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78. Psalm 78

1 My people, hear my teaching;
   listen to the words of my mouth.

2 I will open my mouth with a parable;
   I will utter hidden things, things from of old—

3 things we have heard and known,
   things our ancestors have told us.

4 We will not hide them from their descendants;
   we will tell the next generation
the praiseworthy deeds of the LORD,
   his power, and the wonders he has done.

5 He decreed statutes for Jacob
   and established the law in Israel,
which he commanded our ancestors
   to teach their children,

6 so the next generation would know them,
   even the children yet to be born,
   and they in turn would tell their children.

7 Then they would put their trust in God
   and would not forget his deeds
   but would keep his commands.

8 They would not be like their ancestors—
   a stubborn and rebellious generation,
whose hearts were not loyal to God,
   whose spirits were not faithful to him.

    9 The men of Ephraim, though armed with bows,
   turned back on the day of battle;

10 they did not keep God’s covenant
   and refused to live by his law.

11 They forgot what he had done,
   the wonders he had shown them.

12 He did miracles in the sight of their ancestors
   in the land of Egypt, in the region of Zoan.

13 He divided the sea and led them through;
   he made the water stand up like a wall.

14 He guided them with the cloud by day
   and with light from the fire all night.

15 He split the rocks in the wilderness
   and gave them water as abundant as the seas;

16 he brought streams out of a rocky crag
   and made water flow down like rivers.

    17 But they continued to sin against him,
   rebelling in the wilderness against the Most High.

18 They willfully put God to the test
   by demanding the food they craved.

19 They spoke against God;
   they said, “Can God really
   spread a table in the wilderness?

20 True, he struck the rock,
   and water gushed out,
   streams flowed abundantly,
but can he also give us bread?
   Can he supply meat for his people?”

21 When the LORD heard them, he was furious;
   his fire broke out against Jacob,
   and his wrath rose against Israel,

22 for they did not believe in God
   or trust in his deliverance.

23 Yet he gave a command to the skies above
   and opened the doors of the heavens;

24 he rained down manna for the people to eat,
   he gave them the grain of heaven.

25 Human beings ate the bread of angels;
   he sent them all the food they could eat.

26 He let loose the east wind from the heavens
   and by his power made the south wind blow.

27 He rained meat down on them like dust,
   birds like sand on the seashore.

28 He made them come down inside their camp,
   all around their tents.

29 They ate till they were gorged—
   he had given them what they craved.

30 But before they turned from what they craved,
   even while the food was still in their mouths,

31 God’s anger rose against them;
   he put to death the sturdiest among them,
   cutting down the young men of Israel.

    32 In spite of all this, they kept on sinning;
   in spite of his wonders, they did not believe.

33 So he ended their days in futility
   and their years in terror.

34 Whenever God slew them, they would seek him;
   they eagerly turned to him again.

35 They remembered that God was their Rock,
   that God Most High was their Redeemer.

36 But then they would flatter him with their mouths,
   lying to him with their tongues;

37 their hearts were not loyal to him,
   they were not faithful to his covenant.

38 Yet he was merciful;
   he forgave their iniquities
   and did not destroy them.
Time after time he restrained his anger
   and did not stir up his full wrath.

39 He remembered that they were but flesh,
   a passing breeze that does not return.

    40 How often they rebelled against him in the wilderness
   and grieved him in the wasteland!

41 Again and again they put God to the test;
   they vexed the Holy One of Israel.

42 They did not remember his power—
   the day he redeemed them from the oppressor,

43 the day he displayed his signs in Egypt,
   his wonders in the region of Zoan.

44 He turned their river into blood;
   they could not drink from their streams.

45 He sent swarms of flies that devoured them,
   and frogs that devastated them.

46 He gave their crops to the grasshopper,
   their produce to the locust.

47 He destroyed their vines with hail
   and their sycamore-figs with sleet.

48 He gave over their cattle to the hail,
   their livestock to bolts of lightning.

49 He unleashed against them his hot anger,
   his wrath, indignation and hostility—
   a band of destroying angels.

50 He prepared a path for his anger;
   he did not spare them from death
   but gave them over to the plague.

51 He struck down all the firstborn of Egypt,
   the firstfruits of manhood in the tents of Ham.

52 But he brought his people out like a flock;
   he led them like sheep through the wilderness.

53 He guided them safely, so they were unafraid;
   but the sea engulfed their enemies.

54 And so he brought them to the border of his holy land,
   to the hill country his right hand had taken.

55 He drove out nations before them
   and allotted their lands to them as an inheritance;
   he settled the tribes of Israel in their homes.

    56 But they put God to the test
   and rebelled against the Most High;
   they did not keep his statutes.

57 Like their ancestors they were disloyal and faithless,
   as unreliable as a faulty bow.

58 They angered him with their high places;
   they aroused his jealousy with their idols.

59 When God heard them, he was furious;
   he rejected Israel completely.

60 He abandoned the tabernacle of Shiloh,
   the tent he had set up among humans.

61 He sent the ark of his might into captivity,
   his splendor into the hands of the enemy.

62 He gave his people over to the sword;
   he was furious with his inheritance.

63 Fire consumed their young men,
   and their young women had no wedding songs;

64 their priests were put to the sword,
   and their widows could not weep.

    65 Then the Lord awoke as from sleep,
   as a warrior wakes from the stupor of wine.

66 He beat back his enemies;
   he put them to everlasting shame.

67 Then he rejected the tents of Joseph,
   he did not choose the tribe of Ephraim;

68 but he chose the tribe of Judah,
   Mount Zion, which he loved.

69 He built his sanctuary like the heights,
   like the earth that he established forever.

70 He chose David his servant
   and took him from the sheep pens;

71 from tending the sheep he brought him
   to be the shepherd of his people Jacob,
   of Israel his inheritance.

72 And David shepherded them with integrity of heart;
   with skillful hands he led them.


9. The children of Ephraim being armed, and shooting with the bow. The sacred writer sets before us an example of this unfaithfulness in the children of Ephraim. As those who are pertinaciously set upon doing evil are not easily led to repentance and reformation by simple instruction, the punishments with which God visited the children of Ephraim are brought forward, and by these it is proved that they were reprobates. Since they were a warlike people, it was an evidence of the divine displeasure for them to turn their backs in battle. And it is expressly declared, that they were skillful in shooting with the bow; 317317     Of the Ephraimites shooting with the bow, or being archers, we have an intimation in Genesis 49:24, where, in Jacob’s blessing on Joseph, the father of Ephraim, it is said, “His bow abode in strength.” for it is an additional stigma to represent such as were armed with weapons to wound their enemies at a distance as fleeing through fear. From this, it is the more abundantly manifest that they had incurred the displeasure of God, who not only deprived them of his aid, but also made their hearts effeminate in the hour of danger.

Here the question may be raised, Why the children of Ephraim only are blamed, when we find a little before, all the tribes in general comprehended in the same sentence of condemnation? Some commentators refer this to the slaughter of the sons of Ephraim by the men of Gath, who came forth against them to recover their cattle of which they had been despoiled, 1 Chronicles 7:20, 21, 22. 318318     Dr Morison supposes, that the history here referred to, is that of the Israelites going up contrary to the divine command to take possession of the promised land, when, for their temerity, they were smitten and humbled before their enemies. (Deuteronomy 1:42.) “The tribe of Ephraim,” he observes, “is doubtless specially singled out, because they were the most warlike of all the chosen tribes, and because, perhaps, they led on the other tribes to the fatal act of rebellion against the expressed will of the God of Israel.” This, perhaps, may be considered as receiving some support from comparing the number of the tribe of Ephraim (Numbers 2:19) when they came out of Egypt, with their number when taken in the plains of Moab, at the termination of their wanderings in the wilderness, (Numbers 26:37.) At the former period, they amounted to 40,500, at the latter, to 32,500, eight thousand less; whereas, during those forty years the other tribes had considerably increased. But this exposition is too restricted. Perhaps the kingdom of Israel had fallen into decay, and had been almost ruined when this psalm was composed. It is therefore better to follow the opinion of other interpreters, who think, that by the figure synecdoche, the children of Ephraim are put for the whole people. But these interpreters pass over without consideration the fact, which ought not to be overlooked, that the Ephraimites are purposely named because they were the means of leading others into that rebellion which took place when Jeroboam set up the calves, (1 Kings 12:25-33.) What we have already said must be borne in mind, that towards the close of the psalm, the rejection of the tribe of Ephraim is, not, without cause, contrasted with the election of the tribe of Judah. The children of Ephraim are also here spoken of by way of comparison, to warn the true children of Abraham from the example of those who cut themselves off from the Church, and yet boasted of the title of the Church without exhibiting holy fruits in their life. 319319     “Sans en monstrer les fruicts en leur vie.” — Fr. As they surpassed all the other tribes in number and wealth, their influence was too powerful in beguiling the simple; but of this the prophet now strips them, showing that they were deprived of the aid of God.


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