Psalms 37
CambridgeIn the preceding Psalm the Psalmist found relief and hope in the presence of high-handed iniquity by the contemplation of the inexhaustible lovingkindness of God. Here he assumes the character of a teacher, and bids the godly man not be disquieted by the sight of the prosperity of the wicked, for they are doomed to speedy destruction, while enduring happiness is in store for the righteous. “Hence Tertullian calls the Psalm, providentiae speculum (A mirror of providence), Isidore, potio contra murmur (An antidote to murmuring), Luther, vestis piorum, cui adscriptum: Hic sanctorum patientia est (A garment for the godly, with the inscription, ‘Here is the patience of the saints’).” Delitzsch. The prosperity of the wicked was one of the enigmas of life which most sorely tried the faith of the godly Israelite[13]. No light had as yet been cast upon the problem by the revelation of a future state of rewards and punishments. Sometimes, as we see in Psalms 73, he was in danger of losing all belief in the providential government of the world: at all times he was liable to be tempted to murmuring and envy. [13] See Ochler’s Old Testament Theology, § 246.It is with the more obvious and common danger that the Psalmist here deals. The consolation which he has to offer is of a simple and elementary kind. He affirms the popular doctrine of recompence and retribution which Job found so unsatisfactory. Trust in the Lord: wait His time: all will be well in the end: the wicked will be destroyed and the righteous rewarded. There is an element of truth in this doctrine, for God’s judgements are constantly distinguishing between the righteous and the wicked (Mark 10:30; 1 Timothy 4:8). The verdict of history and experience is, in the long run, in favour of righteousness. But the doctrine is inadequate, as Job felt, for retribution does not invariably and immediately overtake the wrong-doer in this world, nor is the righteous man always visibly rewarded. In order, however, fairly to estimate the Psalmist’s teaching and its value for those whom he addressed, we must bear in mind that personal individuality was comparatively unrecognised in early ages, while the solidarity of the family was realised to an extent which we find it hard to understand. A man lived on in his posterity: his posterity represented him: and the instincts of justice were satisfied if the law of retribution and recompence could be traced in the destinies of the family if not of the individual. The consolation here offered was no doubt real to the mass of the Psalmist’s contemporaries, in virtue of the element of truth which it contains. But it was only a partial and provisional solution of the problem. Through trials of faith and imperfect answers to their questionings God was on the one hand leading men to a truer ideal of happiness, on the other hand preparing them to receive the revelation of a future state of rewards and punishments. The author of Psalms 73 makes a distinct step forward. Though he still looks for the visible punishment of evil-doers, he is taught to find his own highest joy and comfort in fellowship with God, independently of the prospect of temporal felicity. The author of the Book of Job is carried still further, and forced to the conclusion that this world must be but one act in the drama of life. The Psalm should be studied in connexion with Psalms 73 (cp. also Psalms 49) and the Book of Job. The unquestioning confidence of the teacher who speaks here presents a striking contrast to the touching record in Psalms 73 of faith sorely tried but finally victorious. The close relation of the Psalm to the Book of Proverbs must also be noticed. It forms a connecting link between lyric poetry and the proverbial philosophy of the ‘Wise Men’ whose teaching was such an important influence in Israel. See especially Proverbs 10:27-32; Proverbs 24:15 ff. The promises of the Psalm should also be compared with the prophetic expectation of the Messianic age of peace and righteousness. The Psalm is alphabetic in structure. The stanzas commence with the letters of the alphabet in regular succession, and usually consist of two distichs connected in sense. In three instances the stanza consists of a tristich instead of two distichs (Psalms 37:7; Psalms 37:20; Psalms 37:34); and in three instances it consists of five lines (Psalms 37:14-15; Psalms 25, 26; Psalms 39, 40). The same fundamental ideas recur throughout; but four symmetrical divisions of Psa 37:11, Psalms 37:9, Psalms 37:11, Psalms 37:9 verses respectively, in each of which a particular thought is prominent, may be observed. i. Counsel to avoid murmuring, and trust in Jehovah (Psalms 37:1-11): ii. For the triumph of the wicked is shortlived (Psalms 37:12-20): iii. And the reward of the righteous sure and abiding (Psalms 37:21-31). iv. The final contrast of retribution and recompence (Psalms 37:32-40).
Psalms 37:1-11
1–11. Warnings and counsels for times of temptation.
Psalms 37:2
- The grass and the green herb are a common image for what is transient and perishable. See note on Psalms 37:20; and cp. Psalms 90:5 f.; Psalms 103:15 f.; Isaiah 40:6 ff. be cut down] Or, fade. Cp. Job 14:2; Job 18:16 (R.V. marg.).
Psalms 37:3-4
3, 4. Stanza of Beth. The antidote to envious discontent is patient trust in Jehovah, and perseverance in the path of duty. Render Trust in Jehovah, and do good; Dwell in the land, and follow after faithfulness: So shalt thou delight thyself in Jehovah, And he shall grant thee thy heart’s petitions. Remain in the land of promise where God has placed thee: “the land of Jehovah’s presence, which has not only a glorious past, but a future rich in promise, and will finally become the inheritance of the true Israel in a more complete manner than under Joshua” (Delitzsch): there, and there alone, shalt thou find thy true satisfaction in Him. It would seem that the poorer Israelites, oppressed or driven from their homes by powerful neighbours (Psalms 36:11), were tempted to seek their fortunes in foreign lands, and forfeit their national and religious privileges. Cp. 1 Samuel 26:19. Here, as in Psalms 37:9; Psalms 37:11; Psalms 37:22; Psalms 37:29; Psalms 37:34, the land is Canaan, the land of promise. The rendering of A.V. in Psalms 37:9; Psalms 37:11; Psalms 37:22, the earth, is misleading so far as the primary meaning of the Psalm is concerned. It is best to take Psalms 37:3 as virtually a series of conditions in the form of exhortations, and Psalms 37:4 as the promise depending on the fulfilment of the conditions. The A.V. so shalt thou dwell, &c., is inadmissible on grammatical grounds: and though it is possible to render Delight thyself also &c., in Psalms 37:4, the balance of the clauses, and the parallels in Job 22:26, Isaiah 58:14 are decisive in favour of the rendering, so shalt thou delight thyself &c. The renderings of the last clause of Psa 37:3, verily thou shalt be fed, or, feed securely (R.V. marg.) are in themselves questionable, and fall to the ground when the true construction of the verses is adopted. With follow after faithfulness (R.V.) cp. Psalms 119:30 (R.V.).
Psalms 37:5-6
5, 6. Stanza of Gimel. The reward of faith.
Psalms 37:6
- And he shall make thy righteousness go forth as the light, And thy judgement as the brightness of the noonday. The result of that divine working. The justice of thy cause has been hidden, but it shall shine forth like the sun rising out of the darkness of night; thy right has been obscured, but it shall be clear as the full light of the noonday. Cp. Job 11:17; Proverbs 4:18; Isaiah 58:10; Matthew 13:43.
Psalms 37:7
- Stanza of Daleth. The remedy for impatience. Rest in the Lord] Or, Be still before (Heb. be silent to) the Lord (R.V. marg.), in the calmness of faith. Cp. Psalms 62:1; Psalms 62:5; and for illustration see Isaiah 7:4; Isaiah 30:15. who bringeth wicked devices to pass] Lit. who doeth (cp. Psalms 37:1 b, and contrast Psalms 37:3; Psalms 37:5 b) crafty devices.
Psalms 37:8-9
8, 9. Stanza of Hê. The warning of Psa 37:1-2 repeated and emphasised.
Psalms 37:9
- the earth] Rather, as in Psalms 37:3, the land; and so in Psalms 37:11; Psalms 37:22; Psalms 37:29; Psalms 37:34. As the nations were “cut off” before Israel (Deuteronomy 12:29; Deuteronomy 19:1), that Israel might possess the Promised Land, so will the wicked be destroyed, that the true Israel may have undisturbed enjoyment of their inheritance. Cp. Psalms 25:13.
Psalms 37:10-11
10, 11. Stanza of Vâv; expanding the preceding verse.
Psalms 37:11
- The promise is reaffirmed in a larger sense in the beatitude of Mat 5:5, the language of which reproduces the rendering of the LXX here: οἱδὲπρᾳεῖςκληρονομήσουσινγῆν. in the abundance of peace] Cp. Psalms 72:7; Psalms 119:165; Isaiah 32:17.
Psalms 37:12-20
12–20. Disappointment and destruction are the destiny of the wicked.
Psalms 37:13
- Doth laugh (Psalms 2:4 note) … for he hath seen. The punishment of the wicked has been foreseen and foreordained from the first. his day] The appointed day of retribution and ruin. Cp. Psalms 137:7; Obadiah 1:12; 1 Samuel 26:10; Job 18:20.
Psalms 37:14-15
14, 15. Stanza of Cheth. The machinations of the wicked recoil upon themselves. Cp. Psalms 7:15 ff.; Psalms 9:15 ff.
Psalms 37:16-17
16, 17. Stanza of Teth. The nature of true wealth.
Psalms 37:17
- For the arms &c.] All the power which they have misused for evil will be rendered impotent. Cp. Psalms 10:15; Job 38:15. upholdeth] When the wicked strives to make him fall (Psalms 37:14), and at all times. See Psalms 37:24; Psalms 37:31. Cp. Psalms 3:5; Psalms 54:4; Psalms 71:6.
Psalms 37:18-19
18, 19. Stanza of Yôd. Jehovah’s care for the godly.
Psalms 37:19
- Cp. Job 5:19-20. in the evil time] R.V. in the time of evil, i.e. calamity.
Psalms 37:20
- Stanza of Kaph. The end of the wicked. the enemies of the Lord] For His people’s enemies are His enemies. Cp. Psalms 92:9. as the fat of lambs] A rendering derived from the Targum. But the consumption of the fat of the sacrifice upon the altar would be a strange simile for the evanescence of the wicked: and we must render as the excellency of the pastures, or, (R.V.) as the splendour of the meadows. The gay show of flowers, so quickly vanishing, is an apt emblem for the short-lived pomp of the wicked. The force of the comparison is hardly realised in our moist northern climate, where verdure is perpetual. “But let a traveller ride over the downs of Bethlehem in February, one spangled carpet of brilliant flowers, and again in May, when all traces of verdure are gone; or let him push his horse through the deep solid growth of clovers and grasses in the valley of the Jordan in the early spring, and then return and gallop across a brown, hard-baked, gaping plain in June, … and the Scriptural imagery will come home to him with tenfold power.” Tristram’s Natural History of the Bible, p. 455. Cp. Psalms 37:2; Matthew 6:29-30; James 1:10-11. they shall consume &c. Lit. they are consumed; in smoke (or, like smoke) are they consumed away. Smoke is in itself a natural figure of speedy and complete disappearance (Hosea 13:3): possibly, however, the idea of the preceding line is continued, and we are to think of “the grass of the field, which to-day is, and to-morrow is cast into the oven” (Matthew 6:30). The perfect tense, as in Psalms 36:12, forcibly expresses the realising certainty of faith.
Psalms 37:21-31
21–31. God’s care for the righteous.
Psalms 37:22
- For &c.] The wicked man’s ruin and the righteous man’s ability to do good proceed respectively from the curse and the blessing of God.
Psalms 37:23-24
23, 24. Stanza of Mem. God’s directing and upholding care.
Psalms 37:24
- shall not be utterly cast down] Or, shall not lie prostrate. Cp. Proverbs 24:16. upholdeth him with his hand] Better, as R.V. marg., upholdeth his hand. Cp. Psalms 37:17; Isaiah 41:13; Isaiah 51:18.
Psalms 37:25-26
25, 26. Stanza of Nûn. An appeal to the experience of a long life in confirmation of the preceding stanzas. He has never seen the righteous permanently deserted by God, or his children reduced to homeless beggary (Psalms 109:10). Cp. Psalms 37:28; Psalms 37:33; Psalms 9:10; Genesis 28:15. Temporary impoverishment and apparent abandonment for a time need not be supposed to be excluded.
Psalms 37:26
- All the day long he dealeth graciously and lendeth (R.V.). Cp. Psalms 37:21; Psalms 112:5. The righteous not only have abundance, but know how to use it (Isaiah 32:5-8). 27, 28 a., b. Stanza of Samech.
Psalms 37:27
- Once more the teacher addresses his disciple, as in Psalms 37:3 ff. The first line is identical with Psalms 34:14 a (see note): the second line is virtually a promise, and might be rendered so shall thou dwell &c. But as Delitzsch observes, the imperative retains its force in constructions of this type, as an exhortation to participate in the blessing by the fulfilment of the duty. Peaceable occupation of the land by successive generations is meant (cp. Psalms 37:29). The individual lives on in his descendants. 28 a. Cp. Psalms 33:5. For saints see note on Psalms 4:3. 28 c, d, 29. Stanza of Ayin. The verses are wrongly divided. It is evident from the regular structure of the Psalm that the last two lines of Psa 37:28 together with Psalms 37:29 should form a stanza commencing with the letter Ayin. If the Massoretic text is sound, the Ayin is represented by the second letter of the word l’τlβm, ‘for ever’,—the prefixed preposition l being disregarded, as is the prefixed and in Psalms 37:39. But a comparison of the LXX makes it all but certain that the first word of the verse has been lost, and a further corruption taken place in consequence[14]; and that the original reading was: [14] The LXX reads thus: εἰςτὸναἰῶναφυλαχθήσονται· ἄνομοιδὲἐκδιωχθήσονται (ΰ B ἄμωμοιἐκδικηθήσονται), καὶσπέρμαἀσεβωνἐξολοθρευθήσεται, ‘They shall be preserved for ever; but the lawless shall be driven out (ΰ B, the perfect shall be avenged), and the seed of the ungodly shall be destroyed.’ The reading of the Sinaitic and Vatican MSS. appears to be a correction or corruption, and must be abandoned in favour of that found in (apparently) all other MSS., and supported by the Vulg., iniusti punientur. We have then the words ἄνομοιδὲἐκδιωχθήσονται, but the lawless shall be driven out, in addition to a rendering of the Massoretic text. These words might represent an original ςַ ?εָּ ?μִ ?ινπִ ?ωְׁ ?ξְ ?γεּ If the original reading (written defectively) was ςεμνμςμνπωξγε the unrighteous are destroyed for ever, the process of corruption is easily intelligible. ςεμν was omitted, either accidentally, from its resemblance to μςμν, or because the transcriber did not recognise a somewhat rare word, and supposed it to be an erroneous repetition. When once it had disappeared, the change of πωξִ ?γε (destroyed) into πωξִ ?ψε (preserved) followed as a matter of course, ‘his saints’ in the preceding line being the only possible subject. The word ςַ ?εָּ ?μִ ?ιν does not occur elsewhere in the Psalter, but is found four times in the Book of Job, with which this Psalm is so closely connected.
Cp. too the substantive ςַ ?εְ ?μָ ?δ in Psalms 37:1. A case like this, in which the acrostic structure of the Psalm demands a correction for which the LXX supplies clear evidence, is a convincing argument for the temperate employment of the LXX for the correction of the Massoretic Text. This or some similar correction is adopted by most editors.The unrighteous are destroyed for ever, And the seed of the wicked is cut off. With this reading a full stop must of course be placed after saints, and the couplet forms the antithesis to Psalms 37:29. The perfect tenses, as in Psalms 37:20 c, express the Psalmist’s conviction of the certainty of the event. Cp. Psalms 37:38. The addition in the P.B.V., the unrighteous shall be punished, comes from the LXX through the Vulgate. See note below.
Psalms 37:30-31
30, 31. Stanza of Pç. The secret of security.
Psalms 37:31
- Cp. Psalms 119:11. God’s law, treasured in his heart, regulates all his conduct. Without wavering or variation he pursues the path of right. Cp. Psalms 26:1; Psalms 73:2.
Psalms 37:32-40
32–40. The final contrast.
Psalms 37:33
- will not leave him] Lit. will not forsake him, as in Psalms 37:28, and leave him in the hand, i.e. power, of the wicked. nor condemn him &c.] Will not suffer him to be unjustly condemned. The explanation, that though men may condemn him unjustly, God the supreme judge will acquit him, does not satisfy the context. The Psalmist looks for a temporal deliverance.
Psalms 37:34
- Stanza of Qoph. The Psalmist again addresses his disciple. For a while he may be crushed and down-trodden, but ultimately he will be exalted and the wicked cut off. keep his way] Cp. Psalms 37:33, note; Psalms 18:21. thou shall see it] With satisfaction at the vindication of God’s righteous government. Cp. Psalms 52:6; Psalms 58:10-11. See Introd. p. xci.
Psalms 37:35-36
35, 36. Stanza of Resh. The transitoriness of the wicked. Cp. Psalms 37:10; Psalms 52:5 ff.; Job 8:16 ff
Psalms 37:36
- Yet he passed away] R.V. But one passed by. Better, with LXX, Vulg., Syr., Jer.; And I passed by.
Psalms 37:37-38
37, 38. Stanza of Shin. The future of the wicked and the righteous. Mark] I.e. observe. The P.B.V., Keep innocency, and take heed unto the thing that is right, follows the LXX, Vulg., Symm., Jer., Syr., Targ., in a doubtful rendering. for the end &c.] R.V. for the latter end &c. But the marginal alternatives certainly give the right construction of the sentence: there is a reward (or, future, or, posterity) for the man of peace. Acharîth means ‘an after’, ‘a sequel’ (Proverbs 23:18; Proverbs 24:20): hence ‘reward’ or ‘posterity’; and Psalms 37:38 points to the latter sense here. ‘The man of peace’ lives on in his posterity: the wicked man’s family become extinct. P.B.V., for that shall bring a man peace at the last, appears to be a paraphrase of Jerome’s quia erit in extreinum viro pax.
Psalms 37:38
- But transgressors are destroyed together: The posterity of the wicked is cut off. Cp. Psalms 37:28; Psalms 109:13; Job 18:13-21. To the Israelite, with his strong sense of the continuity of life in the family, childlessness or the loss of posterity was a virtual annihilation. In the light of N.T. revelation the contrast between the ‘after’ of the righteous and the wicked is still more solemn and significant.
Psalms 37:39-40
39, 40. Stanza of Tav. Jehovah’s faithfulness to His own.
Psalms 37:40
- And the Lord helpeth them, and rescueth them: He rescueth them from the wicked, and saveth them, Because they have taken refuge in him (R.V.).
