1ΑλληλουιαG239{INJ}· Αγγαιου{N-GSM} καὶG2532{CONJ} ΖαχαριουG2197{N-GSM}. ΑἴνειG134{V-PAD-2S}, ἡG3588{T-NSF} ψυχήG5590{N-NSF} μουG1473{P-GS}, τὸνG3588{T-ASM} יהוהH3068{N-ASM}. 2αἰνέσωG134{V-AAS-1S} יהוהH3068{N-ASM} ἐνG1722{PREP} ζωῇG2222{N-DSF} μουG1473{P-GS}, ψαλῶG5567{V-FAI-1S} τῷG3588{T-DSM} θεῷG2316{N-DSM} μουG1473{P-GS}, ἕωςG2193{PREP} ὑπάρχωG5225{V-PAI-1S}. 3μὴG3165{ADV} πεποίθατεG3982{V-RAI-2P} ἐπ᾽G1909{PREP} ἄρχονταςG758{N-APM} καὶG2532{CONJ} ἐφ᾽G1909{PREP} υἱοὺςG5207{N-APM} ἀνθρώπωνG444{N-GPM}, οἷςG3739{R-DPM} οὐκG3364{ADV} ἔστινG1510{V-PAI-3S} σωτηρίαG4991{N-NSF}. 4ἐξελεύσεταιG1831{V-FMI-3S} τὸG3588{T-ASN} πνεῦμαG4151{N-ASN} αὐτοῦG846{P-GSM}, καὶG2532{CONJ} ἐπιστρέψειG1994{V-FAI-3S} εἰςG1519{PREP} τὴνG3588{T-ASF} γῆνG1065{N-ASF} αὐτοῦG846{P-GSM}· ἐνG1722{PREP} ἐκείνῃG1565{D-DSF} τῇG3588{T-DSF} ἡμέρᾳG2250{N-DSF} ἀπολοῦνταιG622{V-FMI-3P} πάντεςG3956{A-NPM} οἱG3588{T-NPM} διαλογισμοὶG1261{N-NPM} αὐτῶνG846{P-GPM}. 5μακάριοςG3107{A-NSM} οὗG3739{R-GSM} ὁG3588{T-NSM} θεὸςG2316{N-NSM} ΙακωβG2384{N-PRI} βοηθόςG998{N-NSM}, ἡG3588{T-NSF} ἐλπὶςG1680{N-NSF} αὐτοῦG846{P-GSM} ἐπὶG1909{PREP} יהוהH3068{N-ASM} τὸνG3588{T-ASM} θεὸνG2316{N-ASM} αὐτοῦG846{P-GSM} 6τὸνG3588{T-ASM} ποιήσανταG4160{V-AAPAS} τὸνG3588{T-ASM} οὐρανὸνG3772{N-ASM} καὶG2532{CONJ} τὴνG3588{T-ASF} γῆνG1065{N-ASF}, τὴνG3588{T-ASF} θάλασσανG2281{N-ASF} καὶG2532{CONJ} πάνταG3956{A-ASM} τὰG3588{T-APN} ἐνG1722{PREP} αὐτοῖςG846{P-DPM}, τὸνG3588{T-ASM} φυλάσσονταG5442{V-PAPAS} ἀλήθειανG225{N-ASF} εἰςG1519{PREP} τὸνG3588{T-ASM} αἰῶναG165{N-ASM}, 7ποιοῦνταG4160{V-PAPAS} κρίμαG2917{N-ASN} τοῖςG3588{T-DPM} ἀδικουμένοιςG91{V-PMPDP}, διδόνταG1325{V-PAPAS} τροφὴνG5160{N-ASF} τοῖςG3588{T-DPM} πεινῶσινG3983{V-PAI-3P}· יהוהH3068{N-NSM} λύειG3089{V-PAI-3S} πεπεδημένους{V-RMPAP}, 8יהוהH3068{N-NSM} ἀνορθοῖG461{V-PAI-3S} κατερραγμένους{V-AMPAP}, יהוהH3068{N-NSM} σοφοῖG4680{A-NPM} τυφλούςG5185{A-APM}, יהוהH3068{N-NSM} ἀγαπᾷG25{V-PAI-3S} δικαίουςG1342{A-APM}· 9יהוהH3068{N-NSM} φυλάσσειG5442{V-PAI-3S} τοὺςG3588{T-APM} προσηλύτουςG4339{N-APM}, ὀρφανὸνG3737{A-ASM} καὶG2532{CONJ} χήρανG5503{N-ASF} ἀναλήμψεταιG353{V-FMI-3S} καὶG2532{CONJ} ὁδὸνG3598{N-ASF} ἁμαρτωλῶνG268{A-GPM} ἀφανιεῖG853{V-FAI-3S}. 10βασιλεύσειG936{V-FAI-3S} יהוהH3068{N-NSM} εἰςG1519{PREP} τὸνG3588{T-ASM} αἰῶναG165{N-ASM}, ὁG3588{T-NSM} θεόςG2316{N-NSM} σουG4771{P-GS}, ΣιωνG4622{N-PRI}, εἰςG1519{PREP} γενεὰνG1074{N-ASF} καὶG2532{CONJ} γενεάνG1074{N-ASF}.
Matthew Henry - Complete Commentary 1 David is supposed to have penned this psalm; and he was himself a prince, a mighty prince; as such, it might be thought, 1. That he should be exempted from the service of praising God, that it was enough for him to see that his priests and people did it, but that he needed not to do it himself in his own person. Michal thought it a disparagement to him to
dance before the ark; but he was so far from being of this mind that he would himself be first and foremost in the work,
Pss 146:1,
Pss 146:2. He considered his dignity as so far from excusing him from it that it rather obliged him to lead in it, and he thought it so far from lessening him that it really magnified him; therefore he stirred up himself to it and to make a business of it:
Praise the Lord, O my soul! and he resolved to abide by it: I will praise him with my heart,
I will sing praises to him with my mouth. Herein I will have an eye to him as
the Lord, infinitely blessed and glorious in himself, and as
my God, in covenant with me. Praise is most pleasant when, in praising God, we have an eye to him as ours, whom we have an interest in and stand in relation to. This I will do constantly while I live, every day of my life, and to my life's end; nay, I will do it
while I have any being, for when I have no being on earth I hope to have a being in heaven, a better being, to be doing it better. That which is the great end of our being ought to be our great employment and delight while we have any being. In thee must our time and powers be spent. 2. It might be thought that he himself, having been so great a blessing to his country, should be adored, according to the usage of the heathen nations, who deified their heroes, that they should all come and
trust in his shadow and make him their
stay and
strong-hold. No, says David,
Put not your trust in princes (
Pss 146:3), not in me, not in any other; do not repose your confidence in them; do not raise your expectations from them. Be not too sure of their sincerity; some have thought they knew better how to reign by knowing how to dissemble. Be not too sure of their constancy and fidelity; it is possible they may both change their minds and break their words. But, though we suppose them very wise and as good as David himself, yet we must not be too sure of their ability and continuance, for they are sons of Adam, weak and mortal. There is indeed a Son of man in whom there is help, in whom there is salvation, and who will not fail those that trust in him. But all other sons of men are like the man they are sprung of, who, being in honour, did not abide. (1.) We cannot be sure of their ability. Even the power of kings may be so straitened, cramped, and weakened, that they may not be in a capacity to do that for us which we expect. David himself owned (
2Sam 3:39),
I am this day weak, though anointed king. So that
in the son of man there is often
no help, no salvation; he is at a loss, at his wits' end, as
a man astonished, and then, though
a mighty man, he
cannot save, Jer 14:9. (2.) We cannot be sure of their continuance. Suppose he has it in his power to help us while he lives, yet he may be suddenly taken off when we expect most from him (
Pss 146:4):
His breath goes forth, so it does every moment, and comes back again, but that is an intimation that it will shortly go for good and all, and then
he returns to his earth. The earth is his, in respect of his original as a man, the earth out of which he was taken, and to which therefore he must return, according to the sentence,
Gen 3:19. It is his, if he be a worldly man, in respect of choice, his earth which he has chosen for his portion, and on the things of which he has set his affections. He shall go to his own place. Or, rather, it is his earth because of the property he has in it; and though he has had large possessions on earth a grave is all that will remain to him.
The earth God has given to the children of men, and great striving there is about it, and, as a mark of their authority, men
call their lands by their own names. But, after a while, no part of the earth will be their own but that in which the dead body shall make its bed, and that shall be theirs
while the earth remains. But, when he returns to his earth,
in that very day his thoughts perish; all the projects and designs he had of kindness to us vanish and are gone, and he cannot take one step further in them; all his purposes are cut off and buried with him,
Job 17:11. And then what becomes of our expectations from him? Princes are mortal, as well as other men, and therefore we cannot have that assurance of help from them which we may have from that Potentate who hath immortality.
Cease from man, whose breath is in his nostrils and will not be there long.
5 The psalmist, having cautioned us not to trust in princes (because, if we do, we shall be miserably disappointed), here encourages us to put our confidence in God, because, if we do so, we shall be happily secured:
Happy is he that has the God of Jacob for his help, that has an interest in his attributes and promises, and has them engaged for him, and
whose hope is in the Lord his God. I. Let us take a view of the character here given of those whom God will uphold. Those shall have God for their help, 1. Who take him for their God, and serve and worship him accordingly. 2. Who have their hope in him, and live a life of dependence upon him, who have good thoughts of him, and encourage themselves in him, when all other supports fail. Every believer may look upon him as the God of Jacob, of the church in general, and therefore may expect relief from him, in reference to public distresses, and as his God in particular, and therefore may depend upon him in all personal wants and straits. We must hope, (1.) In the providence of God for all the good things we need, which relate to the life that now is. (2.) In the grace of Christ for all the good things which relate to the life that is to come. To this especially the learned Dr. Hammond refers this and the following verses, looking upon the latter part of this psalm to have a most visible remarkable aspect towards the eternal Son of God in his incarnation. He quotes one of the rabbies, who says of
Pss 146:10 that it belongs to the days of the Messiah. And that it does so he thinks will appear by comparing
Pss 146:7,
Pss 146:8, with the characters Christ gives of the Messiah (
Matt 11:5,
Matt 11:6),
The blind receive their sight, the lame walk; and the closing words there,
Blessed is he whosoever shall not be offended in me, he thinks may very well be supposed to refer to
Pss 146:5.
Happy is the man that hopes in the Lord his God, and who is not offended in him.
II. Let us take a view of the great encouragements here given us to hope in
the Lord our God. 1. He is the
Maker of the world, and therefore has all power in himself, and the command of the powers of all the creatures, which, being derived from him, depend upon him (
Pss 146:6):
He made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and therefore his arm is not shortened, that it cannot save. It is very applicable to Christ, by whom God made the world, and
without whom was not any thing made that was made. It is a great support to faith that the Redeemer of the world is the same that was the Creator of it, and therefore has a good-will to it, a perfect knowledge of its case, and power to help it. 2. He is a God of inviolable fidelity. We may venture to take God's word, for he
keepeth truth for ever, and therefore no word of his shall fall to the ground; it is true
from the beginning, and therefore true
to the end. Our Lord Jesus is the Amen,
the faithful witness, as well as
the beginning, the author and principle,
of the creation of God, Revel 3:14. The keeping of God's truth for ever is committed to him, for
all the promises are in him
yea and amen. 3. He is the patron of injured innocency:
He pleads the cause of the oppressed, and (as we read it) he
executes judgment for them. He often does it in his providence, giving redress to those that suffer wrong and clearing up their integrity. He will do it in the judgment of the great day. The Messiah came to rescue the children of men out of the hands of Satan the great oppressor, and, all judgment being committed to him, the executing of judgment upon persecutors is so among the rest,
Jude 1:15. 4. He is a bountiful benefactor to the necessitous:
He gives food to the hungry; so God does in an ordinary way for the answering of the cravings of nature; so he has done sometimes in an extraordinary way, as when ravens fed Elijah; so Christ did more than once when he fed thousands miraculously with that which was intended but for one meal or two for his own family. This encourages us to hope in him as the nourisher of our souls with the bread of life. 5. He is the author of liberty to those that were bound:
The Lord looseth the prisoners. He brought Israel out of the house of bondage in Egypt and afterwards in Babylon. The miracles Christ wrought, in making the dumb to speak and the deaf to hear with that one word,
Ephphatha -
Be opened, his cleansing lepers, and so discharging them from their confinements, and his raising the dead out of their graves, may all be included in this one of
loosing the prisoners; and we may take encouragement from those to hope in him for that spiritual liberty which he came to proclaim,
Isa 61:1,
Isa 61:2. 6. He gives sight to those that have been long deprived of it;
The Lord can open the eyes of the blind, and has often given to his afflicted people to see that comfort which before they were not aware of; witness
Gen 21:19, and the prophet's servant,
2Kgs 6:17. But this has special reference to Christ; for
since the world began was it not heard that any man opened the eyes of one that was born blind till Christ did it (
John 9:32) and thereby encouraged us to hope in him for spiritual illumination. 7. He sets that straight which was crooked, and makes those easy that were pained and ready to sink: He
raises those that are bowed down, by comforting and supporting them under their burdens, and, in due time, removing their burdens. This was literally performed by Christ when he made a poor woman straight that had been
bowed together, and could in no wise lift up herself (
Luke 13:12); and he still does it by his grace, giving rest to those that were weary and heavily laden, and raising up with his comforts those that were humbled and cast down by convictions. 8. He has a constant kindness for all good people:
The Lord loveth the righteous, and they may with the more confidence depend upon his power when they are sure of his good-will. Our Lord Jesus showed his love to the righteous
by fulfilling all righteousness. 9. He has a tender concern for those that stand in special need of his care:
The Lord preserves the strangers. It ought not to pass without remark that the name of
Jehovah is repeated here five times in five lines, to intimate that it is an almighty power (that of Jehovah) that is engaged and exerted for the relief of the oppressed, and that it is as much the glory of God to succour those that are in misery as it is to
ride on the heavens by his name Jah, Pss 68:4. (1.) Strangers are exposed, and are commonly destitute of friends, but
the Lord preserves them, that they be not run down and ruined. Many a poor stranger has found the benefit of the divine protection and been kept alive by it. (2.)
Widows and fatherless children, that have lost the head of the family, who took care of the affairs of it, often fall into the hands of those that make a prey of them, that will not do them justice, nay, that will do them injustice; but
the Lord relieveth them, and raiseth up friends for them. See
Exod 22:22,
Exod 22:23. Our Lord Jesus came into the world to help the helpless, to receive Gentiles, strangers, into his kingdom, and that with him poor sinners, that are as fatherless,
may find mercy, Hos 14:3. 10. He will appear for the destruction of all those that oppose his kingdom and oppress the faithful subjects of it:
The way of the wicked he turns upside down, and therefore let us
hope in him, and not be
afraid of the fury of the oppressor, as though he were
ready to destroy. It is the glory of the Messiah that he will subvert all the counsels of hell and earth that militate against his church, so that, having him for us, we need not fear any thing that can be done against us. 11. His kingdom shall continue through all the revolutions of time, to the utmost ages of eternity, v. 10. Let
this encourage us to trust in God at all times that
the Lord shall reign for ever, in spite of all the malignity of the powers of darkness,
even thy God, O Zion! unto all generations. Christ is set King on the holy hill of Zion, and his kingdom shall continue in an endless glory. It cannot be destroyed by an invader; it shall not be left to a successor, either to a succeeding monarch or a succeeding monarchy, but it shall stand for ever. It is matter of unspeakable comfort that
the Lord reigns as Zion's God, as Zion's king, that the Messiah is head over all things to the church, and will be so while the world stands.