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68. Psalm 68

1 May God arise, may his enemies be scattered;
   may his foes flee before him.

2 May you blow them away like smoke—
   as wax melts before the fire,
   may the wicked perish before God.

3 But may the righteous be glad
   and rejoice before God;
   may they be happy and joyful.

    4 Sing to God, sing in praise of his name,
   extol him who rides on the clouds Or name, / prepare the way for him who rides through the deserts;
   rejoice before him—his name is the LORD.

5 A father to the fatherless, a defender of widows,
   is God in his holy dwelling.

6 God sets the lonely in families, Or the desolate in a homeland
   he leads out the prisoners with singing;
   but the rebellious live in a sun-scorched land.

    7 When you, God, went out before your people,
   when you marched through the wilderness, The Hebrew has Selah (a word of uncertain meaning) here and at the end of verses 19 and 32.

8 the earth shook, the heavens poured down rain,
   before God, the One of Sinai,
   before God, the God of Israel.

9 You gave abundant showers, O God;
   you refreshed your weary inheritance.

10 Your people settled in it,
   and from your bounty, God, you provided for the poor.

    11 The Lord announces the word,
   and the women who proclaim it are a mighty throng:

12 “Kings and armies flee in haste;
   the women at home divide the plunder.

13 Even while you sleep among the sheep pens, Or the campfires; or the saddlebags
   the wings of my dove are sheathed with silver,
   its feathers with shining gold.”

14 When the Almighty Hebrew Shaddai scattered the kings in the land,
   it was like snow fallen on Mount Zalmon.

    15 Mount Bashan, majestic mountain,
   Mount Bashan, rugged mountain,

16 why gaze in envy, you rugged mountain,
   at the mountain where God chooses to reign,
   where the LORD himself will dwell forever?

17 The chariots of God are tens of thousands
   and thousands of thousands;
   the Lord has come from Sinai into his sanctuary. Probable reading of the original Hebrew text; Masoretic Text Lord is among them at Sinai in holiness

18 When you ascended on high,
   you took many captives;
   you received gifts from people,
even from Or gifts for people, / even the rebellious—
   that you, Or they LORD God, might dwell there.

    19 Praise be to the Lord, to God our Savior,
   who daily bears our burdens.

20 Our God is a God who saves;
   from the Sovereign LORD comes escape from death.

21 Surely God will crush the heads of his enemies,
   the hairy crowns of those who go on in their sins.

22 The Lord says, “I will bring them from Bashan;
   I will bring them from the depths of the sea,

23 that your feet may wade in the blood of your foes,
   while the tongues of your dogs have their share.”

    24 Your procession, God, has come into view,
   the procession of my God and King into the sanctuary.

25 In front are the singers, after them the musicians;
   with them are the young women playing the timbrels.

26 Praise God in the great congregation;
   praise the LORD in the assembly of Israel.

27 There is the little tribe of Benjamin, leading them,
   there the great throng of Judah’s princes,
   and there the princes of Zebulun and of Naphtali.

    28 Summon your power, God Many Hebrew manuscripts, Septuagint and Syriac; most Hebrew manuscripts Your God has summoned power for you;
   show us your strength, our God, as you have done before.

29 Because of your temple at Jerusalem
   kings will bring you gifts.

30 Rebuke the beast among the reeds,
   the herd of bulls among the calves of the nations.
Humbled, may the beast bring bars of silver.
   Scatter the nations who delight in war.

31 Envoys will come from Egypt;
   Cush That is, the upper Nile region will submit herself to God.

    32 Sing to God, you kingdoms of the earth,
   sing praise to the Lord,

33 to him who rides across the highest heavens, the ancient heavens,
   who thunders with mighty voice.

34 Proclaim the power of God,
   whose majesty is over Israel,
   whose power is in the heavens.

35 You, God, are awesome in your sanctuary;
   the God of Israel gives power and strength to his people.

   Praise be to God!


22. The Lord said, I will bring back from Bashan. That the Israelites might not be led to take an irreligious and self-glorious view of their victories; that they might look to God as the author of them; and rest assured of his protection in time to come, David sends them back to the first periods of their history, and reminds them how their fathers had been originally brought by the victorious hand of God out of the lowest depths of trouble. He would have them argue that if God rescued his people at first from giants, and from the depths of the Red Sea, it was not to be imagined that he would desert them in similar dangers, but certain that he would defend them upon every emergency which might occur. The prophets are in the constant habit, as is well known, of illustrating the mercy of God by reference to the history of Israel’s redemption, that the Lord’s people, by looking back to their great original deliverance, might find an argument for expecting interpositions of a future kind. To make the deeper impression, God is introduced speaking himself. In what he says he may be considered as asserting his Divine prerogative of raising the dead to life again, for his people’s passage through the Red Sea, and victory over warlike giants, was a species of resurrection. 4444     Or, “I will bring again from Bashan,” may be thus explained. I will perform for my people the like wonders which I did in the days of old; I will render them victorious over their proud enemies, as I before enabled them to triumph in the conflict with Og king of Bashan, (Deuteronomy 3:3, 4;) and I will deliver them from the greatest dangers, as I saved them from the Red Sea, by opening up a passage for them through the midst of it. Some read, I will cause the enemy to fly from Bashan; 4545     Walford considers the persons here intended, not God’s people, but their enemies. “It is evident,” says he, “from the next verse, that the persons who are here meant are the enemies of God and his people; because the purpose for which they were to be brought was, that his people might completely triumph over them in their utter slaughter and destruction. These, he says, I will bring back from Bashan, and from the abysses of the sea; thus referring to the victories that had been gained over the kings of the Canaanites, and the triumph of Israel at the Red Sea. The design of this declaration is, to express the determination of God to bring forth all his enemies to destruction: be they on the heights of Bashan, or in the profoundest depths of the ocean, they shall not escape; his hand will lay hold upon them, and his power utterly destroy them. In Amos 9:2, and in Obadiah 4, there are two sublime illustrations of the sentiment that is here delivered.” “Bashan was east of Judea,” says Boothroyd, “and the sea in the west, so that the meaning is, that God would bring his enemies from every quarter to be slain by his people.” but this cannot be received, and does not agree with the context, as it follows, I will bring back from the depths of the sea In representing God as bedewed or stained with blood, David does not ascribe to him anything like cruelty, but designs to show the Lord’s people how dear and precious they are in his sight, considering the zeal which he manifests in their defense. We know that David himself was far from being a man of cruel disposition, and that he rejoiced in the destruction of the wicked from the purest and most upright motives, as affording a display of the Divine judgments. That is here ascribed to God which may be asserted equally of his Church or people, for the vengeance with which the wicked are visited is inflicted by their hands. Some read the close of the verse, the tongue of thy dogs in thine enemies, even in him, i.e., the king and chief of them all. This is not the meaning of the Psalmist, which simply is, that the tongues of the dogs would be red with licking blood, such would be the number of dead bodies scattered round.


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