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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.


3 For they got not possession of the land by their own sword. Here the sacred writer confirms by contrast what he has just said; for if they obtained not possession of the land by their own power and skill, it follows that they were planted in it by the hand of another. The multitude of men who went out of Egypt was very great; but not being trained to the art of war, and accustomed only to servile works, they would soon have been defeated by their enemies, who far excelled them in numbers and strength. In short, there were not wanting evident signs by which the people were made to know as well their own weakness as the power of God; so that it was their bounden duty to confess that the land was not conquered by their own sword, and also, that it was the hand of God which had preserved them. The Psalmist, not content with mentioning thy right hand, adds, thy arm, to amplify the matter, and give greater weight to his discourse, that we may know that they were preserved in a wonderful manner, and not by any ordinary means. The light of thy countenance is here taken, as in other places, for the manifestation of the divine favor. As, on the one hand, when God is afflicting us severely, he seems to frown upon us, and to overshadow his face with thick clouds; so, on the other, when the Israelites, sustained by his power, overthrew their enemies without any great difficulty, and pursued them in every direction far and near, it is said, that then they beheld the face of God serene and placid, just as if he had manifested himself in a visible manner near them. Here it is necessary to observe the mode of reasoning which the prophet employs, when he argues that it is by the free gift of God that the people obtained the land in heritage, seeing they had not acquired it by their own power. We then truly begin to yield to God what belongs to him, when we consider how worthless our own strength is. And certainly, the reason why men, as it were through disdain, conceal and forget the benefits which God has conferred on them, must be owing to a delusive imagination, which leads them to arrogate somewhat to themselves as properly their own. The best means, therefore, of cherishing in us habitually a spirit of gratitude towards God, is to expel from our minds this foolish opinion of our own ability. There is still in the concluding part of the verse another expression, which contains a more illustrious testimony to the grace of God, when the Psalmist resolves the whole into the good pleasure of God: Thou hadst a favor for them. The prophet does not suppose any worthiness in the person of Abraham, nor imagine any desert in his posterity, on account of which God dealt so bountifully with them, but ascribes the whole to the good pleasure of God. His words seem to be taken from the solemn declaration of Moses,

“The Lord did not set his love upon you, nor choose you, because ye were more in number than any people; (for ye were the fewest of all people;) but because the Lord loved you,” (Deuteronomy 7:7, 8.)

Special mention is here made of the land of Canaan; but the prophet has stated the general principle why it was that God vouchsafed to reckon that people for his flock and peculiar heritage. And certainly, the source and origin of the Church is the free love of God; and whatever benefits he bestows upon his Church, they all proceed from the same source. The reason, therefore, why we are gathered into the Church, and are nourished and defended by the hand of God, is only to be sought in God. Nor does the Psalmist here treat of the general benevolence of God, which extends to the whole human race; but he discourses of the difference which exists between the elect and the rest of the world; and the cause of this difference is here referred to the mere good pleasure of God.


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