Psalm 137:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 Job Proverbs
Psalm 137
Complete Concise
There are divers psalms which are thought to have been penned in
the latter days of the Jewish church, when prophecy was near expiring and the
canon of the Old Testament ready to be closed up, but none of them appears so
plainly to be of a late date as this, which was penned when the people of God
were captives in Babylon, and there insulted over by these proud oppressors;
probably it was towards the latter end of their captivity; for now they saw the
destruction of Babylon hastening on apace (v. 8), which would be their
discharge. It is a mournful psalm, a lamentation; and the Septuagint makes it
one of the lamentations of Jeremiah, naming him for the author of it. Here I.
The melancholy captives cannot enjoy themselves (v. 1, 2). II. They cannot
humour their proud oppressors (v. 3, 4). III. They cannot forget Jerusalem (v.
5, 6). IV. They cannot forgive Edom and Babylon (v. 7-9). In singing this psalm
we must be much affected with the concernments of the church, especially that
part of it that is in affliction, laying the sorrows of God's people near our
hearts, comforting ourselves in the prospect of the deliverance of the church
and the ruin of its enemies, in due time, but carefully avoiding all personal
animosities, and not mixing the leaven of malice with our sacrifices.
Verses 1-6
We have here the daughter of Zion covered with a cloud, and
dwelling with the daughter of Babylon; the people of God in tears, but sowing in
tears. Observe,
I. The mournful posture they were in as to their affairs and as
to their spirits. 1. They were posted
by the rivers of Babylon, in a
strange land, a great way from their own country, whence they were brought as
prisoners of war. The land of Babylon was now a house of bondage to that people,
as Egypt had been in their beginning. Their conquerors quartered them
by the
rivers, with design to employ them there, and keep them to work in their
galleys; or perhaps they chose it as the most melancholy place, and therefore
most suitable to their sorrowful spirits. If they must build houses there (Jer.
29:5), it shall not be in the cities, the places of concourse, but by the
rivers, the places of solitude, where they might mingle their tears with the
streams. We find some of them by the
river Chebar (Eze. 1:3), others by
the
river Ulai, Dan. 8:2. 2. There they
sat down to indulge their
grief by poring on their miseries. Jeremiah had taught them under this yoke to
sit
alone, and
keep silence, and
put their mouths in the dust,
Lam. 3:28, 29. "We sat down, as those that expected to stay, and were
content, since it was the will of God that it must be so." 3. Thoughts of
Zion drew tears from their eyes; and it was not a sudden passion of weeping,
such as we are sometimes put into by a trouble that surprises us, but they were
deliberate tears (we
sat down and wept), tears with considerationwe
wept
when we remembered Zion, the holy hill on which the temple was built. Their
affection to God's house swallowed up their concern for their own houses. They
remembered Zion's former glory and the satisfaction they had had in Zion's
courts, Lam. 1:7.
Jerusalem remembered, in the days of her misery, all her
pleasant things which she had in the days of old, Ps. 42:4. They remembered
Zion's present desolations, and
favoured the dust thereof, which was a
good sign that the time for God to favour it was not far off, Ps. 102:13, 14. 4.
They laid by their instruments of music (v. 2):
We hung our harps upon the
willows. (1.) The harps they used for their own diversion and entertainment.
These they laid aside, both because it was their judgment that they ought not to
use them now that God called to weeping and mourning (Isa. 22:12), and their
spirits were so sad that they had no hearts to use them; they brought their
harps with them, designing perhaps to use them for the alleviating of their
grief, but it proved so great that it would not admit the experiment. Music
makes some people melancholy.
As vinegar upon nitre, so is he that sings
songs to a heavy heart. (2.) The harps they used in God's worship, the
Levites' harps. These they did not throw away, hoping they might yet again
have occasion to use them, but they laid them aside because they had no present
use for them; God had cut them out other work by
turning their feasting into
mourning and their songs into lamentations, Amos 8:10. Every thing is
beautiful in its season. They did not hide their harps in the bushes, or the
hollows of the rocks; but hung them up in view, that the sight of them might
affect them with this deplorable change. Yet perhaps they were faulty in doing
this; for praising God is never out of season; it is his will that we should
in
every thing give thanks, Isa. 24:15, 16.
II. The abuses which their enemies put upon them when they were
in this melancholy condition, v. 3. They had
carried them away captive
from their own land and then
wasted them in the land of their captivity,
took what little they had from them. But this was not enough; to complete their
woes they insulted over them: They
required of us mirth and a song. Now,
1. This was very barbarous and inhuman; even an enemy, in misery, is to be
pitied and not trampled upon. It argues a base and sordid spirit to upbraid
those that are in distress either with their former joys or with their present
griefs, or to challenge those to be merry who, we know, are out of tune for it.
This is adding affliction to the afflicted. 2. It was very profane and impious.
No songs would serve them but the
songs of Zion, with which God had been
honoured; so that in this demand they reflected upon God himself as Belshazzar,
when he drank wine in temple-bowls. Their enemies
mocked at their sabbaths,
Lam. 1:7.
III. The patience wherewith they bore these abuses, v. 4. They
had laid by their harps, and would not resume them, no, not to ingratiate
themselves with those at whose mercy they lay; they would not answer those fools
according to their folly. Profane scoffers are not to be humoured, nor pearls
cast before swine. David prudently
kept silence even from good when the
wicked
were before him, who, he knew, would ridicule what he said and make a jest
of it, Ps. 39:1, 2. The reason they gave is very mild and pious:
How shall we
sing the Lord's song in a strange land? They do not say, "How shall
we sing when we are so much in sorrow?" If that had been all, they might
perhaps have put a force upon themselves so far as to oblige their masters with
a song; but "It is the
Lord's song; it is a sacred thing; it is
peculiar to the temple-service, and therefore we dare not sing it in the land of
a stranger, among idolaters." We must not serve common mirth, much less
profane mirth, with any thing that is appropriated to God, who is sometimes to
be honoured by a religious silence as well as by religious speaking.
IV. The constant affection they retained for Jerusalem, the city
of their solemnities, even now that they were in Babylon. Though their enemies
banter them for talking so much of Jerusalem, and even doting upon it, their
love to it is not in the least abated; it is what they may be jeered for, but
will never be jeered out of, v. 5, 6. Observe,
1. How these pious captives stood affected to Jerusalem. (1.)
Their heads were full of it. It was always in their minds; they remembered it;
they did not forget it, though they had been long absent from it; many of them
had never seen it, nor knew any thing of it but by report, and by what they had
read in the scripture, yet it was graven upon the palms of their hands, and even
its ruins were continually before them, which was ann evidence of their faith in
the promise of its restoration in due time. In their daily prayers they opened
their windows towards Jerusalem; and how then could they forget it? (2.) Their
hearts were full of it. They
preferred it
above their
chief
joy, and therefore they remembered it and could not forget it. What we love
we love to think of. Those that rejoice in God do, for his sake, make Jerusalem
their joy, and prefer it before that, whatever it is, which is the head of their
joy, which is dearest to them in this world. A godly man will prefer a public
good before any private satisfaction or gratification whatsoever.
2. How stedfastly they resolved to keep up this affection, which
they express by a solemn imprecation of mischief to themselves if they should
let it fall: "Let me be for ever disabled either to sing or play on the
harp if I so far forget the religion of my country as to make use of my songs
and harps for the pleasing of Babylon's sons or the praising of Babylon's
gods.
Let my right hand forget her art" (which the hand of an expert
musician never can, unless it be withered), "nay,
let my tongue cleave
to the roof of my mouth, if I have not a good word to say for Jerusalem
wherever I am." Though they dare not sing Zion's songs among the
Babylonians, yet they cannot forget them, but, as soon as ever the present
restraint is taken off, they will sing them as readily as ever, notwithstanding
the long disuse.
Verses 7-9
The pious Jews in Babylon, having afflicted themselves with the
thoughts of the ruins of Jerusalem, here please themselves with the prospect of
the ruin of her impenitent implacable enemies; but this not from a spirit of
revenge, but from a holy zeal for the glory of God and the honour of his
kingdom.
I. The Edomites will certainly be reckoned with, and all others
that were accessaries to the destruction of Jerusalem, that were aiding and
abetting, that
helped forward the affliction (Zec. 1:15) and triumphed in
it, that
said, in the day of Jerusalem, the day of her judgment,
"Rase
it, rase it to the foundations; down with it, down with it; do not leave one
stone upon another." Thus they made the Chaldean army more furious, who
were already so enraged that they needed no spur. Thus they put shame upon
Israel, who would be looked upon as a people worthy to be cut off when their
next neighbours had such an ill-will to them. And all this was a fruit of the
old enmity of Esau against Jacob, because he got the birthright and the
blessing, and a branch of that more ancient enmity between the seed of the woman
and the seed of the serpent:
Lord, remember them, says the psalmist,
which is an appeal to his justice against them. Far be it from us to avenge
ourselves, if ever it should be in our power, but we will leave it to him who
has said,
Vengeance is mine. Note, Those that are glad at calamities,
especially the calamities of Jerusalem, shall not go unpunished. Those that are
confederate with the persecutors of good people, and stir them up, and set them
on, and are pleased with what they do, shall certainly be called to an account
for it against another day, and God will remember it against them.
II. Babylon is the principal, and it will come to her turn too
to drink of the cup of tremblings, the very dregs of it (v. 8, 9):
O daughter
of Babylon! proud and secure as thou art, we know well, by the scriptures of
truth, thou
art to be destroyed, or (as Dr. Hammond reads it)
who art
the destroyer. The destroyers shall be destroyed, Rev. 13:10. And perhaps it
is with reference to this that the man of sin, the head of the New-Testament
Babylon, is called a
son of perdition, 2 Th. 2:3. The destruction of
Babylon being foreseen as a sure destruction (thou
art to be destroyed),
it is spoken of, 1. As a just destruction. She shall be paid in her own coin:
"Thou shalt be served
as thou hast served us, as barbarously used by
the destroyers as we have been by thee," See Rev. 18:6. Let not those
expect to find mercy who, when they had power, did not show mercy. 2. As an
utter destruction. The very little ones of Babylon, when it is taken by storm,
and all in it are put to the sword, shall be dashed to pieces by the enraged and
merciless conqueror. None escape if these little ones perish. Those are the seed
of another generation; so that, if they be cut off, the ruin will be not only
total, as Jerusalem's was, but final. It is sunk like a millstone into the
sea, never to rise. 3. As a destruction which should reflect honour upon the
instruments of it. Happy shall those be that do it; for they are fulfilling God's
counsels; and therefore he calls Cyrus, who did it, his
servant, his
shepherd,
his
anointed (Isa. 44:28; 45:1), and the soldiers that were employed in
it his
sanctified ones, Isa. 13:3. They are making way for the
enlargement of God's Israel, and happy are those who are in any way
serviceable to that. The fall of the New-Testament Babylon will be the triumph
of all the saints, Rev. 19:1.
Psalm 137:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Spurgeon
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 Job Proverbs
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