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ADAM CLARKE'S BIBLE COMMENTARY -
PSALMS 29

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    PSALM XXIX

    The psalmist calls upon the great and mighty to give thanks unto God, and to worship him in the beauty of holiness, on account of a tempest that had taken place, 1, 2. He shouts the wonders produced by a thunderstorm, which he calls the voice of God, 3-9. Speaks of the majesty of God, 10; and points out the good he will do to his people, 11.

    NOTES ON PSALM XXIX

    In the Hebrew, this is called A Psalm for David. The Vulgate says, "A Psalm of David, when the tabernacle was completed." The Septuagint says: "A Psalm of David, at the going out or exodus of the tabernacle." The Arabic states it to be "A prophecy concerning the incarnation; and concerning the ark and the tent." Num. v. 12. The Syriac, "A Psalm of David, concerning oblation." The Psalm was probably written to commemorate the abundant rain which fell in the days of David, after the heavens had been shut up for three years; 2 Sam. xxi. 1-10.

    Verse 1. "O ye mighty " - yla ynb beney elim, "sons of the strong ones," or "sons of rams." The Chaldee has, "Ye hosts of angels, sons of God." The Vulgate has, "Offer to the Lord, ye sons of God; offer to the Lord the sons of rams;" in this rendering agree the Septuagint, AEthiopic Arabic, and Anglo- Saxon. The old Psalter has, "Bringes til Lord ye goddes sonnes; brynges til Lord sonnes of wether: which it paraphrases thus: that es, yourself, sonnes of apostles, that war leders of goddes folk; qwam ye study to folow.

    Glory and strength. ] Ascribe all excellence and might to him.

    The whole Psalms is employed in describing the effects produced by a thunder-storm which had lately taken place.

    Verse 2. "The glory due unto his name " - Rather, the glory of his name.

    His name is Mercy; his nature is love. Ascribe mercy, love, power, and wisdom to him. All these are implied in the name Jehovah.

    "In the beauty of holiness. " - dq trdhb behadrath kodesh, "the beautiful garments of holiness." Let the priests and Levites put on their best and cleanest apparel; and let the whole service be conducted in such a way as to be no dishonour to the Divine Majesty. The Vulgate and others read, In the palace of his holiness. Let all go to the temple, and return thanks to God for their preservation during this dreadful storm. See on ver. 9.

    Verse 3. "The voice of the Lord " - THUNDER, so called, Exodus ix. 23, 28, 29; Job xxxvii. 4; Psa. xviii. 13; Isa. xxx. 30. On this subject see the note on Job xxxvii. 4, where there is a particular description of the nature and generation of thunder; and of the lightning, clap, rain, and other phenomena which accompany it.

    "Upon many waters. " - The clouds, which Moses calls the waters which are above the firmament.

    Verse 4. "Is powerful " - There is no agent in universal nature so powerful as the electric fluid. It destroys life, tears castles and towers to pieces, rends the strongest oaks, and cleaves the most solid rocks: universal animate nature is awed and terrified by it. To several of these effects the psalmist here refers; and for the illustration of the whole I must refer to the above notes on Job.

    "Full of majesty. " - No sound in nature is so tremendous and majestic as that of thunder; it is the most fit to represent the voice of God.

    Verse 5. "Breaketh the cedars " - Very tall trees attract the lightning from the clouds, by which they are often torn to pieces. Woods and forests give dreadful proof of this after a thunderstorm.

    Verse 7. "Divideth the flames of fire. " - The forked zigzag lightning is the cause of thunder; and in a thunder-storm these liahtnings are variously dispersed, smiting houses, towers, trees, men, and cattle, in different places.

    Verse 8. "The wilderness of Kadesh. " - This was on the frontiers of Idumea and Paran. There may be a reference to some terrible thunder-storm and earthquake which had occurred in that place.

    Verse 9. "Maketh the hinds to calve " - Strikes terror through all the tribes of animals; which sometimes occasions those which are pregnant to cast their young. This, I believe, to be the whole that is meant by the text. I meddle not with the fables which have been published on this subject both by ancients and moderns.

    "Discovereth the forests " - Makes them sometimes evident in the darliest night, by the sudden flash; and often by setting them on fire.

    "And in his temple " - Does this refer to the effect which a dreadful thunder-storm often produces? Multitudes run to places of worship as asylums in order to find safety, and pray to God. See on ver. 2.

    Verse 10. "The Lord sitteth upon the flood " - by lwbml hwhy Jehovah lammabbul yasheb, "Jehovah sat upon the deluge." It was Jehovah that commanded those waters to be upon the earth. He directed the storm; and is here represented, after all the confusion and tempest, as sitting on the floods, appeasing the fury of the jarring elements; and reducing all things, by his governing influence, to regularity and order.

    "Sitteth king for ever. " - He governs universal nature; whatsoever he wills he does, in the heavens above, in the earth beneath, and in all deep places.

    Every phenomenon is under his government and control. There is something very like this in Virgil's description of Neptune appeasing the storm raised by Juno for the destruction of the fleet of AEneas. See at the end of this Psalm.

    Verse 11. "The Lord will give strength " - Prosperity in our secular affairs; success in our enterprises; and his blessing upon our fields and cattle.

    "The Lord will bless his people with peace. " - Give them victory over their enemies, and cause the nations to be at peace with them; so that they shall enjoy uninterrupted prosperity. The plentiful rain which God has now sent is a foretaste of his future blessings and abundant mercies.

    In the note on ver. 10 I have referred to the following description taken from Virgil. Did he borrow some of the chief ideas in it from the 29th Psalm? The reader will observe several coincidences.

    Interea magno misceri murmure pontum, Emissamque hyemem sensit Neptunus, et imis Stagna refusa vadis: graviter commotus, et alto Prospiciens, summa placidum caput extulit unda. Disjectam AEneae toto videt aequore classem, Fluctibus oppressos Troas, coelique ruina.

    Eurum ad se zephyrumque vocat: dehinc talia fatur Sic ait: et dicto citius tumida aequora placat, Collectasque fugat nubes, solemque reducit. Cymothoe simul, et Triton adnixus acuto Detrudunt naves scopulo; levat ipse tridenti; Et vastas aperit syrtes, et temperat aequor, Atque rotis summas levibus perlabitur undas.

    Sic cunctus pelagi cecidit fragor, aequora postquam Prospiciens genitor, caeloque invectus aperto, Flectit equos, curruque volans dat lora secundo. AEn. lib. i., ver. 124.

    "Mean time, imperial Neptune heard the sound Of raging billows breaking on the ground. Displeased, and fearing for his watery reign, He rears his awful head above the main, Serene in majesty; then rolled his eyes Around the space of earth, of seas, and skies. He saw the Trojan fleet dispersed, distressed, By stormy winds and wintry heaven oppressed.

    He summoned Eurus and the Western Blast, And first an angry glance on both he cast; Then thus rebuked.

    He spoke; and while he spoke, he soothed the sea, Dispelled the darkness, and restored the day. Cymothoe, Triton, and the sea-green train Of beauteous nymphs, and daughters of the main, Clear from the rocks the vessels with their hands; The god himself with ready trident stands, And opes the deep, and spreads the moving sands; Then heaves them off the shoals: where'er he guides His finny coursers, and in triumph rides, The waves unruffle, and the sea subsides.

    So when the father of the flood appears, And o'er the seas his sovereign trident rears, Their fury fails: he skims the liquid plains High on his chariot; and with loosened reins, Majestic moves along, and awful peace maintains. DRYDEN.

    Our God, Jehovah, sitteth upon the flood: yea, Jehovah sitteth King for ever.

    The heathen god is drawn by his sea-horse, and assisted in his work by subaltern deities: Jehovah sits on the flood an everlasting Governor, ruling all things by his will, maintaining order, and dispensing strength and peace to his people. The description of the Roman poet is fine; that of the Hebrew poet, majestic and sublime.

    ANALYSIS OF THE TWENTY-NINTH PSALM

    There are two parts in this Psalm: - I. The exhortation itself, ver. 1, 2.

    II. The reasons on which it is founded. These are drawn, 1. From his power, ver. 3-11.

    2. From the protection he affords to his people, ver. 11.

    I. The exhortation, which is singular. It proeeeds from a king, and not from a common man; a prince, a great prince; and reminds princes and great men that there is One greater than they; and that, therefore, they should yield unto him his due honour and worship.

    1. That they freely yield and give it up: for which he is very earnest, as appears from the urged repetition, give, give, give.

    2. That in giving this, they must understand they are giving him no more than his due: "Give him the honour due to his name." 3. What they are to give: glory and strength. 1. They must make his name to be glorious. 2. They must attribute their strengths to him.

    4. That they bow before and adore him.

    5. That they exhibit this honour in the proper PLACE: "In his temple; and in the beauty of holiness." II. And that they may be more easily persuaded to give the Lord the honour due to his name, he proposes two reasons to be considered: - First. His power; for although they be mighty ones, his power is infinitely beyond theirs; which is seen in his works of nature; but, omitting many others, he makes choice of the thunder, and the effects it produces.

    1. From its nature: for howsoever philosophers may assign it to natural causes, yet religious men will look higher; and, when they hear those fearful noises in the air, will confess, with the psalmist, that it is the voice of the Lord, which he repeats here seven times; and this voice has affrighted the stoutest-hearted sinners, and the mightiest of tyrants.

    2. From the place where this voice is given: "The voice of the Lord is upon the waters; upon many waters." 3. From its force and power. They are not vain and empty noises, but strike a terror: "The voice of the Lord is powerful; the voice of the Lord is full of majesty." 4. From its effects; which he explains by an induction: - 1. Upon the strong TREES, the cedars of Lebanon: "The voice of the Lord breaks the cedars," &c.

    2. Upon the firmest MOUNTAINS, even Lebanon and Sirion; for sometimes the thunder is accompanied with an earthquake, and the mountains skip like a call.

    3. Upon the air; which is, to common minds, no small wonder; for, as nothing is more contrary to fire than water, it is next to miraculous how, out of a watery cloud, such flames of fire should be darted.

    "The voice of the Lord divideth the flames of fire." 4. In the brute creation; for it makes them fear and leave their caves, dens, and woods; yea, makes some of them cast their young: "The voice of the Lord shaketh the wilderness," &c.; "it maketh the hinds to calve." 5. In the mighty rains which follow upon it; when the cataracts of heaven are opened, and such floods of water follow that a man might fear that the earth was about to be overwhelmed by a second inundation. Out of all which he draws this conclusion: "The Lord sitteth upon the flood; the Lord sitteth a King for ever;" therefore, the earth is not destroyed.

    Secondly. His second reason is drawn from the works of grace. 1. When He moves men to acknowledge his voice, and to give him glory in his temple: "In his temple doth every man speak of his honour." 2. By the security He gives to his people, even in the time when he utters his voice, and speaks on thunder; whereas the wicked then tremble and quake: "The Lord will give strength unto his people; the Lord will bless his people with peace," i.e., bodily security, and peace of conscience.

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