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77. Psalm 77

1 I cried out to God for help;
   I cried out to God to hear me.

2 When I was in distress, I sought the Lord;
   at night I stretched out untiring hands,
   and I would not be comforted.

    3 I remembered you, God, and I groaned;
   I meditated, and my spirit grew faint. The Hebrew has Selah (a word of uncertain meaning) here and at the end of verses 9 and 15.

4 You kept my eyes from closing;
   I was too troubled to speak.

5 I thought about the former days,
   the years of long ago;

6 I remembered my songs in the night.
   My heart meditated and my spirit asked:

    7 “Will the Lord reject forever?
   Will he never show his favor again?

8 Has his unfailing love vanished forever?
   Has his promise failed for all time?

9 Has God forgotten to be merciful?
   Has he in anger withheld his compassion?”

    10 Then I thought, “To this I will appeal:
   the years when the Most High stretched out his right hand.

11 I will remember the deeds of the LORD;
   yes, I will remember your miracles of long ago.

12 I will consider all your works
   and meditate on all your mighty deeds.”

    13 Your ways, God, are holy.
   What god is as great as our God?

14 You are the God who performs miracles;
   you display your power among the peoples.

15 With your mighty arm you redeemed your people,
   the descendants of Jacob and Joseph.

    16 The waters saw you, God,
   the waters saw you and writhed;
   the very depths were convulsed.

17 The clouds poured down water,
   the heavens resounded with thunder;
   your arrows flashed back and forth.

18 Your thunder was heard in the whirlwind,
   your lightning lit up the world;
   the earth trembled and quaked.

19 Your path led through the sea,
   your way through the mighty waters,
   though your footprints were not seen.

    20 You led your people like a flock
   by the hand of Moses and Aaron.


19. Thy ways are in the sea. The miracle which was wrought in drying up the Red Sea is here again described in different phraseology. What, properly speaking, refers to the Israelites is applied to God, under whose protection and guidance they passed dry-shod through the midst of the Red Sea. It is declared that a path had been opened up for them in a very strange and unusual manner; for the sea was not drained by the skill of man, nor was the river Jordan turned aside from its ordinary course into a different channel, but the people walked through the midst of the waters in which Pharaoh and his whole army were soon after drowned. On this account, it is said, that the footsteps of God were not known, for no sooner had God made the people to pass over than he caused the waters to return to their accustomed course. 305305     “Thy footsteps are not known; not by the Egyptians, who essayed to follow after the people of Israel, with the Lord at the head of them, nor by any since; for the waters returned and covered the place on which the Israelites went as on dry ground; so that no footsteps or traces were to be seen at all ever since; and such are the ways of God, many of them in providence as well as in grace, Romans 11:33.” — Dr Gill.

The purpose for which this was effected is added in the 20th verse, — the deliverance of the Church: Thou didst lead thy people like a flock. 306306     “After the sublime and awful imagery of the four preceding verses, in which thunders and lightnings, storms and tempests, rain, hail, and earthquakes, the ministers of the Almighty’s displeasure, are brought together and exhibited in the most impressive colours; nothing can be, more exquisite than the calmness and tranquillity of this concluding verse, on which the mind reposes with sensations of refreshment and delight.” — Mant. And this deliverance should be regarded by all the godly as affording them the best encouragement to cherish the hope of safety and salvation. The comparison of the people to sheep, tacitly intimates that they were in themselves entirely destitute of wisdom, power, and courage, and that God, in his great goodness, condescended to perform the office of a shepherd in leading through the sea, and the wilderness, and all other impediments, his poor flock, which were destitute of all things, that he might put them in possession of the promised inheritance. This statement is confirmed, when we are told that Moses and Aaron were the persons employed in conducting the people. Their service was no doubt illustrious and worthy of being remembered; but God displayed in no small degree the greatness of his power in opposing two obscure and despised individuals to the fury and to the great and powerful army of one of the proudest kings who ever sat on a throne. What could the rod of an outlaw and a fugitive, and the voice of a poor slave, have done of themselves, against a formidable tyrant and a warlike nation? The power of God then was the more manifest when it wrought in such earthen vessels. At the same time, I do not deny that it is here intended to commend these servants of God, to whom he had committed such an honorable trust.


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