinary things urged from one by great distress (Judges 11:35). אשׁר is an accusative of the object relating to the vows, quae aperuerunt = aperiendo nuncupaverunt labia mea (Geier). In Psalms 66:15 עשׂה , used directly (like the Aramaic and Phoenician עבד ) in the signification “to sacrifice” (Exodus 29:36-41, and frequently), alternates with העלה , the synonym of הקטיר . The sacrifices to be presented are enumerated. מיחים (incorrect for מחים ) are marrowy, fat lambs; lambs and bullocks ( בּקר ) have the most universal appropriation among the animals that were fit for sacrifices. The ram ( איל ), on the contrary, is the animal for the whole burnt-offering of the high priest, of the princes of the tribes, and of the people; and appears also as the animal for the shelamim only in connection with the shelamim of Aaron, of the people, of the princes of the tribes, and, in Numbers 6:14, of the Nazarite. The younger he-goat ( עתּוּד ) is never mentioned as an animal for the whole burnt-offering; but, indeed, as an animal for the shelamim of the princes of the tribes in Num. 7. It is, therefore, probable that the shelamim which were to be offered in close connection with the whole burnt-offerings are introduced by עם , so that קטרת signifies the fat portions of the shelamim upon the altar smoking in the fire. The mention of “rams” renders it necessary that we should regard the poet as here comprehending himself among the people when he speaks thus.


Verses 16-20

The words in Psalms 66:16 are addressed in the widest extent, as in Psalms 66:5 and Psalms 66:2, to all who fear God, wheresoever such are to be found on the face of the earth. To all these, for the glory of God and for their own profit, he would gladly relate what God has made him to experience. The individual-looking expression לנפשׁי is not opposed to the fact of the occurrence of a marvellous answering of prayer, to which he refers, being one which has been experienced by him in common with the whole congregation. He cried unto God with his mouth (that is to say, not merely silently in spirit, but audibly and importunately), and a hymn ( רומם ,

(Note: Kimchi (Michlol 146 a ) and Parchon (under רמם ) read רומם with Pathach ; and Heidenheim and Baer have adopted it.)

something that rises, collateral form to רומם , as עולל and שׁובב to עולל and שׁובב ) was under my tongue; i.e., I became also at once so sure of my being heard, that I even had the song of praise in readiness (vid., Psalms 10:7), with which I had determined to break forth when the help for which I had prayed, and which was assured to me, should arrive. For the purpose of his heart was not at any time, in contradiction to his words, און , God-abhorred vileness or worthlessness; ראה with the accusative, as in Genesis 20:10; Psalms 37:37 : to aim at, or design anything, to have it in one's eye. We render: If I had aimed at evil in my heart, the Lord would not hear; not: He would not have heard, but: He would not on any occasion hear. For a hypocritical prayer, coming from a heart which has not its aim sincerely directed towards Him, He does not hear. The idea that such a heart was not hidden behind his prayer is refuted in Psalms 66:19 from the result, which is of a totally opposite character. In the closing doxology the accentuation rightly takes תּפלּתי וחסדּו as belonging together. Prayer and mercy stand in the relation to one another of call and echo. When God turns away from a man his prayer and His mercy, He commands him to be silent and refuses him a favourable answer. The poet, however, praises God that He has deprived him neither of the joyfulness of prayer nor the proof of His favour. In this sense Augustine makes the following practical observation on this passage: Cum videris non a te amotam deprecationem tuam, securus esto, quia non est a te amota misericordia ejus .