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Psalms 146

Cambridge

This Psalm is “the praise of Jehovah as the one true Helper.” Israel is warned against putting its trust in men, however powerful they may seem for the moment to be—a warning demanded perhaps by the particular circumstances and tendencies of the time—and reminded of the privileges it enjoys in the guardianship of Jehovah, the celebration of Whose power, beneficence, and eternal dominion forms the main subject of the Psalm. It is the first of the five ‘Hallelujah Psalms’ with which the Psalter ends, and it has several points of contact with Psalms 145[88]. [88] Cp. Psalms 146:2 with Psalms 145:2; Psalms 145:5; Psalms 145:7 with Psalms 145:15; Psalms 146:8 with Psalms 145:14; Psalms 146:10 with Psalms 145:13.To this and the three following Psalms (145–148 of LXX = 146–148 of Heb., 147 being divided), the LXX prefixes the title of Haggai and Zechariah, as it does to Psalms 138. Whether this title represents some tradition, or was simply a conjecture from the use of these Psalms in the services of the Second Temple, is quite uncertain. They can however hardly be earlier than the time of Nehemiah, to the circumstances of which Psalms 147, vv3, 4 of this Psalm may refer. The use of Psalms 146-150 in the daily Morning Service of the Synagogue is of great antiquity, though not, according to Dr Schiller-Szinessy, so ancient as that of Psalms 145.

Psalms 146:1

  1. Praise ve Jah] Hallelujah! See note on Psalms 104:35. The words are omitted in P.B.V. as belonging to the title rather than to the Psalm. praise Jehovah, O my soul] Cp. Bless Jehovah, O my soul, Psalms 103:1; Psalms 103:22; Psalms 104:1; Psalms 104:35. In this and the following verse the worship of the congregation is individualised: the Psalmist speaks for himself, and offers to each worshipper words wherewith to stir himself up to praise, and to express his purpose.

Psalms 146:2

  1. Almost identical with Psalms 104:33.

Psalms 146:3-4

3, 4. The central thought of the Ps., expressed in Psalms 146:5 ff., is prefaced by a warning against the temptation to rely upon the favour and protection of men, however powerful. Princes to-day, they may be I dust to-morrow; and their loftiest schemes crumble into dust with them.

Psalms 146:4

  1. Cp. Psalms 104:29; Isaiah 2:22. to his earth] The ‘ground’ (ãdâmâh) from which he was taken and ‘of which his name (âdâm = ‘man’) reminds him. his thoughts] Or, purposes. The word is common in Aramaic, but occurs here only in the Heb. of the O.T. The author of 1 Macc, appears to have had both this passage and Psalms 104:29 in his mind when he wrote (1Ma 2:63), “To-day he will be exalted, and to-morrow he will not be found, because he is returned to his dust, and his thought is perished.”

Psalms 146:5

  1. Happy is he, whose help is the God of Jacob; Whose hope resteth upon Jehovah his God. Cp. Psalms 33:12; Psalms 144:15; Psalms 20:1. The word for hope is Aramaic, and is found elsewhere only in Psalms 119:116 : the cognate verb is used in Psalms 145:15 (A.V. wait).

Psalms 146:6

  1. The omnipotence and faithfulness of Jehovah are contrasted with the frailty and transitoriness of man (Psalms 146:3-4). For similar references to the power of Jehovah manifested in creation as a ground for trusting Him see Psalms 121:2; Psalms 124:8; cp. Nehemiah 9:6; Acts 4:24. all that in them is] In heaven and earth and sea; all being wherever found. Cp. Exodus 20:11.

Psalms 146:7

  1. Illustrations of Jehovah’s beneficent action, not without allusion to the circumstances of Israel. Observe how these Divine works were literally manifested in Christ’s miracles. 7 a is abbreviated from Psalms 103:6; with 7 b cp. Psalms 107:9. the Lord &c.] Five times the name of Jehovah stands emphatically at the beginning of the line, to shew that it is He and no other Who does all these things. Prison may be a figure for exile, or for suffering generally (cp. Psalms 107:10; Psalms 107:14). Releasing from prison and giving sight to the blind are coupled together in Isaiah 42:7; Isaiah 61:1, “to prisoners opening of eyes.”

Psalms 146:8

  1. Blindness is a figure for moral and spiritual ignorance and insensibility, and helplessness in general. Cp. Isaiah 29:18; Isaiah 35:5; Deuteronomy 28:19; Job 12:25; Isaiah 59:9-10. raiseth up them that are bowed down] As Psalms 145:14. loveth] And therefore, as P.B.V., careth for them. But is not this an accidental mistake, introduced into the Great Bible of 1540? Coverdale (1535) and the Great Bible of 1539 have loveth.

Psalms 146:9

  1. As in Psalms 94:6 the sojourners[89] or resident aliens who had no rights of citizenship, orphans, and widows are typical examples of defencelessness. They are therefore specially under Jehovah’s protection, and are commended in the Law to the care of the Israelites. [89] The LXX regularly renders gηr, ‘sojourner,’ by προσήλυτος; but this does not mean ‘proselyte’ in the later technical sense of “a Gentile who through circumcision and observance of the law had been admitted into full religious fellowship with Israel,” but, as the Vulg. renders it here, ‘advena.’ See Schόrer’s Hist. of Jewish People, § 31, E.T. ii. ii. 315.relieveth] R.V. upholdeth. turneth upside dawn] Lit. as R.V. marg., maketh crooked; turns aside from its goal, so that it leads to destruction. Cp. Psalms 1:6. That which they would fain do to innocent men (Psalms 119:78) He does to them.

Psalms 146:10

  1. Cp. Exodus 15:18. Such is Jehovah, Zion’s God: and His reign is eternal, not transitory, like the dominion of earthly princes (Psalms 146:3-4). Cp. Psalms 145:13.

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