1Haleluja! Chválu vzdejte Hospodinu, protože je dobrý, vždyť jeho milosrdenství je věčné! 2Kdo vylíčí Hospodinovy mocné činy? Kdo rozhlásí všechnu jeho chválu? 3Blahoslavení jsou ti, kdo zachovávají právo, kdo jednají v každé době spravedlivě. 4Rozpomeň se na mě, Hospodine, pro přízeň ke svému lidu, navštiv mě svou spásou, 5abych viděl dobro tvých vyvolených, abych se radoval radostí tvého národa, abych se chlubil tvým dědictvím. 6Zhřešili jsme jako naši otcové, páchali jsme zlo, jednali jsme ničemně. 7Naši otcové v Egyptě nepochopili tvé divy, nepřipomínali si tvé hojné milosrdenství, byli vzpurní při moři, při moři Rákosovém. 8Ale on je zachránil pro své jméno, aby dal poznat svou udatnost. 9Obořil se na Rákosové moře a vyschlo. Vedl je vodními hlubinami jako pustinou. 10Zachránil je z rukou toho, kdo je nenáviděl, vykoupil je z ruky nepřítele. 11Jejich protivníky přikryla voda, nezbyl z nich ani jeden. 12I uvěřili jeho slovům, zpívali k jeho chvále. 13Rychle však zapomněli na jeho skutky, nečekali na jeho rozhodnutí. 14V pustině propadli chtivosti, v pusté krajině pokoušeli Boha. 15Splnil jim tedy jejich prosby, leč postihl je úbytěmi. 16V táboře žárlili na Mojžíše i na Árona, Hospodinova svatého. 17Země se otevřela a pohltila Dátana a přikryla spolek Abíramův. 18Proti jejich spolku vzplanul oheň, plamen spálil ničemy. 19Na Chorébu udělali tele a klaněli se lité modle. 20Zaměnili svou Slávu za zpodobení býka, který žere trávu. 21Zapomněli na Boha, svého zachránce, který učinil v Egyptě veliké věci, 22divy v zemi Chámově, hrůzu vzbuzující činy u Rákosového moře. 23Řekl tedy, že je vyhladí. Ale Mojžíš, jeho vyvolený, se postavil do trhliny před ním, a tak odvrátil jeho rozlícení, aby je nezničil. 24Pohrdli výbornou zemí, nevěřili jeho slovu, 25reptali ve svých stanech, neuposlechli Hospodina. 26Pozvedl tedy proti nim ruku, že je v pustině nechá padnout 27a že jejich potomstvo nechá padnout mezi pohany a že je rozpráší do různých zemí. 28Pak se spřáhli s Baal-peórem a jedli oběti mrtvých. 29Svými činy ho popouzeli k hněvu a dopadla na ně rána. 30I povstal Pinchas, vykonal soud a rána byla zastavena. 31Bylo mu to přičteno k spravedlnosti od pokolení do pokolení — až navěky. 32U Vod sváru ho podnítili ke hněvu, kvůli nim se zle vedlo i Mojžíšovi, 33neboť se vzepřeli jeho Duchu a on svými rty mluvil nerozvážně. 34Nevyhladili národy, o nichž Hospodin mluvil, 35ale smísili se s pohanskými národy a učili se jejich skutkům. 36Sloužili jejich modlářským zpodobeninám a ty se jim staly léčkou. 37Své syny a své dcery obětovali démonům. 38Prolévali nevinnou krev, krev svých synů a dcer, které obětovali kenaanským modlářským zpodobeninám, a proléváním krve znesvětili zemi. 39Svými skutky se poskvrnili; svými činy se dopouštěli smilstva. 40Hospodin vzplál proti svému lidu hněvem a své dědictví si zošklivil. 41Vydal je do ruky pohanských národů, takže nad nimi vládli ti, kdo je nenáviděli. 42Utlačovali je jejich nepřátelé, byli pokořeni, byli pod jejich mocí. 43Mnohokrát je vysvobodil, leč oni se svými úradky vzpírali a pro své viny byli pokořeni. 44I pohleděl na jejich soužení a vyslyšel jejich nářek. 45Pamatoval kvůli nim na svou smlouvu a slitovával se podle svého hojného milosrdenství 46a dal jim dojít slitování před všemi, kdo je odvedli do zajetí. 47Zachraň nás, Hospodine, náš Bože, shromáždi nás z národů, a budeme vzdávat díky tvému svatému jménu a uctívat tě chválami. 48Požehnán buď Hospodin, Bůh Izraele, od věků až navěky. A všechen lid ať řekne: Amen. Haleluja!
Matthew Henry - Complete Commentary 1 We are here taught,
I. To bless God (
Pss 106:1,
Pss 106:2):
Praise you the Lord, that is, 1. Give him thanks for his goodness, the manifestation of it to us, and the many instances of it.
He is good and
his mercy endures for ever; let us therefore own our obligations to him and make him a return of our best affections and services. 2. Give him the glory of his greatness, his
mighty acts, proofs of his almighty power, wherein he has done great things, and such as would be opposed.
Who can utter these? Who is worthy to do it? Who is able to do it? They are so many that they cannot be numbered, so mysterious that they cannot be described; when we have said the most we can of the mighty acts of the Lord, the one half is not told; still there is more to be said; it is a subject that cannot be exhausted. We must
show forth his praise; we may show forth some of it, but
who can show forth all? Not the angels themselves. This will not excuse us in not doing what we can, but should quicken us to do all we can.
II. To bless the people of God, to call and account them happy (
Pss 106:3):
Those that keep judgment are blessed, for they are fit to be employed in praising God. God's people are those whose principles are sound -
They keep judgment (they adhere to the rules of wisdom and religion, and their practices are agreeable); they
do righteousness, are just to God and to all men, and herein they are steady and constant; they do it
at all times, in all manner of conversation, at every turn, in every instance, and herein persevering to the end.
III. To bless ourselves in the favour of God, to place our happiness in it, and to seek it, accordingly, with all seriousness, as the psalmist here,
Pss 106:4,
Pss 106:5. 1. He has an eye to the lovingkindness of God, as the fountain of all happiness:
Remember me, O Lord! to give me that mercy and grace which I stand in need of,
with the favour which thou bearest to thy people. As there are a people in the world who are in a peculiar manner God's people, so there is a peculiar favour which God bears to that people, which all gracious souls desire an interest in; and we need desire no more to make us happy. 2. He has an eye to the salvation of God, the great salvation, that of the soul, as the foundation of happiness:
O visit me with thy salvation. Afford me (says Dr. Hammond) that pardon and that grace which I stand in need of, and can hope for from none but thee. Let that salvation be my portion for ever, and the pledges of it my present comfort. 3. He has an eye to the blessedness of the righteous, as that which includes all good (
Pss 106:5):
That I may see the good of thy chosen and be as happy as the saints are; and happier I do not desire to be. God's people are here called his
chosen, his
nation, his
inheritance; for he has set them apart for himself, incorporated them under his own government, is served by them and glorified in them. The chosen people of God have a good which is peculiar to them, which is the matter both of their gladness and of their glorying, which is their pleasure, and their praise. God's people have reason to be a cheerful people, and to boast in their God all the day long; and those who have that gladness, that glory, need not envy any of the children of men their pleasure or pride. The gladness of God's nation, and the glory of his inheritance, are enough to satisfy any man; for they have everlasting joy and glory at the end of them.
6 Here begins a penitential confession of sin, which was in a special manner seasonable now that the church was in distress; for thus we must justify God in all that he brings upon us, acknowledging that
therefore he has done right, because
we have done wickedly; and the remembrance of former sins, notwithstanding which God did not cast off his people, is an encouragement to us to hope that, though we are justly corrected for our sins, yet we shall not be utterly abandoned.
I. God's afflicted people here own themselves guilty before God (
Pss 106:6):
We have sinned with our fathers, that is, like our fathers, after the similitude of their transgression. We have added to the stock of hereditary guilt, and filled up the measure of our fathers' iniquity,
to augment yet the fierce anger of the Lord, Num 32:14;
Matt 23:32. And see how they lay a load upon themselves, as becomes penitents:
We have committed iniquity, that which is in its own nature sinful, and
we have done wickedly; we have sinned with a high hand presumptuously. Or this is a confession, not only of their imitation of, but their interest in, their fathers' sins:
We have sinned with our fathers, for we were in their loins and we
bear their iniquity, Lam 5:7.
II. They bewail the sins of their fathers when they were first formed into a people, which, since children often smart for, they are concerned to sorrow for, even further than to the third and fourth generation. Even we now ought to take occasion from the history of Israel's rebellions to lament the depravity and perverseness of man's nature and its unaptness to be amended by the most probable means. Observe here,
1. The strange stupidity of Israel in the midst of the favours God bestowed upon them (
Pss 106:7):
They understood not thy wonders in Egypt. They saw them, but they did not rightly apprehend the meaning and design of them.
Blessed are those that have not seen, and yet have understood. They thought the plagues of Egypt were intended for their deliverance, whereas they were intended also for their instruction and conviction, not only to force them out of their Egyptian slavery, but to cure them of their inclination to Egyptian idolatry, by evidencing the sovereign power and dominion of the God of Israel, above all gods, and his particular concern for them. We lose the benefit of providences for want of understanding them. And, as their understandings were dull, so their memories were treacherous; though one would think such astonishing events should never have been forgotten, yet they remembered them not, at least
they remembered not the multitude of God's
mercies in them.
Therefore God is distrusted because his favours are not remembered.
2. Their perverseness arising from this stupidity:
They provoked him at the sea, even at the Red Sea. The provocation was, despair of deliverance (because the danger was great) and wishing they had been left in Egypt still,
Exod 14:11,
Exod 14:12. Quarrelling with God's providence, and questioning his power, goodness, and faithfulness, are as great provocations to him as any whatsoever. The place aggravated the crime; it was
at the sea, at the Red Sea, when they had newly come out of Egypt and the wonders God had wrought for them were fresh in their minds; yet they reproach him, as if all that power had no mercy in it, but he had brought them out of Egypt on purpose to
kill them in the wilderness. They never lay at God's mercy so immediately as in their passage through the Red Sea, yet there they affront it, and provoke his wrath.
3. The great salvation God wrought for them notwithstanding their provocations,
Pss 106:8-
Pss 106:11. (1.) He forced a passage for them through the sea:
He rebuked the Red Sea for standing in their way and retarding their march,
and it was dried up immediately; as, in the creation,
at God's rebuke the waters fled, Pss 104:7. Nay, he not only prepared them a way, but, by the pillar of cloud and fire, he
led them into the sea, and, by the conduct of Moses, led them through it as readily as
through the wilderness. He encouraged them to take those steps, and subdued their fears, when those were their most dangerous and threatening enemies. See
Isa 63:12-
Isa 63:14. (2.) He interposed between them and their pursuers, and prevented them from cutting them off, as they designed. The Israelites were all on foot, and the Egyptians had all of them chariots and horses, with which they were likely to overtake them quickly, but God
saved them from the hand of him that hated them, namely, Pharaoh, who never loved them, but now hated them the more for the plagues he had suffered on their account.
From the hand of his
enemy, who was just ready to seize them,
God redeemed them (
Pss 106:10), interposing himself, as it were, in the pillar of fire, between the persecuted and the persecutors. (3.) To complete the mercy, and turn the deliverance into a victory, the Red Sea, which was a lane to them, was a grave to the Egyptians (
Pss 106:11):
The waters covered their enemies, so as to slay them, but not so as to conceal their shame; for, the next tide, they were thrown up dead upon the shore,
Exod 14:30.
There was not one of them left alive, to bring tidings of what had become of the rest. And why did God do this for them? Nay, why did he not cover them, as he did their enemies, for their unbelief and murmuring? He tells us (
Pss 106:8): it was
for his name's sake. Though they did not deserve this favour, he designed it; and their undeservings should not alter his designs, nor break his measures, nor make him withdraw his promise, or fail in the performance of it. He did this for his own glory,
that he might make his mighty power to be known, not only in dividing the sea, but in doing it notwithstanding their provocations. Moses prays (
Num 14:17,
Num 14:19),
Let the power of my Lord be great and pardon the iniquity of this people. The power of the God of grace in pardoning sin and sparing sinners is as much to be admired as the power of the God of nature in dividing the waters.
4. The good impression this made upon them for the present (
Pss 106:12):
Then believed they his words, and acknowledged that God was with them of a truth, and had, in mercy to them, brought them out of Egypt, and not with any design to slay them in the wilderness; then
they feared the Lord and his servant Moses, Exod 14:31. Then
they sang his praise, in that song of Moses penned on this great occasion,
Exod 15:1. See in what a gracious and merciful way God sometimes silences the unbelief of his people, and turns their fears into praises; and so it is written,
Those that erred in spirit shall come to understanding, and
those that murmured shall learn doctrine, Isa 29:24.
13 This is an abridgment of the history of Israel's provocations in the wilderness, and of the wrath of God against them for those provocations: and this abridgment is abridged by the apostle, with application to us Christians (
1Cor 10:5, etc.); for these things were
written for our admonition, that we sin not like them, lest we suffer like them.
I. The cause of their sin was disregard to the works and word of God,
Pss 106:13. 1. They minded not what he had done for them:
They soon forgot his works, and lost the impressions they had made upon them. Those that do not improve God's mercies to them, nor endeavour in some measure to render according to the benefit done unto them, do indeed forget them. This people soon forgot them (God took notice of this,
Exod 32:8,
They have turned aside quickly )
: They made haste, they forgot his works (so it is in the margin), which some make to be two separate instances of their sin.
They made haste; their expectations anticipated God's promises; they expected to be in Canaan shortly, and because they were not they questioned whether they should ever be there and quarrelled with all the difficulties they met with in their way; whereas
he that believeth does not make haste, Isa 28:16. And, withal,
they forgot his works, which were the undeniable evidences of his wisdom, power, and goodness, and denied the conclusion as confidently as if they had never seen the premises proved. This is mentioned again (
Pss 106:21,
Pss 106:22):
They forgot God their Saviour; that is, they forgot that he had been their Saviour. Those that forget the works of God forget God himself, who makes himself known by his works. They forgot what was done but a few days before, which we may suppose they could not but talk of, even then, when, because they did not make a good use of it, they are said to forget it: it was what God did for them
in Egypt, in the land of Ham, and
by the Red Sea, things which we at this distance cannot, or should not, be unmindful of. They are called
great things (for, though the great God does nothing mean, yet he does some things that are in a special manner great),
wondrous works, out of the common road of Providence, therefore observable, therefore memorable, and
terrible things, awful to them, and dreadful to their enemies, and yet soon forgotten. Even miracles that were seen passed away with them as tales that are told. 2. They minded not what God had said to them nor would they depend upon it:
They waited not for his counsel, did not attend his word, though they had Moses to be his mouth to them; they took up resolves about which they did not consult him and made demands without calling upon him. They would be in Canaan directly, and had not patience to tarry God's time. The delay was intolerable, and therefore the difficulties were looked upon as insuperable. This is explained (
Pss 106:24):
They believed not his word, his promise that he would make them masters of Canaan; and (
Pss 106:25),
They hearkened not to the voice of the Lord, who gave them counsel which they would not wait for, not only by Moses and Aaron, but by Caleb and Joshua,
Num 14:6,
Num 14:7, etc. Those that will not wait for God's counsel shall justly be given up to their own hearts' lusts, to walk in their own counsels.
II. Many of their sins are here mentioned, together with the tokens of God's displeasure which they fell under for those sins.
1. They would have flesh, and yet would not believe that God could give it to them (
Pss 106:14):
They lusted a lust (so the word is)
in the wilderness; there, where they had bread enough and to spare, yet nothing would serve them but they must have flesh to eat. They were now purely at God's finding, being supported entirely by miracles, so that this was a reflection upon the wisdom and goodness of their Creator. They were also, in all probability, within a step of Canaan, yet had not patience to stay for dainties till they came thither. They had flocks and herds of their own, but they will not kill them; God must give them flesh as he gave them bread, or they will never give him credit, or their good word. They did not only wish for flesh,
but they
lusted exceedingly after it. A desire, even of lawful things, when it is inordinate and violent, becomes sinful; and therefore this is called
lusting after evil things (
1Cor 10:6), though the quails, as God's gift, were good things, and were so spoken of,
Pss 105:40. Yet this was not all:
They tempted God in the desert, where they had had such experience of his goodness and power, and questioned whether he could and would gratify them herein. See
Pss 78:19,
Pss 78:20. Now how did God show his displeasure against them for this. We are told how (
Pss 106:15):
He gave them their request, but gave it them in anger, and with a curse, for he
sent leanness into their soul; he filled them with uneasiness of mind, and terror of conscience, and a self-reproach, occasioned by their bodies being sick with the surfeit, such as sometimes drunkards experience after a great debauch. Or this is put for that great plague with which the Lord smote them,
while the flesh was yet between their teeth, as we read,
Num 11:33. It was the consumption of the life. Note, (1.) What is asked in passion is often given in wrath. (2.) Many that fare deliciously every day, and whose bodies are healthful and fat, have, at the same time, leanness in their souls, no love to God, no thankfulness, no appetite to the bread of life, and then the soul must needs be lean. Those wretchedly forget themselves that feast their bodies and starve their souls.
Then God gives the good things of this life in love, when with them he gives grace to glorify him in the use of them; for then
the soul delights itself in fatness, Isa 55:2.
2. They quarrelled with the government which God had set over them both in church and state (
Pss 106:16):
They envied Moses his authority
in the camp, as generalissimo of the armies of Israel and chief justice in all their courts; they envied
Aaron his power, as
saint of the Lord, consecrated to the office of high priest, and Korah would needs put in for the pontificate, while Dathan and Abiram, as princes of the tribe of Reuben, Jacob's eldest son, would claim to be chief magistrates, by the so-much-admired right of primogeniture. Note, Those are preparing ruin for themselves who envy those whom God has put honour upon and usurp the dignities they were never designed for. And justly will contempt be poured upon those who put contempt upon any of the saints of the Lord. How did God show his displeasure for this? We are told how, and it is enough to make us tremble (
Pss 106:17,
Pss 106:18); we have the story,
Num 16:32,
Num 16:35. (1.) Those that flew in the face of the civil authority were punished by
the earth, which
opened and swallowed them up, as not fit to go upon God's ground, because they would not submit to God's government. (2.) Those that would usurp the ecclesiastical authority in things pertaining to God suffered the vengeance of heaven, for
fire came out from the Lord and consumed them, and the pretending sacrificers were themselves sacrificed to divine justice.
The flame burnt up the wicked; for though they vied with
Aaron, the saint of the Lord, for holiness (
Num 16:3,
Num 16:5), yet God adjudged them wicked, and as such cut them off, as in due time he will destroy the man of sin, that wicked one, notwithstanding his proud pretensions to holiness.
3. They made and worshipped the golden calf, and this in Horeb, where the law was given, and where God had expressly said,
Thou shalt neither
make any graven image nor
bow down to it; they did both:
They made a calf and worshipped it,
Pss 106:19.
(1.) Herein they bade defiance to, and put an affront upon, the two great lights which God has made to rule the moral world: - [1.] That of human reason; for
they changed their glory, their God, at least the manifestation of him, which always had been in a cloud (either a dark cloud or a bright one), without any manner of visible similitude,
into the similitude of Apis, one of the Egyptian idols,
an ox that eateth grass, than which nothing could be more grossly and scandalously absurd,
Pss 106:20. Idolaters are perfectly besotted, and put the greatest disparagement possible both upon God, in representing him by the image of a beast, and upon themselves, in worshipping it when they have so done. That which is here said to be the changing of their glory is explained by St. Paul (
Roma 1:23) to be the
changing of the glory of the incorruptible God. [2.] That of divine revelation, which was afforded to them, not only in the words God spoke to them, but in the works he wrought for them,
wondrous works, which declared aloud that the Lord Jehovah is the only true and living God and is alone to be worshipped,
Pss 106:21,
Pss 106:22.
(2.) For this God showed his displeasure by declaring the decree that he would cut them off from being a people, as they had, as far as lay in their power, in effect cut him off from being a God; he
spoke of destroying them (
Pss 106:23), and certainly he would have done it if
Moses, his chosen, had not stood before him in the breach (
Pss 106:23), if he had not seasonably interposed to deal with God as an advocate about the breach or ruin God was about to devote them to and wonderfully prevailed to turn away his wrath. See here the mercy of God, and how easily his anger is turned away, even from a provoking people. See the power of prayer, and the interest which God's chosen have in heaven. See a type of Christ, God's
chosen, his
elect, in whom his soul delights, who
stood before him in the breach to
turn away his wrath from a provoking world, and ever lives, for this end, making intercession.
4. They gave credit to the report of the evil spies concerning the land of Canaan, in contradiction to the promise of God (
Pss 106:24):
They despised the pleasant land. Canaan was a pleasant land,
Deut 8:7. They undervalued it when they thought it not worth venturing for, no, not under the guidance of God himself, and therefore were for making a captain and returning to Egypt again. They
believed not God's word concerning it, but
murmured in their tents, basely charging God with a design upon them in bringing them thither that they might become a prey to the Canaanites,
Num 14:2,
Num 14:3. And, when they were reminded of God's power and promise, they were so far from hearkening to that voice of the Lord that they attempted to stone those who spoke to them,
Num 14:10. The heavenly Canaan is a pleasant land. A promise is left us of entering into it; but there are many that despise it, that neglect and refuse the offer of it, that prefer the wealth and pleasure of this world before it, and grudge the pains and hazards of this life to obtain that. This also was so displeasing to God that
he lifted up his hand against them, in a way of threatening,
to destroy them in the wilderness; nay, in a way of swearing, for he swore in his wrath that they should not enter into his rest (
Pss 95:11;
Num 14:28); nay, and he threatened that their children also should be
overthrown and scattered (
Pss 106:26,
Pss 106:27), and the whole nation dispersed and disinherited; but Moses prevailed for mercy for their seed, that they might enter Canaan. Note, Those who despise God's favours, and particularly the pleasant land, forfeit his favours, and will be shut out for ever from the pleasant land.
5. They were guilty of a great sin in the matter of Peor; and this was the sin of the new generation, when they were within a step of Canaan (
Pss 106:28):
They joined themselves to Baal-peor, and so were entangled both in idolatry and in adultery, in corporeal and in spiritual whoredom,
Num 25:1-
Num 25:3. Those that did often partake of the altar of the living God now
ate the sacrifices of the dead, of the idols of Moab (that were dead images, or dead men canonized or deified), or sacrifices to the infernal deities on the behalf of their dead friends.
Thus they provoked God to anger with their inventions (
Pss 106:29), in contempt of him and his institutions, his commands, and his threatenings. The iniquity of Peor was so great that, long after, it is said,
They were not cleansed from it, Josh 22:17. God testified his displeasure at this, (1.) By sending a plague among them, which in a little time swept away 24,000 of those impudent sinners. (2.) By stirring up Phinehas to use his power as a magistrate for the suppressing of the sin and checking the contagion of it. He stood up in his zeal for the Lord of hosts, and executed judgment upon Zimri and Cozbi, sinners of the first rank, genteel sinners; he put the law in execution upon them, and this was a service so pleasing to God that upon it
the plague was stayed, Pss 106:30. By this, and some other similar acts of public justice on that occasion (
Num 25:4,
Num 25:5), the guilt ceased to be national, and the general controversy was let fall. When the proper officers did their duty God left it to them, and did not any longer keep the work in his own hands by the plague. Note, National justice prevents national judgments. But, Phinehas herein signalizing himself, a special mark of honour was put upon him, for what he did was
counted to him for righteousness to all generations (
Pss 106:31), and, in recompence of it, the priesthood was entailed on his family.
He shall make an atonement by offering up the sacrifices, who had so bravely made an atonement (so some read it,
Pss 106:30) by offering up the sinners. Note, It is the honour of saints to be zealous against sin.
6. They continued their murmurings to the very last of their wanderings; for in the fortieth year they
angered God at the waters of strife (
Pss 106:32), which refers to that story,
Num 20:3-
Num 20:5. And that which aggravated it now was that
it went ill with Moses for their sakes; for, though he was the meekest of all the men in the earth, yet their clamours at that time were so peevish and provoking that they put him into a passion, and, having now grown very old and off his guard,
he spoke unadvisedly with his lips (
Pss 106:33), and not as became him on that occasion; for he said in a heat,
Hear now, you rebels, must we fetch water out of this rock for you? This was Moses's infirmity, and is written for our admonition, that we may learn, when we are in the midst of provocation, to keep our mouth as with a bridle (
Pss 39:1-
Pss 39:3), and to
take heed to our spirits, that they admit not resentments too much; for, when the spirit is provoked, it is much ado, even for those that have a great deal of wisdom and grace, not to
speak unadvisedly. But it is charged upon the people as their sin:
They provoked his spirit with that with which they angered God himself. Note, We must answer not only for our own passions, but for the provocation which by them we give to the passions of others, especially of those who, if not greatly provoked, would be meek and quiet. God shows his displeasure against this sin of theirs by shutting Moses and Aaron out of Canaan for their misconduct upon this occasion, by which, (1.) God discovered his resentment of all such intemperate heats, even in the dearest of his servants. If he deals thus severely with Moses for one unadvised word, what does their sin deserve who have spoken so many presumptuous wicked words?
If this was done in the green tree, what shall be done in the dry? (2.) God deprived them of the blessing of Moses's guidance and government at a time when they most needed it, so that his death was more a punishment to them than to himself. It is just with God to remove those relations from us that are blessings to us, when we are peevish and provoking to them and grieve their spirits.
34 Here, I. The narrative concludes with an account of Israel's conduct in Canaan, which was of a piece with that in the wilderness, and God's dealings with them, wherein, as all along, both justice and mercy appeared.
1. They were very provoking to God. The miracles and mercies which settled them in Canaan made no more deep and durable impressions upon them than those which fetched them out of Egypt; for by the time they were just settled in Canaan they corrupted themselves, and forsook God. Observe,
(1.) The steps of their apostasy. [1.] They spared the nations which God had doomed to destruction (
Pss 106:34); when they had got the good land God had promised them they had no zeal against the wicked inhabitants whom the Lord commanded them to extirpate, pretending pity; but so merciful is God that no man needs to be in any case more compassionate than he. [2.] When they spared them they promised themselves that, notwithstanding this, they would not join in any dangerous affinity with them. But the way of sin is down-hill; omissions make way for commissions; when they neglect to
destroy the heathen the next news we hear is, They were
mingled among the heathen, made leagues with them and contracted an intimacy with them, so that they
learned their works, Pss 106:35. That which is rotten will sooner corrupt that which is sound than be cured or made sound by it. [3.] When they mingled with them, and learned some of their works that seemed innocent diversions and entertainments, yet they thought they would never join with them in their worship; but by degrees they learned that too (
Pss 106:36):
They served their idols in the same manner, and with the same rites, that they served them; and they became
a snare to them. That sin drew on many more, and brought the judgments of God upon them, which they themselves could not but be sensible of and yet knew not how to recover themselves. [4.] When they joined with them in some of their idolatrous services, which they thought had least harm in them, they little thought that ever they should be guilty of that barbarous and inhuman piece of idolatry the sacrificing of their living children to their dead gods; but they came to that at last (
Pss 106:37,
Pss 106:38), in which Satan triumphed over his worshippers, and regaled himself in blood and slaughter:
They sacrificed their sons and daughters, pieces of themselves, to devils, and added murder, the most unnatural murder, to their idolatry; one cannot think of it without horror. They
shed innocent blood, the most innocent, for it was infant-blood, nay, it was the
blood of their sons and their daughters. See the power of the spirit that works in the children of disobedience, and see his malice. The beginning of idolatry and superstition, like that of strife, is as the letting forth of water, and there is no villany which those that venture upon it can be sure they shall stop short of, for God justly
gives them up to a reprobate mind, Roma 1:28.
(2.) Their sin was, in part, their own punishment; for by it, [1.] They wronged their country:
The land was polluted with blood, Pss 106:38. That pleasant land, that holy land, was rendered uncomfortable to themselves, and unfit to receive those kind tokens of God's favour and presence in it which were designed to be its honour. [2.] They wronged their consciences (
Pss 106:39):
They went a whoring with their own inventions, and so debauched their own minds, and were
defiled with their own works, and rendered odious in the eyes of the holy God, and perhaps of their own consciences.
2. God brought his judgments upon them; and what else could be expected? For his name is Jealous, and he is a jealous God. (1.) He fell out with them for it,
Pss 106:40. He was angry with them:
The wrath of God, that consuming fire,
was kindled against his people; for from them he took it as more insulting and ungrateful than from the heathen that never knew him. Nay, he was sick of them:
He abhorred his own inheritance, which once he had taken pleasure in; yet the change was not in him, but in them. This is the worst thing in sin, that it makes us loathsome to God; and the nearer any are to God in profession the more loathsome are they if they rebel against him, like a dunghill at our door. (2.) Their enemies then fell upon them, and, their defence having departed, made an easy prey of them (
Pss 106:41,
Pss 106:42):
He gave them into the hands of the heathen. Observe here how the punishment answered to the sin: They
mingled with the heathen and learned their works; from them they willingly took the infection of sin, and therefore God justly made use of them as the instruments of their correction. Sinners often see themselves ruined by those by whom they have suffered themselves to be debauched. Satan, who is a tempter, will be a tormentor. The heathen hated them. Apostates lose all the love on God's side, and get none on Satan's; and when those that
hated them ruled over them, and they were brought into subjection under them, no marvel that they oppressed them and ruled them with rigour; and thus God made them know the difference between
his service and the service of the kings of the countries, 2Chr 12:8. (3.) When God granted them some relief, yet they went on in their sins, and their troubles also were continued,
Pss 106:43. This refers to the days of the Judges, when God often raised up deliverers and wrought deliverances for them, and yet they relapsed to idolatry and
provoked God with their counsel, their idolatrous inventions, to deliver them up to some other oppressor, so that at last they
were brought very
low for their iniquity. Those that by sin disparage themselves, and will not by repentance humble themselves, are justly debased, and humbled, and brought low, by the judgments of God. (4.) At length they cried unto God, and God returned in favour to them,
Pss 106:44-
Pss 106:46. They were chastened for their sins, but not destroyed, cast down, but not cast off. God appeared for them, [1.] As a God of mercy, who looked upon their grievances,
regarded their affliction, beheld when distress was upon them (so some), who looked over their complaints, for he
heard their cry with tender compassion (
Exod 3:7) and overlooked their provocations; for though he had said, and had reason to say it, that he would destroy them, yet he
repented, according to the multitude of his mercies, and reversed the sentence. Though he is not a
man that he should repent, so as to change his mind, yet he is a gracious God, who pities us, and changes his way. [2.] As a God of truth, who
remembered for them his covenant, and made good every word that he had spoken; and therefore, bad as they were, he would not break with them, because he would not break his own promise. [3.] As a God of power, who has all hearts in his hand, and turns them which way soever he pleases.
He made them to be pitied even of those that carried them captives, and hated them, and ruled them with rigour. He not only restrained the remainder of their enemies' wrath, that it should not utterly consume them, but he infused compassion even into their stony hearts, and made them relent, which was more than any art of man could have done with the utmost force of rhetoric. Note, God can change lions into lambs, and,
when a man's ways please the Lord, will make even
his enemies to pity him and
be at peace with him. When God pities men shall.
Tranquillus Deus tranquillat omnia -
A God at peace with us makes every thing at peace. II. The psalm concludes with prayer and praise. 1. Prayer for the completing of his people's deliverance. Even when the Lord brought back the captivity of his people still there was occasion to pray,
Lord, turn again our captivity (
Pss 126:1,
Pss 126:4); so here (
Pss 106:47),
Save us, O Lord our God! and gather us from among the heathen. We may suppose that many who were forced into foreign countries, in the times of the Judges (as Naomi was,
Ruth 1:1), had not returned in the beginning of David's reign, Saul's time being discouraging, and therefore it was seasonable to pray, Lord, gather the dispersed Israelites
from among the heathen, to give thanks to thy holy name, not only that they may have cause to give thanks and hearts to give thanks, that they may have opportunity to do it in the courts of the Lord's house, from which they were now banished, and so may
triumph in thy praise, over those that had in scorn challenged them to
sing the Lord's song in a strange land. 2. Praise for the beginning and progress of it (
Pss 106:48):
Blessed be the Lord God of Israel from everlasting to everlasting. He is a blessed God from eternity, and will be so to eternity, and so let him be praised by all his worshippers. Let the priests say this, and then
let all the people say, Amen, Hallelujah, in token of their cheerful concurrence in all these prayers, praises, and confessions. According to this rubric, or directory, we find that when this psalm (or at least the closing verses of it) was sung all the people said
Amen, and praised the Lord by saying,
Hallelujah. By these two comprehensive words it is very proper, in religious assemblies, to testify their joining with their ministers in the prayers and praises which, as their mouth, they offer up to God, according to his will, saying
Amen to the prayers and
Hallelujah to the praises.