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The Blue Letter Bible

David Guzik :: Study Guide for Psalm 78

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References for 1Sa 5:9 —  1   2 

Learning from God’s Faithfulness to His Rebellious People

This psalm is titled A Contemplation of Asaph. The author Asaph was the great singer and musician of David and Solomon’s era (1 Chronicles 15:17-19, 16:5-7; 2 Chronicles 29:13). 1 Chronicles 25:1 and 2 Chronicles 29:30 add that Asaph was a prophet in his musical compositions.

Psalm 78 is the longest of the historical psalms. Its lesson is that history must not repeat itself. The people must never again be unbelieving.” (James Montgomery Boice)

A. Introduction: Learning from the past, teaching for the future.

1. (Psalm 78:1-4) Gaining the attention of the people of God.

Give ear, O my people, to my law;
Incline your ears to the words of my mouth.
I will open my mouth in a parable;
I will utter dark sayings of old,
Which we have heard and known,
And our fathers have told us.
We will not hide them from their children,
Telling to the generation to come the praises of the LORD,
And His strength and His wonderful works that He has done.

a. Give ear, O my people, to my law: Psalm 78 is a wisdom psalm, written to instruct God’s people. The theme is the goodness and kindness of God to His stubborn and rebellious people. Asaph began by asking for the attention of God’s people so they could hear the wisdom he would speak.

i. Psalm 78 begins with a principle sometimes neglected among those who would speak wisdom to others: you must first gain the attention of your listeners if you would teach them and reach them.

ii. Incline your ears: “Inclining the ears does not denote any ordinary sort of hearing, but such as a disciple renders to the words of his master, with submission and reverence of mind, silent and earnest, that whatever is enunciated for the purpose of instruction may be heard and properly understood, and nothing be allowed to escape. He is a hearer of a different stamp, who hears carelessly, not for the purpose of learning or imitation, but to criticise, to make merry, to indulge animosity, or to kill time.” (Musculus, cited in Spurgeon)

b. I will open my mouth in a parable: Psalm 49 is another wisdom psalm with reference to a proverb or parable and the dark sayings. The phrase dark sayings does not have in mind hidden or mystical knowledge, but things that can simply be difficult to understand — riddles that are good topics for instruction.

i. In a parable: “The word for parable (masal) gives the book of Proverbs its title. Basically this means a comparison, i.e., a saying which uses one realm of life to illuminate another.” (Kidner)

ii. Matthew 13:35 quotes Psalm 78:2 as a prophecy of the way Jesus would teach.

c. Which we have heard and known, and our fathers have told us: Asaph will not bring up new things for discussion, but things already within the mind of Israel.

d. Telling to the generation to come the praises of the LORD: Asaph knew what followed in this psalm came from events and themes received from their fathers. He also knew that what they had received, they had to pass on to the next generation; they had a responsibility to not hide them from their children.

i. “For the classic passage on teaching this faith to one’s children see Deuteronomy 6:6-9, for Scripture has no room for parental neutrality.” (Kidner)

ii. “The more of parental teaching the better; ministers and Sabbath-school teachers were never meant to be substitutes for mothers’ tears and fathers’ prayers.” (Spurgeon)

e. The praises of the LORD, and His strength and His wonderful works that He has done: Asaph was concerned about passing on at least three things to the next generation.

  • The praises of the LORD — teaching them that God was worthy of our adoration and gratitude.
  • God’s strength — His power and greatness above and beyond all.
  • His wonderful works — that is, God’s power and greatness in active assistance to His people.

i. It is still good and necessary for us to pass these things on. We should speak often about them and tell the continually unfolding story of how God has done wonderful works in and through His people.

ii. This speaks to the importance of seeing and understanding the hand of God as He moves in and through history. “History should ever be the record of the works of God. That is to emphasize the important factor. History thus written, and thus taught, will so affect hope and memory in youth, as to constrain it to obedience to the God revealed; and this is the way of life for man and nation.” (Morgan)

iii. This psalm emphasizes the strength and the wonderful works of God — not the strength or wonderful works of His people. This psalm is remarkably honest about the failings of God’s people. “The supreme quality of this psalm is that throughout all its measures, over against the repeated failure of His people, God’s persistent patience is set forth in bold relief.” (Morgan)

iv. “Those who forget God’s works are sure to fail in their own.” (Spurgeon)

2. (Psalm 78:5-8) Teaching one generation to avoid the errors of previous generations.

For He established a testimony in Jacob,
And appointed a law in Israel,
Which He commanded our fathers,
That they should make them known to their children;
That the generation to come might know them,
The children who would be born,
That they may arise and declare them to their children,
That they may set their hope in God,
And not forget the works of God,
But keep His commandments;
And may not be like their fathers,
A stubborn and rebellious generation,
A generation that did not set its heart aright,
And whose spirit was not faithful to God.

a. He established a testimony in Jacob, and appointed a law in Israel: Using poetic repetition for style and emphasis, Asaph began by describing one of the greatest of God’s wonderful works (verse 4) — the giving of God’s word to Israel.

i. Centuries later the Apostle Paul would explain that one of the great advantages God gave to Israel was that He committed to them His word, the oracles of God (Romans 3:2).

b. That they should make them known to their children: Then and now, God gives His word so that it will be transmitted to following generations. In theory, the revelation of God’s word can perish or become utterly irrelevant if not passed on to the next generation.

i. “Through Moses he had commanded all Israelites, regardless of tribal descent, to instruct their children at home (Deuteronomy 6:6-9, 20-22; cf. Exodus 10:2; 12:26-27; 13:8).” (VanGemeren)

c. That they may arise and declare them to their children: Not only should our children be taught, they should be taught to teach their children so that the word and the work of God will continue throughout the generations.

i. “Five generations appear to be mentioned above: 1. Fathers; 2. Their children; 3. The generation to come; 4. And their children; 5. And their children. They were never to lose sight of their history throughout all their generations.” (Clarke)

d. That they may set their hope in God, and not forget the works of God: The purpose of communicating to the next generation is that they would learn to trust God for themselves, never forgetting His wonderful works.

e. But keep His commandments; and may not be like their fathers: To the psalmist, losing trust in God and forgetting His works would lead to disobedience. If the younger generation is well instructed, they would be more likely to be obedient, avoiding many of the errors of their fathers.

f. A stubborn and rebellious generation: Asaph described the sins of previous generations in Israel. They were stubborn and rebellious; they did not set their hearts aright, and their spirit was not faithful to God. Asaph’s focus was on heart and attitude more than on action.

3. (Psalm 78:9-11) Preview and overview: losing the spiritual battle.

The children of Ephraim, being armed and carrying bows,
Turned back in the day of battle.
They did not keep the covenant of God;
They refused to walk in His law,
And forgot His works
And His wonders that He had shown them.

a. The children of Ephraim: The tribe of Ephraim was one of the larger tribes of Israel, and sometimes God called Israel “Ephraim.” In 2 Chronicles 25:7 God used the phrase children of Ephraim to refer to the people of Israel as a whole.

i. “As the largest of the breakaway tribes, their subsequent history was to make them almost a symbol of backsliding and apostasy.” (Kidner)

ii. “The prophetic writings (especially Hosea) show that Ephraim became the leader in the rebellion and disloyalty that cursed the nation, and so, figuratively and standing for the rest, Ephraim is here addressed.” (Morgan)

b. Being armed and carrying bows, turned back in the day of battle: Because it is difficult to match this with a known instance in Israel’s history, perhaps the sense here is of a spiritual battle. Spiritually speaking, God equipped Israel for conflict. They were armed and had bows. Yet they often failed in the day of battle, because they did not keep the covenant of God.

i. “The incident referred to is not known. It was a time when ‘Ephraim, though armed with bows, turned back on the day of battle’ (Psalm 78:9). Nothing exactly like this is found anywhere in the Old Testament.” (Boice)

ii. Yet, “The psalmist’s description ‘armed with bows’ fits well with their aggressiveness as portrayed in the Book of Judges (Judges 8:1-3; 12:1-6).” (VanGemeren)

iii. “The reference to Ephraim in Psalm 78:9-11 is not to be taken as alluding to any cowardly retreat from actual battle. Psalm 78:9 seems to be a purely figurative way of expressing what is put without a metaphor in the two following verses. Ephraim’s revolt from God’s covenant was like the conduct of soldiers, well armed and refusing to charge the foe.” (Maclaren)

iv. God makes spiritual resources available to His people for the spiritual conflicts they face (Ephesians 6:10-18). However, the effectiveness of those resources depends in some regard on their decision to actually make use of them. Ultimately, God’s people are assured of victory in Jesus. Day to day there may be defeats and setbacks — being turned back in the day of battle — because available resources are not used.

v. Spiritually considered, there are many who are turned back in the day of battle, though in different ways.

  • Some turn back before the battle begins.
  • Some turn back as soon as the battle is engaged.
  • Some turn back when the first injury is received.
  • Some turn back when the battle becomes long.

c. They refused to walk in His law, and forgot His works and His wonders: Disobedience and ignorance among God’s people were examples of being turned back in the day of battle. This is a warning to all generations: the spiritual battle may be lost.

i. And forgot His works: “It would seem almost past belief to us as we read that a people so led could forget. Yet is not this sin of forgetfulness with us perpetually? In some day of danger and perplexity we become so occupied with the immediate peril as utterly to fail to think of past deliverances. Such forgetfulness is of the nature of unbelief in its worst form.” (Morgan)

ii. Forgot His works: “Not historically, but practically. They did not so remember them, as to love, and serve, and trust that God of whose infinite power and goodness they had such ample experience.” (Poole)

iii. “Ere we condemn them, let us repent of our own wicked forgetfulness, and confess the many occasions upon which we also have been unmindful of past favours.” (Spurgeon)

B. Stubborn, rebellious Israel in the Exodus from Egypt.

1. (Psalm 78:12-16) God brought Israel out of Egypt, through the sea, and gave the people water in the wilderness.

Marvelous things He did in the sight of their fathers,
In the land of Egypt, in the field of Zoan.
He divided the sea and caused them to pass through;
And He made the waters stand up like a heap.
In the daytime also He led them with the cloud,
And all the night with a light of fire.
He split the rocks in the wilderness,
And gave them drink in abundance like the depths.
He also brought streams out of the rock,
And caused waters to run down like rivers.

a. Marvelous things He did in the sight of their fathers, in the land of Egypt: Asaph remembered how God helped His people as described in the first part of the Book of Exodus. Through a series of miraculous plagues and demonstrations of God’s power, Pharaoh was compelled to let Israel go from slavery, and the people left rewarded with riches from the Egyptians (Exodus 5-13).

i. “Zoan is better known as Tanis, in the north-east of the Nile Delta, a city which was either identical with Rameses II’s capital (Raamses, which the Israelites helped to build: Exodus 1:11) or not many miles from it.” (Kidner)

b. He divided the sea and caused them to pass through: As Pharaoh’s armies pursued Israel, God miraculously brought the people through the sea on dry ground as God made the waters stand up like a heap (Exodus 14).

c. In the daytime also He led them with the cloud, and all the night with a light of fire: When the Israelites came into the wilderness of Sinai, God assured them and guided them with the two demonstrations of His presence — the cloud by day and the fire by night (Exodus 40:36-38).

i. “A cloud; which was very comfortable, both for a shadow from the scorching heat of the climate and season, and for a companion and director in their journey.” (Poole)

d. He split the rocks in the wilderness, and gave them drink: Often in the wilderness the nation of Israel needed water, and many times God miraculously provided. One occasion was at Meribah where Moses struck the rock and it presumably split, bringing forth water (Numbers 20:10-13, Isaiah 48:21).

i. “Rocks; he useth the plural number, because it was twice done; once in Rephidim, Exodus 17:6, and again in Kadesh, Numbers 20:1,11.” (Poole)

2. (Psalm 78:17-20) Israel’s stubborn, rebellious response to God’s wonderful works.

But they sinned even more against Him
By rebelling against the Most High in the wilderness.
And they tested God in their heart
By asking for the food of their fancy.
Yes, they spoke against God:
They said, “Can God prepare a table in the wilderness?
Behold, He struck the rock,
So that the waters gushed out,
And the streams overflowed.
Can He give bread also?
Can He provide meat for His people?”

a. But they sinned even more against Him: God repeatedly did great and amazing things for Israel in taking the people out of Egypt and preserving them in the wilderness. Yet Israel’s response was to sin even more and to rebel against the Most High.

b. They tested God in their heart by asking for the food of their fancy: God provided Israel’s needs in the wilderness, but sometimes the people demanded more. He gave them manna, but they soon wanted meat — the food of their fancy (as in Numbers 11:4-10, 18-23, and 31-34). This tested God.

i. God promises to provide our needs. He never promised to give us the food of our fancy.

ii. “Nothing is more provoking to God, than our quarrelling with our allotment, and indulging the desires of the flesh.” (Henry, cited in Spurgeon)

iii. We could say that the people of Israel were guilty of at least two sins.

  • They were dissatisfied with what God provided.
  • They thought the reason why God didn’t give them what they wanted was because He couldn’t — that it was beyond His power.

c. Can God prepare a table in the wilderness? With these words they spoke against God; they tested Him, expressing their lack of faith in His power and lack of trust in His care. They didn’t believe that God could give them a banquet in the wilderness.

i. “Israel had seen the wonderful works of God, cleaving the sea, lighting the night, and giving water from rocks. Yet they questioned God’s ability to give bread, and to spread out a table in the wilderness.” (Meyer)

ii. “It was no sin to be hungry and thirsty; it was a necessity of their nature. There is nothing living that does not desire and require food: when we do not we are dead, and that they did so was no sin. Their sin was to doubt that God could or would support them in the wilderness, or allow those who followed his leadings to lack any good thing. This was their sin.” (North, cited in Spurgeon)

iii. “The expression, spread a table, uses the same words as Psalm 23:5, whose serenity is a shining contrast to this.” (Kidner)

iv. In 1933 — the middle of the Great Depression — a young Irishman named J. Edwin Orr left a good paying job and, with no fixed source of income, he trusted that God would provide for him and his mother. He planned to travel around Great Britain with the message of prayer, salvation, and revival. He left Belfast with 2 shillings and 8 pence — about 65 cents. He had a bicycle, a change of clothes, and a Bible. He spent the next year travelling to every county in Great Britain and organizing some 300 prayer groups dedicated to pray for revival. He wrote a book about it all and finally convinced a publisher to take it — after being rejected 17 times. That first book, titled Can God—?, was based on Psalm 78:19 and published in 1934. It sold hundreds of thousands of copies and was a tremendous inspiration to Christians in that day. Orr’s book and his life were a remarkable demonstration of the fact that God can prepare a table in the wilderness.

v. “Though behind us lay the gift of the Cross, the miracles of the Resurrection and Ascension, the care exercised by God over our early years, the goodness and mercy of our after lives, we are disposed to say, ‘Can God?’.... Fetch arguments for faith from the days that have gone.” (Meyer)

vi. “The words are wrongly placed. Never say again, ‘Can God?’ but God can.” (Meyer)

d. Can He give bread also? Can He provide meat for His people? Repeatedly, God showed Israel that He could do all this and more. The people asked these doubting questions with the miraculously provided manna in their stomachs.

i. “Who will say that a man is thankful to his friend for a past kindness, if he nourishes an ill opinion of him for the future?” (Gurnall, cited in Spurgeon)

3. (Psalm 78:21-25) God’s anger with the unbelief and mistrust of Israel.

Therefore the LORD heard this and was furious;
So a fire was kindled against Jacob,
And anger also came up against Israel,
Because they did not believe in God,
And did not trust in His salvation.
Yet He had commanded the clouds above,
And opened the doors of heaven,
Had rained down manna on them to eat,
And given them of the bread of heaven.
Men ate angels’ food;
He sent them food to the full.

a. Therefore the LORD heard this and was furious: God blessed and provided for Israel in the escape from Egypt and in the wilderness; Israel responded with complaining and unbelief. God did not ignore this; He heard it and He was furious with their sin against Him.

i. Keep in mind that the sins Asaph had in mind were the sins of ingratitude, testing God, and doubting His power and His care. These were sins God was furious with. We often think God takes little account of such sins.

ii. “He was not indifferent to what they said. He dwelt among them in the holy place, and, therefore, they insulted him to his face. He did not hear a report of it, but the language itself came into his ears.” (Spurgeon)

b. So a fire was kindled against Jacob: Asaph may have had in mind what happened at Taberah, where in judgment the fire of the LORD burned among Israel (Numbers 11:1-3).

c. Because they did not believe in God, and did not trust in His salvation: In case we didn’t get it before, Asaph stated it clearly for emphasis. These were the sins that made God furious and made His judgment burn like fire against Israel. Unbelief and mistrust toward God are counted as small sins by many today.

i. “In the text it appears as if all Israel’s other sins were as nothing compared with this; this is the peculiar spot which the Lord points at, the special provocation which angered him. From this let every unbeliever learn to tremble more at his unbelief than at anything else. If he be no fornicator, or thief, or liar, let him reflect that it is quite enough to condemn him that he trusts not in God’s salvation.” (Spurgeon)

d. Yet He had commanded the clouds above, and opened the doors of heaven: Their dark sin is set against the white background of God’s goodness and constant care for them. He gave them and kept giving them bread of heaven and angels’ food, and they ate to the full.

i. There have been many attempts to understand manna as a known natural phenomena. It’s possible that there is a link to something along these lines, such as the sugary substance modern Arabs call mann; yet the sense of verses 24-25 is that there was something supernatural and even other-worldly about manna.

ii. “Tis called ‘angels’ food,’ not because the angels do daily feed upon it, but because it was both made and ministered by the ministry of angels, and that phrase sets forth the excellency of it.” (Ness, cited in Spurgeon)

e. And given them of the bread of heaven: John records in his Gospel that in trying to persuade Jesus to keep providing miraculous bread, those who had been fed quoted this line from verse 24 (Our fathers ate the manna in the desert; as it is written, “He gave them bread from heaven to eat,” John 6:31). In quoting this psalm to Jesus, they fulfilled it in a negative way, showing the same ingratitude and willingness to test God that Israel showed in the wilderness.

i. “In appealing to this very psalm, the arguers [those contesting with Jesus in John 6] were handling too sharp a weapon.” (Kidner)

ii. In verse 24, bread of heaven is more literally grain of heaven — or, corn in the King James Version. “The manna was round, like coriander seed, and hence was rightly called corn; it did not rise from the earth, but descended from the clouds, and hence the words of the verse are literally accurate.” (Spurgeon)

4. (Psalm 78:26-31) The sending of fowl for meat.

He caused an east wind to blow in the heavens;
And by His power He brought in the south wind.
He also rained meat on them like the dust,
Feathered fowl like the sand of the seas;
And He let them fall in the midst of their camp,
All around their dwellings.
So they ate and were well filled,
For He gave them their own desire.
They were not deprived of their craving;
But while their food was still in their mouths,
The wrath of God came against them,
And slew the stoutest of them,
And struck down the choice men of Israel.

a. He also rained meat on them like the dust: Numbers 11:31-33 describes how God sent quail to Israel when they complained about the manna. He literally let them fall in the midst of their camp, bringing the meat they craved to them.

b. So they ate and were well filled, for He gave them their own desire: Asaph wrote this with a strong sense of irony. Israel was well filled, but not with good quail meat in their stomachs. God gave them their own desire, but because their craving was rooted in their self-will, the result was not good.

i. He gave them their own desire: “The Lord shewed them that he could ‘provide flesh for his people,’ even enough and to spare. He also shewed them that when lust wins its desire, it is disappointed.” (Spurgeon)

ii. “Consider that there is more real satisfaction in mortifying lusts than in making provision for them or in fulfilling them: there is more true pleasure in crossing and pinching our flesh than in gratifying it; were there any true pleasure in sin, hell would not be hell, for the more sin, the more joy. You cannot satisfy one lust if you would do your utmost, and make yourself never so absolute a slave to it; you think if you had your heart’s desire you would be at rest: you much mistake; they had it.” (Carmichael, cited in Spurgeon)

c. While their food was still in their mouths, the wrath of God came against them: Numbers 11:33 stated it like this: But while the meat was still between their teeth, before it was chewed, the wrath of the LORD was aroused against the people, and the LORD struck the people with a very great plague. God gave a disobedient and rebellious Israel all they desired and craved, and the quail turned to a plague of judgment among them.

5. (Psalm 78:32-39) A merciful response to great sin.

In spite of this they still sinned,
And did not believe in His wondrous works.
Therefore their days He consumed in futility,
And their years in fear.
When He slew them, then they sought Him;
And they returned and sought earnestly for God.
Then they remembered that God was their rock,
And the Most High God their Redeemer.
Nevertheless they flattered Him with their mouth,
And they lied to Him with their tongue;
For their heart was not steadfast with Him,
Nor were they faithful in His covenant.
But He, being full of compassion, forgave their iniquity,
And did not destroy them.
Yes, many a time He turned His anger away,
And did not stir up all His wrath;
For He remembered that they were but flesh,
A breath that passes away and does not come again.

a. In spite of this they still sinned: In some ways this is the most tragic line of this psalm. Despite all the blessings and the strongest of corrections, they still sinned. Israel didn’t learn either from God’s goodness or from His wrath.

b. Therefore their days He consumed in futility and their years in fear: God said that the generation of unbelieving people could not enter the Promised Land; that generation would be consumed in the wilderness (Numbers 14:22-24). The futility was expressed in the idea that they came out of Egypt, but never into Canaan. The fear was expressed in their unwillingness to take the land by faith (Numbers 14:1-4).

c. When He slew them, then they sought Him: It took the most extreme correction from God, but eventually a generation of people grew and sought earnestly for God — but even their seeking was somewhat insincere.

i. “But such seeking after God, which is properly not seeking Him at all, but only seeking to escape from evil, neither goes deep nor lasts long.” (Maclaren)

ii. “As iron is very soft and malleable while in the fire, but soon after returneth to its former hardness; so many, while afflicted, seem very well affected, but afterwards soon show what they are.” (Trapp)

d. Nevertheless they flattered Him with their mouth: Their seeking of God was sincere but short-lived. Soon they came to God only with flattering, insincere words. Strange to think a man could think he could lie to God, yet they (and often we) lied to Him with their tongue.

i. “False on their knees, liars in their prayers. Mouth-worship must be very detestable to God when dissociated from the heart: other kings love flattery, but the King of Kings abhors it.” (Spurgeon)

e. But He, being full of compassion, forgave their iniquity: God’s response to their stubborn rebellion, to their insincere seeking, to their failure to be faithful in His covenant, was surprising. God showed His compassion, He forgave, and many a time He turned His anger away.

i. “It is indeed a great song of God’s patience, and there is no story more fruitful than if men will but learn it.” (Morgan)

ii. “Though not mentioned in the text, we know from the history that a mediator interposed, the man Moses stood in the gap.” (Spurgeon)

f. He remembered that they were but flesh, a breath that passes: In part, God’s understanding of the weakness of humanity prompted His compassion and forgiveness. One reason He was merciful to them was because of their frail nature.

i. “His compassion found expression in his forgiveness (cf. Psalm 65:3) of their sins, his forbearance with their stubborn spirits, and his empathy with the human condition, so that the full brunt of his anger did not destroy them.” (VanGemeren)

ii. “How gracious on the Lord’s part to make man’s insignificance an argument for staying his wrath.” (Spurgeon)

6. (Psalm 78:40-55) From Egypt to Canaan, Israel’s failure to remember the power of God.

How often they provoked Him in the wilderness,
And grieved Him in the desert!
Yes, again and again they tempted God,
And limited the Holy One of Israel.
They did not remember His power:
The day when He redeemed them from the enemy,
When He worked His signs in Egypt,
And His wonders in the field of Zoan;
Turned their rivers into blood,
And their streams, that they could not drink.
He sent swarms of flies among them, which devoured them,
And frogs, which destroyed them.
He also gave their crops to the caterpillar,
And their labor to the locust.
He destroyed their vines with hail,
And their sycamore trees with frost.
He also gave up their cattle to the hail,
And their flocks to fiery lightning.
He cast on them the fierceness of His anger,
Wrath, indignation, and trouble,
By sending angels of destruction among them.
He made a path for His anger;
He did not spare their soul from death,
But gave their life over to the plague,
And destroyed all the firstborn in Egypt,
The first of their strength in the tents of Ham.
But He made His own people go forth like sheep,
And guided them in the wilderness like a flock;
And He led them on safely, so that they did not fear;
But the sea overwhelmed their enemies.
And He brought them to His holy border,
This mountain which His right hand had acquired.
He also drove out the nations before them,
Allotted them an inheritance by survey,
And made the tribes of Israel dwell in their tents.

a. How often they provoked Him in the wilderness: Asaph just explained God’s compassionate response to Israel’s sin. Yet he did not want to ignore Israel’s sin, their great debt of ingratitude, and their rebellion against God.

b. Again and again they tempted God, and limited the Holy One of Israel: Not only did Israel’s stubborn disobedience provoke and tempt God, there was a real sense in which it limited the Holy One of Israel. In one sense it is impossible for the creature to limit the Creator. Yet, when God ties His work to man’s faith and/or obedience, there is a sense in which man can and does limit God.

i. Matthew 13:58 says of the ministry of Jesus in Nazareth, Now He did not do many mighty works there because of their unbelief. As long as God chooses to work in concert with human agency, developing our ability to partner with Him, our unbelief can and may hinder the work of God.

ii. It’s possible that limited the Holy One of Israel isn’t the best translation of the Hebrew. “The rare verb in 41b probably means hurt or provoked (Septuagint and most moderns) rather than King James Version’s ‘limited’, appropriate though the latter might seem.” (Kidner)

c. They did not remember His power, the day when He redeemed them from the enemy: Asaph had in mind the great power God showed in setting Israel free from their 400 years of slavery in Egypt. The exodus redemption is often presented in the Hebrew Scriptures as a demonstration of the power of God.

i. In the New Testament we have a new and ultimate demonstration of the power of God: the resurrection of Jesus Christ (Romans 1:4, Ephesians 1:19-20, Philippians 3:10). Paul might have rephrased Psalm 78:42, They did not remember His power, the day when He raised Jesus from the dead.

ii. “The psalmist traces Israel’s sin to forgetfulness of God’s mercy, and thus glides into a swift summing up of the plagues of Egypt, regarded as conducing to Israel’s deliverance. They are not arranged chronologically, though the list begins with the first.” (Maclaren)

d. When He worked His signs in Egypt: Asaph recounted how God demonstrated His power for Israel and against Pharaoh by sending the plagues upon Egypt. The plagues were special demonstrations of God’s power because they were focused against Egyptian deities.

  • When God turned their rivers into blood, He showed He was greater than the Egyptian gods Khnum (said to be the guardian of the Nile), Hapi (supposedly the spirit of the Nile), and Osiris, said to have the Nile as his bloodstream (Exodus 7:17-20).
  • When God sent swarms of flies and lice, He showed that He was greater than the Egyptian god Imhotep (believed to be the god of medicine), and that He was able to stop the whole worship of the Egyptian gods with loathsome lice and swarms of insects (Exodus 8:20-32).
  • When God sent frogs, He showed that He was greater than the Egyptian goddess Heqt, believed to be the frog-goddess of fertility (Exodus 8:1-8:15).
  • When God gave their labor to the locust, He showed that He was greater than the Egyptian god Set, thought to be the protector of crops (Exodus 10:1-20).
  • When God destroyed their agriculture with hail and frost and their flocks to fiery lightning, He showed that He was greater than the Egyptian goddess Nut, the supposed sky goddess (Exodus 9:13-35).
  • When God gave up their cattle to the hail, He showed that He was greater than the Egyptian goddess Hathor, believed to be a cow-like mother goddess (Exodus 9:1-7).

i. “The psalm omits the plague of gnats, the disease inflicted on the livestock, the boils visited on the people, and the days of darkness. There is no discernible reason either for the choice of the six judgments or the omission of the other four.” (Boice)

e. By sending angels of destruction among them: The worst of all the plagues was the last, the death of the firstborn. Egypt and Pharaoh would not give God His firstborn — Israel (Exodus 4:22-23); so God took the firstborn of Egypt (Exodus 11:1-12:30).

i. “His last arrow was the sharpest. He reserved the strong wine of his indignation to the last. Note how the psalmist piles up the words, and well he might; for blow followed blow, each one more staggering than its predecessor, and then the crushing stroke was reserved for the end.” (Spurgeon)

f. He made His own people go forth like sheep: After the death of the firstborn, the Egyptians begged the Israelites to leave and sent them away with gifts, happy to be rid of them. Asaph then summarized the next many years.

  • He led them on safely: God protected them all the way.
  • The sea overwhelmed their enemies: God destroyed the pursuing Egyptian army when the waters of the sea came crashing down upon them.
  • He brought them to His holy border: The border of His holy land of promise.
  • He also drove out the nations before them: Many of the Canaanite peoples were cleared away before Israel ever came to the land.
  • He allotted them an inheritance by survey: The land was divided among those to whom He had made an eternal promise of the land.

i. “The contrast is striking, and ought never to have been forgotten by the people. The wolves were slain in heaps, the sheep were carefully gathered, and triumphantly delivered. The tables were turned, and the poor serfs became the honoured people, while their oppressors were humbled before them.” (Spurgeon)

C. Stubborn, rebellious Israel in the Promised Land.

1. (Psalm 78:56-64) The terrible tragedy at Shiloh.

Yet they tested and provoked the Most High God,
And did not keep His testimonies,
But turned back and acted unfaithfully like their fathers;
They were turned aside like a deceitful bow.
For they provoked Him to anger with their high places,
And moved Him to jealousy with their carved images.
When God heard this, He was furious,
And greatly abhorred Israel,
So that He forsook the tabernacle of Shiloh,
The tent He had placed among men,
And delivered His strength into captivity,
And His glory into the enemy’s hand.
He also gave His people over to the sword,
And was furious with His inheritance.
The fire consumed their young men,
And their maidens were not given in marriage.
Their priests fell by the sword,
And their widows made no lamentation.

a. Yet they tested and provoked the Most High God: The previous long section of this psalm (verses 40 through 55) recounted God’s great faithfulness while in Egypt and as they went to Canaan. Yet once Israel came into the Promised Land, they did not keep His testimonies, but turned back and acted unfaithfully.

i. Turned aside like a deceitful bow: “In this they were unreliable, like a ‘faulty bow’ that springs wrongly when needed (cf. Psalm 78:9; Hosea 7:16).” (VanGemeren)

ii. “The figure of a ‘deceitful bow,’ in Psalm 78:57, well describes the people as failing to fulfil the purpose of their choice by God. As such a weapon does not shoot true, and makes the arrow fly wide, however well aimed and strongly drawn, so Israel foiled all Divine attempts, and failed to carry God’s message to the world, or to fulfil His will in themselves.” (Maclaren)

iii. “Israel boasted of the bow as the national weapon, they sang the song of the bow, and hence a deceitful bow is made to be the type and symbol of their own unsteadfastness; God can make men’s glory the very ensign of their shame.” (Spurgeon)

b. They provoked Him to anger with their high places, and moved Him to jealousy with their carved images: When Israel came into the Promised Land, they often worshiped the gods of the Canaanites, setting up altars on the high places and worshipping gods of carved images.

i. “The characteristic sin is no longer discontent (the paradox of the wilderness years with their daily miracles) but idolatry — the paradox of the years in Canaan, whose idolaters God had used Israel to judge.” (Kidner)

c. He forsook the tabernacle of Shiloh: Asaph remembered the tragedy at Shiloh, where the Philistines overran the tabernacle, killed the priests, and captured the ark of the covenant (1 Samuel 4).

d. Delivered His strength into captivity, and His glory into the enemy’s hand: When the ark of the covenant was captured at Shiloh, the daughter-in-law of Eli the high priest also learned that her husband, her brother-in-law, her father-in-law, and 30,000 Israeli soldiers were killed.

i. She was pregnant and the news was so overwhelming that she went into labor and died giving birth. With her last words she said to name the child born on such a tragic day, Ichabod — meaning, the glory has departed (1 Samuel 4:20-22). There certainly was a sense in which the glory had departed from Israel, but it wasn’t the glory of the ark of the covenant. The glory that departed was the glory of God’s blessing upon and presence with an obedient Israel.

e. The fire consumed the young men.... Their priests fell by the sword: Asaph reminded Israel that the losses at Shiloh were more than just the ark of the covenant. There was also a great loss of life, including the priests (1 Samuel 4:10-22).

i. Their maidens were not given in marriage: “They had not been honoured with nuptial songs according to the customs of those times, see Jeremiah 7:34; 16:9; 25:10. The meaning is, they had not been honourably married, because men were grown scarce by reason of the wars, Isaiah 4:1; Jeremiah 31:22. Or, they had been married without any solemnity, like poor bond-women; or privately, as in the time of public calamities.” (Diodati, cited in Spurgeon)

2. (Psalm 78:65-66) God’s triumph after Shiloh.

Then the Lord awoke as from sleep,
Like a mighty man who shouts because of wine.
And He beat back His enemies;
He put them to a perpetual reproach.

a. Then the Lord awoke as from sleep: When the Philistines captured the ark of the covenant, they placed it as a trophy in the temple of their pagan god Dagon. Even while the symbol of His presence was captive in a pagan temple, God demonstrated His glory (1 Samuel 5).

i. Like a mighty man: “The renewal of his acts of mercy to Israel was so overwhelming that the psalmist likens God to a ‘hero’ (gibbor, NIV, ‘man’) who feels himself more heroic when intoxicated with wine (Psalm 78:65).” (VanGemeren)

ii. “One who, going forth to meet his enemy, having taken a sufficiency of wine to refresh himself, and become a proper stimulus to his animal spirits, shouts — gives the war-signal for the onset; impatient to meet the foe, and sure of victory. The idea is not taken from the case of a drunken man. A person in such a state would be very unfit to meet his enemy, and could have little prospect of conquest.” (Clarke)

b. He beat back His enemies: The story of how God exalted Himself over the Philistines and put them to a perpetual reproach is found in 1 Samuel 5. In it all, God demonstrated that He was able to guard His glory when His people neglected His glory.

i. The King James Version translates the line from verse 66 he smote his enemies in the hinder parts. “Smote his enemies in the hinder part, with the disease of the emerods, which was both painful and shameful. He caused them to perpetuate their own reproach by sending back the ark of God with their golden emerods, the lasting monuments of their shame.” (Poole)

3. (Psalm 78:67-72) The hopeful choice of Jerusalem and David.

Moreover He rejected the tent of Joseph,
And did not choose the tribe of Ephraim,
But chose the tribe of Judah,
Mount Zion which He loved.
And He built His sanctuary like the heights,
Like the earth which He has established forever.
He also chose David His servant,
And took him from the sheepfolds;
From following the ewes that had young He brought him,
To shepherd Jacob His people,
And Israel His inheritance.
So he shepherded them according to the integrity of his heart,
And guided them by the skillfulness of his hands.

a. But chose the tribe of Judah: Asaph explained how God did not choose the other tribes to be the home of His sanctuary. He rejected the tent of Joseph, and instead chose Jerusalem (Mount Zion) to be the spiritual center of Israel.

i. “There are always new beginnings with God. Ephraim is rejected, but here Judah is chosen. Shiloh is abandoned, but the ark is brought to Mount Zion.” (Boice)

b. He also chose David His servant: In some ways Jerusalem was an unlikely choice to be the center of Israel. In the same pattern, David — the humble shepherd boy following the ewes that had young — was God’s choice to shepherd Jacob His people and Israel His inheritance.

c. So he shepherded them according to the integrity of his heart, and guided them by the skillfulness of his hands: Psalm 78 ends on a hopeful note. It concludes with recognition of and gratitude for the goodness of God in the integrity and skillfulness of David’s rule.

i. According to the integrity of his heart: “David was upright before God, and never swerved in heart from the obedient worship of Jehovah. Whatever faults he had, he was unfeignedly sincere in his allegiance to Israel’s superior king; he shepherded for God with honest heart.” (Spurgeon)

ii. Like many aspects of David’s rule, this was fulfilled in a much greater way in David’s Greater Son, Jesus the Messiah. David’s heart mostly had integrity; the heart of Jesus was perfect in integrity. David guided Israel with great skill; Jesus leads His people with perfect skill.

iii. “If Israel’s record is her shame, God’s persistent goodness emerges as her hope (and ours) for the unfinished story.” (Kidner)

© 2020 The Enduring Word Bible Commentary by David Guzik — ewm@enduringword.com


References:

  1. Boice, James Montgomery "Psalms: An Expostional Commentary" Volume 2 (Psalms 42-106) (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Books, 1996)
  2. Clarke, Adam "Clarke's Commentary: The Holy Bible Containing the Old and New Testaments with a Commentary and Critical Notes" Volume 3 (Job-Song of Solomon) (New York: Eaton and Mains, 1827)
  3. Kidner, Derek "Psalms 73-150: A Commentary" (Kidner Classic Commentaries) (Leicester, England: Inter-Varsity Press, 1975)
  4. Maclaren, Alexander "The Psalms" Volume 2 (Psalms 39-89) (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1892)
  5. Meyer, F.B. "Our Daily Homily: Psalms-Song of Solomon" Volume 3 (Westwood, New Jersey: Revell, 1966)
  6. Morgan, G. Campbell "Searchlights from the Word" (New York: Revell, 1926)
  7. Morgan, G. Campbell "An Exposition of the Whole Bible" (Old Tappan, New Jersey: Revell, 1959)
  8. Poole, Matthew "A Commentary on the Holy Bible" Volume 2 (Psalms-Malachi) (London: Banner of Truth Trust, 1968)
  9. Spurgeon, Charles Haddon "The Treasury of David: Volume 2" (Psalms 58-110) (Peabody, Massachusetts: Hendrickson, 1988)
  10. Trapp, John "A Commentary on the Old and New Testaments" Volume 2 (Ezra to Psalms) (Eureka, California: Tanski Publications, 1997)
  11. VanGemeren, Willem A. "Psalms: The Expositor's Bible Commentary" Volume 5 (Psalms-Song of Songs) (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan, 1991)

Updated: August 2022

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