Study

a Bible passage

Click a verse to see commentary
Select a resource above

44. Psalm 44

1 We have heard it with our ears, O God;
   our ancestors have told us
what you did in their days,
   in days long ago.

2 With your hand you drove out the nations
   and planted our ancestors;
you crushed the peoples
   and made our ancestors flourish.

3 It was not by their sword that they won the land,
   nor did their arm bring them victory;
it was your right hand, your arm,
   and the light of your face, for you loved them.

    4 You are my King and my God,
   who decrees Septuagint, Aquila and Syriac; Hebrew King, O God; / command victories for Jacob.

5 Through you we push back our enemies;
   through your name we trample our foes.

6 I put no trust in my bow,
   my sword does not bring me victory;

7 but you give us victory over our enemies,
   you put our adversaries to shame.

8 In God we make our boast all day long,
   and we will praise your name forever. The Hebrew has Selah (a word of uncertain meaning) here.

    9 But now you have rejected and humbled us;
   you no longer go out with our armies.

10 You made us retreat before the enemy,
   and our adversaries have plundered us.

11 You gave us up to be devoured like sheep
   and have scattered us among the nations.

12 You sold your people for a pittance,
   gaining nothing from their sale.

    13 You have made us a reproach to our neighbors,
   the scorn and derision of those around us.

14 You have made us a byword among the nations;
   the peoples shake their heads at us.

15 I live in disgrace all day long,
   and my face is covered with shame

16 at the taunts of those who reproach and revile me,
   because of the enemy, who is bent on revenge.

    17 All this came upon us,
   though we had not forgotten you;
   we had not been false to your covenant.

18 Our hearts had not turned back;
   our feet had not strayed from your path.

19 But you crushed us and made us a haunt for jackals;
   you covered us over with deep darkness.

    20 If we had forgotten the name of our God
   or spread out our hands to a foreign god,

21 would not God have discovered it,
   since he knows the secrets of the heart?

22 Yet for your sake we face death all day long;
   we are considered as sheep to be slaughtered.

    23 Awake, Lord! Why do you sleep?
   Rouse yourself! Do not reject us forever.

24 Why do you hide your face
   and forget our misery and oppression?

    25 We are brought down to the dust;
   our bodies cling to the ground.

26 Rise up and help us;
   rescue us because of your unfailing love.


13 Thou hast made us a reproach to our neighbors Here the Psalmist speaks of their neighbors, who were all actuated either by some secret ill-will, or avowed enmity to the people of God. And certainly it often happens, that neighborhood, which ought to be the means of preserving mutual friendship, engenders all discord and strife. But there was a special reason in respect of the Jews; for they had taken possession of the country in spite of all men, and their religion being hateful to others, so to speak, served as a trumpet to stir up war, and inflamed their neighbors with rage against them. Many, too, cherished towards them a feeling of jealousy, such as the Idumeans, who were inflated on the ground of their circumcision, and imagined that they also worshipped the God of Abraham as well as the Jews. But what proved the greatest calamity to them was, that they were exposed to the reproach and derision of those who hated them on the ground of their worship of the true God. The faithful illustrate still farther the greatness of their calamity by another circumstance, telling us, in the last clause of the verse, that they were met by reproaches on all sides; for they were beset round about by their enemies, so that they would never have enjoyed one moment of peace unless God had miraculously preserved them. Nay, they add still farther, (verse 14,) that they were a proverb, a byword, or jest, even among the nations that were far off. The word משל, mashal, which is translated proverb, might be taken in the sense of a heavy imprecation or curse, as well as of a byword or jest; but the sense will be substantially the same, namely, that there were no people under heaven held in greater detestation, insomuch that their very name was bandied about every where in proverbial allusions, as a term of reproach. To the same purpose also is the wagging, or shaking of the head, which occurs in Psalm 22, of which we have already spoken. There can be no doubt that the faithful recognised this as inflicted upon them by the vengeance of God, of which mention was made in the Law. In order to arouse themselves to the consideration of the judgments of God, they carefully compared with the threatenings of God all the punishments which he inflicted upon them. But the Law had declared beforehand, in express terms, this derision of the Gentiles, which they now relate as a thing that had come to pass, (Deuteronomy 28:3.) Moreover, when it is said, among the heathen, and among the people, the repetition is very emphatic and expressive; for it was a thing quite unseemly and intolerable, that the heathen nations should presume to torment with their scoffings the chosen people of God, and revile them by their blasphemies at their pleasure. That the godly complained not of these things without cause is abundantly obvious from a passage in Cicero, in his oration in defense of Flaccus, in which that heathen orator, with his accustomed pride, scoffs no less against God than against the Jews, asserting that it was perfectly clear that they were a nation hated of the gods, inasmuch as they had often, and, as it were, from age to age, been wasted with so many misfortunes, and in the end subjected to a most miserable bondage, and kept, as it were, under the feet of the Romans. 144144     “Et comme tenue sous les pieds des Romains.” — Fr.


VIEWNAME is study