Psalm 22:1
“My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? Why art thou so
far from helping me, and from the words of my roaring?”
My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me:
In Matthew 27:46 the Lord Jesus Christ took these words and used them to
express the terrible isolation he experienced when he was “made sin for us” (2 Corinthians 5:21; 1Peter 2:22-24; Hebrews
9:28). Forsaken azab is to be abandoned
to be utterly alone, and ‘God in the
flesh’ (Romans 8:3; Galatians 4:4; 1Timothy 3:16; 1John 4:2) was abandoned by my God (the Father) and my God (the Spirit) when he became sin,
or the sin bearer. This is the essence
of the Cross where sin was judged and condemned in the body of Jesus of Nazareth. God can have nothing to do with sin and he
(the Father and the Spirit) turned their backs as it were, on the ‘Lamb of God’
and in doing so rejected sin.
A
point to be noted is our Lords deliberate use of these particular words; he
knew the scriptures and quoted from the Psalms many times during his ministry;
with these words he reveals the very depths of his suffering in that he was
bearing the sins of the world and was in reality being condemned and judged for
them. It was at this time that he fulfilled
the prophecy so clearly revealed in the death of the Passover lamb (John 1:29,
John 1:36 c.f. Genesis 22:8; Exodus 12:3-13; 1Peter 1:19), an innocent victim
paying the ‘wages of sin’ for the guilty (Romans 6:23, Romans 5:12; Genesis
2:17; Ezekiel 18:4; Romans 3:23).
Whilst
on the Cross our Lord had told the believing thief “today shalt thou be with me in paradise”; when dying he committed his spirit to the Father (Luke
23:43-46), then his body went into
the wilderness (the ‘undiscovered country’) of death and the grave, taking with
it the sins of mankind and fulfilling that which was represented by the
scapegoat of Leviticus 16:8-22. On the
third day (the day of first fruits) his soul and spirit reunited with his
resurrection body, came forth from death leaving those sins in that wilderness
to be remembered no more (Psalm 65:3; Jeremiah 50:20; Micah 7:19; Romans 11:27)
and entered into the Holiest of holies (the throne room of Heaven) as our great
High Priest, thus fulfilling all Old Testament types.
Far from helping me, and from the words of my
roaring: Because Christ had been made sin for us it was not possible for God
to help him until the wages of sin had been paid. To do so would have violated holiness and
left sin un-judged.
Roaring sheagah
is rumbling or moaning, or a cry of
distress and is part of the same feelings of isolation and helplessness.
There
is no indication of the time or reason for such a cry of despair from David,
yet we know the Lord tests the faith of his people at times by withdrawing the
fellowship of his Spirit. It is at such
times believers are most vulnerable, yet God’s word is greater than our despair
and he has said “…I will never leave
thee, nor forsake thee” (Psalm 37:25, Psalm 37:28; Isaiah 41:10, Isaiah 41:17;
Hebrews 13:5). There is a demonstration
later in the psalm that the sufferer believed in God’s promises and even in the
depths of despair, he continued to look for the renewal, the restoration of
fellowship with his LORD and thereby shows the depth of his trust in God (vss.
3-5, 24-31).
Psalm 22:2
“O my God, I cry in the daytime, but thou hearest not; and in the night
season, and am not silent.”
O my God, I cry in the daytime… the night
season… am not silent: This would seem to be David’s own experience, for the period of our
Lord’s desolation began when he was forsaken of God and ended when he commended
his spirit to the Father, a period of less than three hours. The verbal abuse and persecution Christ Jesus
suffered throughout his ministry cannot be associated with these words, for
during his ministry he was in constant communion with the Father; nor does it
disparage the physical abuse he suffered at his trial and crucifixion, for although
that was extreme, we are told in Isaiah 53:7, “He was oppressed, and he was afflicted, yet he opened not his mouth: he is brought as a lamb to the
slaughter, and as a sheep before her shearers is dumb, so he openeth not his mouth”.
Under abuse, persecution, and physical torture he was able to remain silent,
yet during those three hours, when forsaken of God, his affliction was so great
that he cried out.
But,
David’s distress was so constant and unrelieved (thou hearest not) that his cry, the roaring sheagah of vs.1, was incessant (both day and night). The whole expression indicates that this
agony of despair had lasted for some time and therefore David felt as if he had
been ‘forsaken’ (vs.1).
Thou
hearest not: The word hearest anah is to take heed, to pay attention
with the implication to respond. God hears every prayer we utter but does not
always answer them, and the lack of response would make it seem that God
‘hearest not’. Such an experience is a
good indication that God is treating us as his children and should be an
encouragement even in the midst of the emotional turmoil (Hebrews 12:6-8; 1
Peter 5:10).
Psalm 22:3
“But thou art holy, O thou
that inhabitest the praises of Israel.”
But thou art
holy: This is an acknowledgment by the psalmist,
that because God is holy such suffering must have a just and righteous purpose
and therefore, though misery has come upon him, God’s mercy and grace are not
compromised. David is making a clear
statement of faith.
Barnes
writes: “It expresses a state of mind
such as all true believers in God have - Confidence in him, whatever may be
their trials; Confidence in him, though the answer to their prayers may be long
delayed; Confidence in him, though their prayers should seem to be unanswered”.
(C.f. Job 13:15).
Inhabitest the praises of Israel: The name Israel is used here in
the sense of ‘true Israel’, a name representing faith and Godliness. The daily offerings in the Tabernacle/Temple
were made on behalf of Israel and as God was believed to ‘dwell between the
cherubim’ in the Holy of Holies (2 Samuel 6:2), this phrase is to be understood
as God being at one with Israel in their praises.
Psalm 22:4-5
“Our fathers trusted in thee: they trusted, and thou didst deliver them.
They cried unto thee, and were delivered: they trusted in thee, and were not
confounded.”
Our fathers trusted in thee… thou didst
deliver them: This is in accordance with the historic
records of the Jewish Scriptures. David
read them; he meditated on them day and
night (Psalm 1:2; Psalm 40:8) and knew this to be true, yet in vs.6 there
seems to be some doubt in his mind as to whether his trust in God would be so
honoured.
Throughout
the ages God’s people have cried out to him for help; it is as true today as it
has ever been and yet, like David, we are still overcome by doubts and feelings
of being forsaken. All heroes of faith
suffered the testing of doubts and fears yet the Lord was in all things working
them together for their good as well.
We do
not like discipline or testing yet this is the only way the lessons of the
spiritual life, i.e. patience, humility, gentleness and love, are learned. Discipline is essential for we must feel the
consequences of sin so that we learn not to indulge in the lusts of our old
nature. Testing is crucial because our
faith at best is weak and we are all too prone to trust in self and to go our
own way, the way of that ‘old nature’ and the way of sin. Without discipline and testing we would quickly
spiral into carnality and suffer the loss of joy and peace in this life and of
rewards at the judgment seat of Christ (1 Corinthians 3; 1 Corinthians 6:18;
Romans 14:10; 2 Corinthians 5:10; 2 John 1:8).
They trusted in thee, and were not
confounded: Such is the experience of heroes of
faith. After they had learnt the lesson
of fully trusting in God it was not possible for them to be confounded. The Hebrew for confound is bush and means to be put to shame, to be
ashamed.
Shame
is an emotion, it is not something that can be inflicted by others and we can
only inflict it upon ourselves. If we
have a half-hearted faith, a lukewarm commitment to Jesus Christ, and knowledge
of God commensurate with such a commitment, we will suffer shame when confronted
by the worldly-wise and cynical unbeliever and also at the judgment seat of
Christ (1 John 2:28). Yet if, like Paul,
we know in whom we have believed we too will not be ashamed either at that
judgment seat or in confrontation with the world, for we will know the truth
and the truth does set you free (2
Timothy 1:12; John 8:32).
Psalm 22:6
“But I am a worm, and no man;
a reproach of men, and despised of the people.”
The
word for worm tola is translated
throughout the O.T. as worm, or scarlet or crimson depending on the context (see note below). The context of this verse is in reference to
lowliness and inadequacy therefore worm is the correct translation. There are those who stress this association
of worm and scarlet to the abasement and glorification of Christ, but though
there are clear and unmistakable prophetic utterances in this psalm the correct
and immediate understanding of David’s usage here is worm, portraying abasement.
Because
this verse is in the direct context of vss.7-8 (and they are undoubtedly
prophetic; c.f. Matthew 27:39; Luke 23:35-39) this verse depicts Jesus’
physical and mental state as he hung upon the cross. Isaiah, in his prophecy of the same event
wrote, “He is despised and rejected of
men; a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief: and we hid as it were our
faces from him; he was despised, and we esteemed him not” (Isaiah
53:3).
But I am
a worm… may
therefore properly contain self appraisal of Messiah’s condition during the
time he was made sin for us, the time
he hung upon the cross: For as it is
written, “Cursed is every one that
hangeth on a tree” (Galatians 3:13).
If we
think of this verse as applicable to David’s life, vss.6-8 would reveal a
despondency of faith-shattering proportion, with vs.9 having him recall Bible
doctrine in his struggle against despair, a despair not uncommon to those who
battle the ‘old nature’. Feeling himself
to be a reproach of men, and despised of
the people and forsaken of God (vs.1), David then likens himself to a worm. His despondency is then used of God to utter
what seem to be words of excessive pessimism in regard to his own state, yet
words that accurately portray the future agony of Messiah.
Note:
In
regard to the word ‘worm’ tola the
ISBE has the following information: “Tola'ath
shani, "scarlet," is the scarlet-worm, Cermes vermilio, a
scale-insect which feeds upon the oak, and which is used for producing a red
dye. The female is wingless and adheres
to its favourite plant by its long, sucking beak, by which it extracts the sap
on which it lives. After once attaching itself it remains motionless, and when
dead its body shelters the eggs, which have been deposited beneath it. The dye
is made from the dried bodies of the females. Other species yielding red dyes
are Porphyrophora polonica and Coccus cacti.”
Psalm 22:7
“All they that see me laugh me to scorn: they shoot out the lip, they
shake the head, saying,”
Laugh me to scorn: The word that covers this expression is laag, which means to mock, deride or
ridicule. The attitude of Shimei is an
illustration of such behaviour toward David (2 Samuel 16:5-13), and in Matthew
27:39 the word ‘reviled’ blasphemeo
to speak reproachfully, rail at, revile, calumniate, blaspheme, is the attitude
of those who passed by Golgotha at Christ’s crucifixion. It is only necessary to read this passage
from Matthew to see just how completely verses 7-8 were fulfilled in the case
of Christ Jesus.
They shoot out the lip: The Hebrew word patar means to
separate, burst through, open and
is used here in he sense of the lips wide open in derision and scorn. Job suffered much the same experience, “They have gaped upon me with their mouth;
they have smitten me upon the cheek reproachfully; they have gathered
themselves together against me” (Job 16:10). Both Job and David use poetic language to
illustrate the contemptuous denunciation by their critics, but Matthew, Mark
and Luke use plain speech to reveal the murderous hatred of those who crucified
Christ Jesus (Matthew 27:39-40; Mark 15:29-30; Luke 23:35-39).
They shake the head: A silent gesture of contempt and disapproval. See Matthew 27:39, “Wagging their heads.”
Psalm 22:8
“He trusted on the LORD that
he would deliver him: let him deliver him, seeing he delighted in him.”
As
applied to David, a statement such as this and made in such a manner is a
contemptuous and complete denial of God’s providence in his life. This statement, He trusted on the LORD, shows
that these people had knowledge of David’s religious beliefs, and by their use
of the title LORD, a good understanding of the Jewish religion. It was a comment aimed directly at David and
his professed faith in Jehovah, yet
in their continued rejection of God’s anointed king they showed themselves to
be in contempt of his God.
The
Holy Spirit anointed the Lord Jesus and John testified to that anointing (Mark
1:9-11; Luke 3:21-22 see also Luke 4:18; Acts 4:27; Acts 10:38). It was this anointing that gave witness to
Jesus being the Messiah or Christ and anointed to be King over Israel, yet
after three years proclaiming the Kingdom and proving his calling (Mark 6:2;
Luke 19:37; John 10:25; John 10:37-38), he was utterly rejected by the people
even to the point of callous ridicule and contempt.
It
seems incredible that the chief priests, the scribes, and the elders of Israel
should use these exact words against him without recognizing their part in the fulfilment
of this prophecy.
“Likewise also the chief priests mocking him,
with the scribes and elders, said, “He saved others; himself he cannot save. If
he be the King of Israel, let him now come down from the cross, and we will
believe him. He trusted in God; let him deliver him now, if he will have him:
for he said, I am the Son of God”” Matthew27: 41-43.
But
since they had rejected the Baptist’s call to repentance it was inevitable they
would also reject his testimony; his testimony to Jesus being the
Messiah/Christ. Their self-righteous and
arrogant pride continued to blind them to Jesus’ own teachings and the mighty
works that he performed, and in the end caused them to have these hateful
thoughts and utter these blasphemous words.
Psalm 22: 9-10
“But thou art he that took me
out of the womb: thou didst make me hope when
I was
upon my mother's breasts. I was cast
upon thee from the womb: thou art my
God from my mother's belly.”
There
is nothing of specific relevance to the psalmist here; nothing that is not
common to others who are also brought up in a Godly home and have never known a
life of unbelief (1Samuel 2:18; 2Chronicles 34:3; Psalm 71:17; Proverbs 22:6;
Luke 1:15; Luke 2:40; 2Timothy 3:15).
Such people have faith in God from the moment of self-awareness, and
because every child belongs to God prior to that awareness it is a fact that
God is their God from the womb.
Hope batach,̣ trust or assurance is
established in them upon their mother’s
breast, or in their early childhood (Genesis 18:19; Deuteronomy 4:9,
Deuteronomy 6:7; Psalm 78:3-6; Proverbs 22:6; Ephesians 6:4). It is a particularly apt phrase for it is
during the mother’s intimacy with her child that the primary role of teaching
and nurturing a child is fulfilled.
In
Luke 2:40-52 it can be seen that these verses were
applicable to Jesus of Nazareth, for he is shown as growing up in subjection to
his parents, becoming mature and knowledgeable (strong in spirit) and being
filled with wisdom; for though he was God come in the flesh, it behooved him (he was under
obligation) to be made like unto his
brethren in all things, so that he might be a merciful and faithful high priest
in things pertaining to God (Hebrews 2:17).
When
we consider the doctrine of freewill, every child is seen to have this
potential, but the tragedy is that hope is not established in them, and most
enter into self-awareness and self-determination without God in their lives and
without hope in this world, so that at death they have their names blotted out
of the Lamb’s book of life (Revelation 3:5).
Psalm 22:11
“Be not far from me; for trouble is
near; for there is none to help.”
Be not far from me:
The doctrine of the omnipresence of God, found in 2 Chronicles 2:6;
Isaiah 66:1; Acts 7:49 shows this comment to be either the emotional reaction
of a man under testing or a prayer for help couched in poetic terms. God never leaves nor forsakes those who are
his (Deuteronomy 31:6; Joshua 1:5; Isaiah 41:10) and if there are moments when
one seems to be forsaken of God it is not so, but the pressure has been allowed
for God’s good purpose. In the case of
Christ, and anyone who knows and believes God’s word, this would be a prayer
for help.
Such
pressure can become extreme when one’s eyes are fixed on the approaching
trouble and on the indifference or enmity of men (none to help), but when God is in view what does it matter that the heathen rage or that the kings of the earth set themselves
against God’s child for God is our
refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble (Psalm46: 1; see also
Hebrews 13:6).
In Psalm
55:22 David tells us to cast thy burden
upon the LORD and as we continue on in this psalm it would appear that this
is exactly what he did.
Psalm 22:12-13
“Many bulls have compassed me: strong bulls of Bashan have beset me round. They gaped upon me with their mouths, as a ravening and a roaring lion.”
Many bulls have compassed me:
The bullock is a symbol of perverse and aggressive power and is used in
regard to perverse and aggressive men throughout scripture (Isaiah 51:20; Psalm
68:30; Amos 4:1). These are more than
ordinary bulls however for they are bulls fed on the rich pastures of Bashan and therefore large and powerful
beasts. The surrounding enemies are seen
as a great number of aggressive and powerful beasts.
On
Bashan: the Easton Bible Dictionary writes: “…first
mentioned in Genesis 14:5, where it
is said that Chedorlaomer and his confederates "smote the Rephaim in
Ashteroth" (east of the Jordan river) where Og the king of Bashan had his residence. At the time of Israel's
entrance into the Promised Land, Og came out against them, but was utterly
routed (Numbers 21:33-35; Deuteronomy 3:1-7). This country extended from Gilead in the south to Hermon in the
north, and from the Jordan on the west to Salcah on the east. Along with the
half of Gilead it was given to the half-tribe of Manasseh (Joshua 13:29-31)…
Bashan almost disappears from history,
although we read of the wild cattle of its rich pastures (Ezekeil 39:18; Psalm 22:12), the oaks of its forests (Isaiah 2:13;
Ezekeil 27:6; Zechariah 11:2), and the
beauty of its extensive plains (Amos 4:1; Jeremiah 50:19).
Soon after the conquest, the name
"Gilead" was given to the whole country beyond Jordan. After the Exile, Bashan was divided into four
districts, (1.) Gaulonitis, or Jaulan, the most western; (2.) Auranitis, the
Hauran (Ezekeil
47:16); (3.) Argob or Trachonitis, now
the Lejah; and (4.) Batanaea, now Ard-el-Bathanyeh, on the east of the Lejah,
with many deserted towns almost as perfect as when they were inhabited.”
In
vs.7 the detractors are seen to open their mouths in scorn and derision but
here the gaping of the mouth has a more murderous purpose, their derision has
turned to malicious intent. Clarke has
it as, “They were fiercely and madly bent
on my destruction.”
The
application of this verse to the passion of Christ reverses the order from
murderous intent to derision and scorn.
Luke 23:21 “But they cried,
saying, Crucify him, crucify him”; then later in Luke 23:35 “And the rulers also with them derided him,
saying, He saved others; let him save himself, if he be Christ, the chosen of
God.” Compare Matthew 27:22-25 with
Matthew 27:41-43, and Mark 15:13 with Mark 15:29-32.
A ravening and a roaring lion: The force of these words is greater when the uncalled-for particle of
comparison ‘as’ is left out. This verse
should read, “They gaped upon me with
their mouths, a ravening and a roaring lion”. The psalmist does not mix his metaphors but
keeps them distinct and separate, i.e. the ‘bulls of Bashan’ and a ‘ravening
and roaring lion’.
Psalm 22:14
“I am poured out like water, and all my bones are out of joint: my heart
is like wax; it is melted in the midst of my bowels.
I am poured out like water: Today we use a similar expression, which is
probably derived from the scriptures: We say we are ‘as weak as water’ when
feeling unwell. Joshua 7:5 speaks of the
hearts of the people “melting and
becoming as water”. The phrase has
the meaning of weakness and here of physical weakness; where there is no
strength left, no ability to keep upright.
In David’s case this verse speaks of psychosomatics, physical symptoms
induced by mental stress (see also Psalm 31:9-12; Psalm 38)
The
hands shake, the legs tremble as though the bones are out of joint giving no support to the body. The heart may be affected, palpitations etc.,
but in such a case as are described here, the word leb speaks of the whole of the inner man. The heart
melting speaks of the internal workings of a man’s body becoming
dysfunctional, the upsetting of the bowels will in turn flow on to effect the
extremities, the arms, the hands and the legs.
These
are very human sufferings and though the Lord Jesus was “…in the likeness of sinful flesh” (Romans 8:3), it is
inconceivable that such sufferings in his case were induced by
psychosomatics. It is conceivable
however that they would result from the physical sufferings of crucifixion.
Psalm 22:15
“My strength is dried up like a potsherd; and my tongue cleaveth to my
jaws; and thou hast brought me into the dust of death.”
A potsherd is a fragment of pottery or
earthenware. Though the pottery was
originally made to hold water etc., a broken pot can no longer do so, and a
small fragment even less; there is no moisture whatsoever in such an
object. David’s strength had dissipated
as water from broken pottery.
My tongue cleaveth to my jaws: Most of us would have
experienced the effects of thirst to some degree or other and know the dryness of
mouth and thickness of tongue. Extreme
thirst causes the tongue to swell, filling the mouth, or as here, cleave dabaq to cling, to stick to the jaws,
the inside of the mouth. In times of
intense excitement and apprehension such a dryness of the mouth can occur in
any man but it is also evident from the gospels that Christ suffered from
thirst induced by his agony (John 19:28).
Thou hast brought me into the dust of death:
Death was expected at any moment.
In Daniel 12:2 the dead are seen to “sleep
in the dust of the earth”, see also Isaiah 26:19; Psalm 22:15; Daniel 12:2
and compare them with Genesis 3:19 for “dust
thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return”.
The
context of this passage (vss. 12-18) is one of extreme pressure, where the
sufferer’s death was the intended goal and its accomplishment very near. David’s poetic imagery adds colour and
intensity to his narrative, yet in accordance to the will of God, such imagery
was imminently suitable to describe the sufferings of Messiah.
There
are moments of intensity in this psalm where David goes way beyond his own
experience into the realm of pure revelation.
There are statements in the next three verses, which can only be the
results of revelation, for there is nothing in David’s recorded history that
could account for them.
Psalm 22:16
“For dogs have compassed me: the assembly of the wicked have enclosed
me: they pierced my hands and my feet.”
For dogs have compassed me:
In both in the Old Testament and in the New Testament, the designation
‘dog’ is usually of a contemptuous nature.
The
ISBE writes. “A dog, and especially a
dead dog, is used as a figure of insignificance. Goliath says to David (1Samuel
17:43): "Am I a dog, that thou comest to me with staves?"
David says to Saul (1Samuel 24:14): "After whom dost thou
pursue? after a dead dog, after a flea." Mephibosheth says to David
(2Samuel 9:8): "What is thy servant, that thou shouldest look upon
such a dead dog as I am?" The same figure is found in the words of
Hazael to Elisha (2Kings 8:13).
Other passages express by inference the low
esteem in which dogs are held. Nothing worse could happen to a person than that
dogs should devour his body (1Kings 14:11; 1Kings 16:4; 1Kings 21:19, 1Kings
21:23, etc.). Job 30:1 says of the youth
who deride him that he disdained to set their fathers with the dogs of his
flock. In Philippians 3:2 and Revelation 22:15, dogs are coupled with
evil-workers, sorcerers, etc. In Matthew 7:6 we read: "Give not that which is holy
unto the dogs, neither cast your pearls before the swine”.”
The wicked have enclosed me: Evil and worthless men have compassed sabab or encircled me, and with violence have enclosed naqaph me. Everything we have read up to this point
could be related to David’s experience, his writings being coloured by emotions
stimulated by memories of times of danger.
With a little imagination we could even feel for him, but unless the end
phrase to this verse “they pierced my hands and my feet”
can be made to fit David’s situation the thrust of this verse along with the
next two verses must be taken as pure
revelation of future events relating to Messiah.
The translation
“they pierced my hands and my feet” (so rendered in the KJV) hinges
upon the word translated ‘they pierced’.
The word in its noun form ariy
(used some eighty times) refers to a “full grown lion” (Vines) and in every
case is translated ‘lion’.
According
to Alfred Barnes the word in this passage is a verb and used only twice, here
and in Isaiah 38:13 where it is rendered ‘as
a lion’. He writes: “All
the ancient interpreters have taken the word here to be a verb, and in all the
ancient versions it is rendered as if it were a verb... …Gesenius
admits that all the ancient interpreters have taken this as a verb, and says
that it is “certainly possible” that it may be so. He says that it may be regarded as a
participle formed in the Aramaic manner (from kur), and in the plural number
for kaariym, and says that in this way it would be properly rendered,
‘piercing, my hands and my feet’.” Barnes
continues “…From such high authority, and
from the uniform mode of interpreting the word among the ancients, it may be
regarded as morally certain that the word is a verb, and that it is not to be
rendered, as in Isaiah 38:13, ‘as a lion’.”
Gill
reports: “…in some copies, in the margin,
it is "as a lion my hands and my feet", but in the text, "they
have dug" or "pierced my hands and my feet"; both are joined
together in the Targum, "biting as a lion my hands and my feet”.
(Note: The Targums were explanations of
the Hebrew Scriptures in Chaldaic (Western Aramaic) for the benefit of those
Jews who had partially or completely ceased to understand the sacred tongue.)
The
thought expressed in Gill’s comments is evidently the thought behind some
modern versions: (CEV) “Brutal
enemies attack me like a pack of dogs, tearing at my hands and my feet.” (GNB) “An evil gang is around me; like a pack of
dogs they close in on me; they tear at my hands and feet.”
It is
possible that these are accurate renditions of David’s thoughts, yet the
explicit use of ‘hands’ and ‘feet’ is difficult to appreciate when applied to
him. It is not difficult however when
this passage is applied as prophecy, and seen in its fulfilment in the
crucifixion of our Lord Jesus Christ. If
there is any doubt as to the meaning in David’s case, the use of hands and feet
are plainly revealed to be the facts regarding our Lord and his crucifixion
(John 20:15).
Psalm 22:17
“I may tell all my bones: they look and
stare upon me.”
As we
follow on from the previous verse’s clear reference to the wounds of
crucifixion, this phrase to ‘make record
of one’s bones’ has great relevance to one whose body is being subjected to
the forces of exhaustion and gravity.
Christ Jesus hung from his nailed hands, supported only by his nailed
feet, and as exhaustion set in, the joints of his body would be painfully
extended. It doesn’t take a great deal
of imagination to see that such a situation would allow one to detail all my bones.
They look… stare upon me: The conjunction and
is not in the original therefore to use both nabat and raah adds
intensity to the action. The dogs of
vs.16, those who have violently enclosed him and nailed him to the Cross looked
at him intently and because their attitude has been one of malicious hostility
such looks must have been as hateful or derisive as were their words.
This
expression is too extreme to be descriptive of anything applicable to
David. Becoming emaciated would allow
one to ‘tell all my bones’, yet there is no evidence of such a
thing happening to him. There is no
doubt that there were times he was hungry, yet to be so thin that he became an
object of intense scrutiny is not recorded and highly unlikely: It would require a sustained period of
hunger, or starvation. Anxiety and
stress can do things to the body, and aches and pains may be behind this
expression, yet would it attract intense scrutiny? I think not.
Psalm 22:18
“They part my garments among them, and cast lots upon my vesture.”
They part my garments: Again there is no record of anything like this as being David’s
experience, yet when we read the account of our Lord’s crucifixion it is seen
in perfect detail. There is no real
difference between begged ‘garments’
and lebush ‘vesture’ and from this
passage it might seem to be only a parallelism, but the repetition brings out
the accuracy with which God the Holy Spirit gives to his record of future
events.
And cast lots upon my vesture: The soldiers divided his upper garment into
four parts, each soldier taking a part; but they agreed not to divide his tunic
or inward vestment (chiton) and cast
lots to see whose it would be, for it was without seam, woven in one entire
piece. Of this passage in Psalm 22, the
Roman soldiers were almost certainly ignorant; but they fulfilled it to the
letter. The Spirit of God foresaw this, making this verse and those in context,
a direct revelation concerning Jesus Christ (c.f. Matthew 27:35; Luke 23:34; John
19:23-24).
Psalm 22:19-20
“But be not thou far from me, O LORD: O my
strength, haste thee to help me. Deliver my soul from the sword; my darling
from the power of the dog. Save me from
the lion's mouth: for thou hast heard me from the horns of the unicorns.”
Such
was the agony of soul during this trial that the sufferer was constant in his
plea for divine relief, for the return of intimacy with his God. See also vs.11 and compare them both with
vs.1.
My soul… my darling: Soul or nephesh
is the inner man but is here used to denote the whole man. It is equivalent to “deliver me.” It is therefore a parallelism to my darling yachiyd (only one), which according to Gesenius (Lexicon), is used
poetically for life, as being something most dear, or as denoting all that we
have, and therefore most precious.
Barnes believes this to be the most probable interpretation as it would correspond with the
expression in the first part of the parallelism, “Deliver my soul.”
Gill
agrees: "My only one"; meaning
his life or soul… so called, not because there is but one soul in the body, but
because it was dear and valuable to him; and hence we render it
"darling", an only one being usually the darling of its parents; so a
man's life is dear to him…”
The sword chereb, a knife, sword, or other sharp
implement is also parallel to the power
of the dog, for as we saw in vs.16, dogs were instrumental
in the piercing of the hands and feet.
If we accept the possible rendition for that verse, “like a pack of dogs, tearing at my hands and my feet”, then the parallelism here is
unmistakable.
In
these verses we have intense prayer for support and deliverance: “be not thou far from me, O LORD… haste thee
to help me… Deliver my soul… Save me” and
from what? The sword, dogs, ravening and
roaring lions and from the unicorns, for the implication here is that it was
while he was on the horns of these unicorns that the LORD heard him.
Unicorn
reem seems in all probability to be
the great aurochs or wild bulls, which are now extinct. If this were so then they would be parallel
to the “strong bulls of Bashan” in
vs.12. The unicorns and the bulls of
Bashan are the powerful adversaries who had arrayed themselves against the
LORD’S anointed, and seeing these animals are being used in this figurative
way, so horns qeren should also be used, as reference to the power (political and
military ) of these men.
Unicorn:
Described
as an animal of great ferocity and strength and untameable ((Numbers 23:22;
Numbers 24:8; Isaiah 34:7; Job 39:9), it is translated "wild oxen" in
the RV. It was in reality a two-horned
animal; but the exact reference of the word so rendered (reem) is doubtful. Some have supposed it to be the buffalo; others,
the white antelope, called by the Arabs rim.
Most probably, however, the word denotes the Bos primigenius ("primitive
ox"), which is now extinct all over the world. This was the auerochs of the
Germans, and the urus described by Caesar (Gal. Bel., vi.28) as inhabiting the
Hercynian forest. The word thus rendered has been found in an Assyrian
inscription written over the wild ox or bison, which some also suppose to be
the animal intended (c.f. Deuteronomy 33:17; Psalm 29:6; Psalm 92:10). From the Easton Bible Dictionary
Unicorns:
DESCRIBED AS:
Intractable in disposition
Job 39:9; Job 39:10; Job 39:12
Of vast strength
Job 39:11
The young being remarkable for
their agility
Psalm 29:6
ILLUSTRATIVE:
Of God as the strength of Israel
Numbers 23:22; Numbers 24:8
Of the wicked
Isaiah 34:7
(Horns of,) of the strength of
the descendants of Joseph
Deuteronomy 33:17
(Horns of,) of the strength of
powerful enemies
Psalm 22:21
(The position of its horns,) of
the exaltation of saints
Psalm 92:10
From
RA Torrey’s New Topical Textbook
Psalm 22:22-23
“I will declare thy name unto my brethren: in the midst of the
congregation will I praise thee. Ye that
fear the LORD, praise him; all ye the seed of Jacob, glorify him; and fear him,
all ye the seed of Israel.”
We now enter into what can only
be described as pure praise and thanksgiving, intimating that fellowship has
been restored, help received and deliverance obtained.
The
inspired writer of the letter to the Hebrews adds this verse to his review of
the purpose of Christ’s sufferings: i.e.
“But we see Jesus, who was made a little
lower than the angels for the suffering of death, crowned with glory and honor;
that he by the grace of God should taste death for every man. For it became him, for whom are all things,
and by whom are all things, in bringing many sons unto glory, to make the
captain of their salvation perfect through sufferings.
For both he that sanctifieth and they who
are sanctified are all of one (of one Father): for which cause
he is not ashamed to call them brethren,; Saying,
I will declare thy name unto my brethren, in the midst of the church will I
sing praise unto thee” (Hebrews 2: 9-12). (The ‘Church’, the Gk. ekklesia, has the same meaning as the Heb. qahal, or congregation.)
The
use of Psalm 22:22 in Hebrews makes it clear that the previous verses of this
psalm were intended by God to foretell the crucifixion experience of
Messiah/Christ and that vs.22 itself expresses his reaction after his ordeal
was over and the great act of salvation and sanctification was completed (c.f.
Hebrews 2: 10-11).
I will declare thy name: Throughout his ministry Christ
declared the character and glory of God (John 5:17-47; John 14:6-11). His ministry was to the whole nation, the
whole congregation of Israel, but there were very few who believed in him and
it was these few that are identified as his brethren (Matthew 12:48-50). We see then that this exhortation to the seed of Jacob and the seed of Israel to praise, glorify and
fear God was fulfilled in Jesus preaching godliness to the Jews and, though
only in a minority, their acceptance of his message.
There
is no mention of the Nations (Gentiles) here, because Messiah was not to be
sent to them but “…unto the lost sheep of
the house of Israel” and until it became clear that the Jews were bent on
rejecting him, Christ Jesus commanded his disciples to do the same (Matthew
15:24 see also Matthew 10:5-6). This
created the principle, which the apostle Paul enunciated in Romans 1:16 “… it is the power of God unto salvation to every
one that believeth; to the Jew first,
and also to the Greek”. Compare this
with Matthew 21:43 and Acts 13:46.
Psalm 22:24
“For he hath not despised nor abhorred the affliction of the afflicted;
neither hath he hid his face from him; but when he cried unto him, he heard.”
The
reasons for the exhortation to praise, glorify and fear the LORD in the
previous verse are now given.
Though
the sufferer had suffered utter humiliation to the point of being abandoned by
God and men, it was for a little while only, and though the reason for his
suffering is not directly revealed in the psalm, in the renewal of his
fellowship with the LORD he finds, not disdain or detestation but acceptance and esteem. God in grace has turned his face toward the petitioner, listened to his cry and responded. The contrast from feelings of humiliation to
intense joy is good reason for praise and thanksgiving.
Up to
this point, the psalm has been written in the first person, in this verse it is
written in the third person showing that all
who are afflicted and cry unto God will be heard, therefore “Ye (all
you) that fear the LORD, praise him”
(vs.23), for he has not despised (ignored) your affliction: It becomes a very
personal application.
It is
when we look into such N.T. passages as Hebrews 2:9-12 (as we did in the
previous verse) that we see its application to the Lord Jesus Christ. Barnes writes, “Though the darkness seemed to continue until death, yet it was not an
utter forsaking. His prayer was heard; his work was accepted; the great object
for which he came into the world would be accomplished; he himself would rise
triumphantly from his sufferings; and the cause, which he came to establish,
and for which he died, would finally prevail in the world. Compare Hebrew
5:7-8; John 11:42; Isaiah 53:11-12.”
In vss.6-8 we see the attitude of self-righteous and religious men; men
who looked on Christ with contempt and ridicule, in this verse however we are
shown the LORD’S attitude to the affliction
of the afflicted. Those afflictions were of such a nature as to
bring salvation to the world of men, including those who despise him (1John 2:2). The LORD hath
not despised nor abhorred his afflictions for they were in accordance with
God’s will in the eternal plan of salvation for mankind.
Gill writes: “…the sacrifice of
Christ was of a sweet smelling savour to him; he was well pleased with his
righteousness, his law being magnified and made honourable by it; and his death
was precious in his sight, being the propitiation for the sins of his people;
so far was he from despising and abhorring the afflictions of his son.” For this reason, those that ‘fear’ the LORD
(vs.23) are exhorted to praise him.
Neither hath he hid his face from him:
Men turned from him (Isaiah 53:3), but God, though he forsook him for a
while and in judgment hid his face from him for a moment (that he might bear
the whole curse of the law for us); yet turned again in restoration of
fellowship. Gill paraphrased.
But when he cried unto him, he heard: The cry with which this psalm begins, "My
God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken me?" (Psalm 22:1; c.f. Matthew 27:46;
Mark 15:34) contains desolation that only Messiah was to experience, we
experience loss of fellowship but Christ suffered judgment for sin. Something of this cry is brought out as we
read Christ’s prayer in Gethsemane (Matthew 26:37-39; Mark 14:32-39; Luke 22:44;
see also Hebrews 5:7).
Psalm 22:25
“My praise shall be of thee in the great congregation: I
will pay my vows before them that fear him.”
My praise shall be of thee: David was never in a position to sing his
praises of God in the ‘great’ congregation, though some may say he
does so by means of his psalms. As we
saw in vs.22 the ‘congregation’ there was in reference to Israel, here it is
the ‘great’ congregation and is almost certainly the Church, which includes
Jews and Gentiles, and over the centuries has and will continue to encompass
many tens of millions of people. Compare this with vs.27.
I will pay my vows:
Jesus, in his declaration “thy
will, not mine be done” (Luke 22:42), makes his vow, confirming the promise made “before the foundation of the world” (1Peter 1:20, c.f. 2Timothy
1:9, 2Timothy 1:10; Titus 1:2, Revelation 13:8) when, as Gill writes, “…in the council and covenant of grace, he
engaged (vowed) to become a surety for his people, to assume
their nature, to suffer and die for them, to redeem them from sin and misery,
and bring them nigh to God, and save them with an everlasting salvation”.
Before them that fear him: Though the work entailed in the
vow was finished at the Cross, Messiah’s vow is paid (complete) when those who ‘fear’ God are standing before him
(the proof is in the pudding as it were).
This is a similar construction to our sanctification in Christ (John
3:15-16, John 1:12, John 5:24): complete in Christ yet not completed until the
redemption of our bodies at the resurrection (Romans 8:23; Ephesians
1:14).
Psalm 22:26
“The meek shall eat and be satisfied: they
shall praise the LORD that seek him: your heart shall live forever.”
The meek are those who humbly accept life as the
Lord provides; are those who learn “…in
whatsoever state they are, therewith
to be content” (Philippians 4:11; Hebrews 13:5) and in their contentment are satisfied (see Matthew 6:30-32 c.f. Psalm 37:3, Psalm 55:22 where
the Lord’s providence is assured).
Shall praise the LORD: This necessitates belief in God
and an enquiring mind to seek him;
which will elicit a gracious response from God in giving them reason for praising him. Such a response from God is guaranteed for “I love them that love me; and those that
seek me early shall find me” (Proverbs 11:18, see also Proverbs 8:17;
Jeremiah 29:13; Matthew 6:33; 2Peter 1:10, 2Peter 3:14). The end result will be that those who seek
him shall praise the LORD.
Your heart shall live forever:
Heart lebab is not referring
to the heart muscle but to the inner man, the soul; that immaterial part of man
that has been made in the image of God (see below). Live chayah
means to have life and coupled with ad
meaning perpetuity, the
combination means ‘liver forever’: a
continuing future: eternal life.
Man – The Image
Of God
Genesis 1:26 “And
God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness”.
Image Heb. tselem, image, likeness (of
resemblance)
Likeness Heb. demuth, resemblance; in the physical sense – model or shape: -
fashion, manner, similitude
Vine’s Expository Dictionary says of these
two words: “It is noteworthy that in Genesis 1:26, (the first occurrence of the
word) the image of God is represented
by two Hebrew words (selem and demut); by selem alone in Genesis 1:27 and 9:6; and demut alone in Genesis 5:1.
This plus the fact that in other contexts the words are used exactly the
same leads to the conclusion that the use of both in passages such as Genesis 1:26
is for literary effect.”
The way Genesis 1 is written makes it
evident that man was to see himself as distinct and separate from the swarming
mass of other creatures, for we read, “Let
the waters bring forth the moving
creature that hath life”; “let the earth bring forth the living creature
after his kind” and then “let us make man”. In this, God leads our thoughts toward a
pinnacle of his (nephesh), his living
creation. From the waters God brings
forth a myriad of life forms including monstrous creatures and the winged fowl,
the birds: From the earth he makes other
categories of living creatures, quadrupeds and reptiles, then in a separate and
distinct decision, God says, “Let us make
man… in our image”.
Man was to be something beyond what had come
before. Let us make asah man; make him from existing materials
(the dust of the earth, Genesis 2:7), modelled on the same principles as those
creatures that came from the earth (Genesis 1:24), yet with a far greater
dimension, “in our image, after our
likeness”.
Up to this point in the narrative we know
God to be above and beyond his creation (he is infinite), that he is a spirit
(Genesis 1:2) and that he thinks, speaks, wills, and acts (Genesis
1:3-4, etc.). Therefore, from this
context alone we can conclude that if we are made in God’s image, it must be an
image that reflects only those characteristics of God appropriate to the
limitations of our material and finite body: These would be the attributes of
consciousness and volition.
Because the material part of man’s being
(his body) is so obviously unlike God, logic demands that the image of God must be within the
intellectual side of man’s being, yet manifesting itself through the body in thinking, willing, speaking and acting.
In Ephesians 4:24 (see also Colossians 3:10)
Paul tells us that God’s image is “righteousness
and true holiness”, which would indicate that Adam was made a righteous and
holy being, a fact that Genesis 1:31 asserts, “And God saw every thing that he had made, and, behold, very good”. This then is what places man above all of
God’s physical creation, the capacity for godly thinking and behaviour, the
ability to appreciate God. This also
explains the innate desire of fallen man to worship, and because of ignorance
(wilful or otherwise), the proliferation of religion.
Psalm 22:27
“All the ends of the world shall remember and turn unto the LORD: and
all the kindreds of the nations shall worship before thee.”
All the ends of the world:
The world (an almost perfect sphere) is often depicted as having four
corners: “And he shall set up an ensign
for the nations, and shall assemble the outcasts of Israel, and gather together
the dispersed of Judah from the four corners of the earth” (Isaiah 11:12;
Jeremiah 9:26; Jeremiah 25:23; Jeremiah 49:32; Revelation 7:1). ‘Ends of the world’ is used in the same way;
a means of conveying an impression of totality, of every part, of every nation.
Shall
remember and turn unto the LORD: To remember is an attribute of intellect,
therefore it is the race of men, of every nation, from the four corners of the earth who in times past had had knowledge
of God but through neglect or indifference had forgotten him; people from these
nations will remember and shub, turn
back to the LORD.
All the kindreds of the nations shall
worship: Again we see the parallelism of Hebrew
poetry, for to worship shachah is to
bow down, to prostrate oneself before
thee (the LORD) and requires the
active participation of mind and body, parallel to remember and turn.
This
verse, following such clear references to Messiah’s sacrifice, is prophecy
regarding the effect the Christian gospel would have on the Gentile world, and
it is these people who will make up the ‘great congregation’ of vs.25. ‘All
the ends’ and ‘all the kindreds’
are referring to nations and families (or tribes), not to every individual
person within those nations/tribes. By
the end of the Church age, every nation/tribe will be represented by the
redeemed “out of every kindred, and
tongue, and people, and nation” (Revelation 5:9), and in the kingdom to
come all nations and tribes will be represented in worship before the LORD.
Psalm 22:28
“For the kingdom is the
LORD's: and he is the governor among
the nations.”
In the
latter part of this psalm (vs.22 on) we see the transition from Judaism to the fullness
of the LORD’S kingdom.
With
the benefit of New Testament revelation, we now know that that transition
incorporates the dispensation of the Christian Church, something that was
hidden from the understanding of O.T. saints, yet revealed to the apostles of
Christ (Romans 11:25, Romans 16:25; Ephesians 3:4, Ephesians 5:32; Colossians
1:27; 1Titus 3:16). Therefore many Old
Testament prophecies regarding the kingdom
(including this psalm) incorporate things to do with the Christian Church. It is because this dispensation was kept
hidden that prophecies regarding these two ages (Church and Kingdom) are
blended, without any chronological order.
The transition from Judaism to the fullness of the LORD’S kingdom was
begun by Messiah/Christ’s redeeming sacrifice (vss.1-24) on behalf of the
congregation of Israel (vs.22) and for
the ‘great’ congregation (vs.25) made up of all who fear God and turn and worship
him (vs.27).
The fullness
of the LORD’S kingdom is the millennial reign of Christ (Isaiah 9:6-7, 11:3-9;
Ezekiel 37:21-23; Revelation 20:6), for it is his by right of creation (Genesis
1:1; Colossians 1:16), and by right of conquest.
In
rising from the dead, Christ took from Satan (the god of this world) the keys
of hell and death, destroying the power of him who through the power of sin and
death had kept mankind in bondage (Isaiah 25:8; Hosea 13:14; Hebrew 2:14-15; 1
Corinthians 15:54-57). In Revelation 5
Christ is seen as the only one worthy of taking and opening the title deeds of
the earth (the book with seven seals) and of the praise and worship of his
creatures. It is from this moment that
Christ will indeed have mashalI, dominion
or governorship over the nations.
Psalm 22:29
“All they
that be fat upon earth shall eat and worship: all they that go down to
the dust shall bow before him: and none can keep alive his own soul.”
Here
we have a three-fold description of the representatives of the nations.
All fat upon earth shall eat and worship: These are they who are wealthy,
the fat dashen, the rich and fertile; they will remember God and turn to
him. Kings are said to come to worship
bringing gifts (Isaiah 49:23, Isaiah 52:15, Isaiah 60:3, Isaiah 60:10,Isaiah
60:16; Psalm 2:10-12, Psalm 68:31, Psalm 72:10, Psalm 72:11; Revelation
11:15). Although there are “not many wise men after the flesh, not many
mighty, not many noble, called” (1Corinthians
1:26) there are those who do, and it would seem more so in the latter days
including the tribulation.
The
tribulation period is shown to be a time of great evangelism where the manifest
evil of Satan and those who follow him will drive righteous people to the Lord,
it will be a great example of grace before judgment even though many will be
martyred (Revelation 7:9-14). It may
very well be that a great number of wise,
mighty and noble men and women
will be saved during this time.
They that go down to the dust: Barnes (and others) interpret this as “those who are bowed down to the
dust; who are crushed, broken, and oppressed; the poor, the sad, the
sorrowful”, yet the Psalmist has already used dust aphar as a picture of
death (see note at vs.15) therefore ‘down (yarad) to the dust’ must surely speak of a decline, a descent to
physical death, making this a reference to the frail and elderly.
And none can keep alive his own soul: Barnes states that the proper
rendering of this phrase is “and he who cannot
keep alive his own soul”, which he
believes to be the reference to the frail and elderly. Yet to the present author this is more in
keeping with the destitute, the poverty stricken who, as our modern day phrase
goes, ‘cannot keep body and soul together’.
There
is quite a divergence between scholars as to the meaning of these last two
phrases yet it does seem clear that the intention of the Psalmist is to show
“all classes of persons will come and worship the true God; not the poor and
needy only, the afflicted, and the oppressed, but the rich and the
prosperous”. From history we know this
to be true and even in our own day ‘all classes of people’ are experiencing
regeneration and come to worship God through Jesus the Christ.
Psalm 22:30-31
“A seed shall serve him; it shall be accounted to the Lord for a
generation. They shall come, and shall declare his righteousness unto a people
that shall be born, that he hath done this.”
A seed shall serve him:
The word ‘seed’ is zera‛,
which properly means “a sowing” and in that context depicts many stemming from
one (a planted seed produces many). It
is used here in the figurative sense regarding a multitude of people; posterity
(Genesis 3:15; Genesis 13:16; Genesis 15:5, Genesis 15:13). This brings to mind the very fitting parable
of our Lord “Unless a grain of wheat
falls into the ground and dies, it abides alone; but if it dies, it brings
forth much fruit” (John 12:24).
This posterity, the fruit of the Saviours sacrifice, “shall be accounted
to the Lord for a generation”.
It shall be accounted: The posterity shall be saphar,
scored with a mark, made a permanent record to the Lord. This is
generally translated in the manner, i.e. “A seed shall serve him; It shall be
told of the Lord unto the next
generation.” (ASV). But ‘to the Lord’ could also be translated ‘unto’ the Lord, which gives it the
connotation of belonging to him. Generation is the Heb. dor and is properly period, duration or
(those living during a period). It is
here related to people therefore translated generation in the sense of family,
tribe or people.
It is
best understood as Barnes has it. “The seed - the people referred to - would be
reckoned to the Lord as a generation of his own people, a race, a tribe, a
family pertaining to him. They would be regarded as such by him; they would be
so estimated by mankind. They would not be a generation of aliens and
strangers, but a generation of his people and friends (compare Psalm 87:6, in
context).
Shall come and declare his righteousness: To declare the LORD’S
righteousness is to make known the very essence of God’s character. Righteousness tsedaqah (all that is right, just and virtuous) is revealed in
God’s dealings with his creation; from condemnation and judgment of sin to the
love displayed in redemption; both of which are seen in the sacrifice of
Messiah the Son of God. This is why the
Apostle Paul wrote of Christ, “But now,
apart from the law, God's righteousness is revealed and is attested by the Law
and the Prophets - God's righteousness through the faithfulness of Jesus Christ
for all who believe” (Romans 3:21-22).
Unto a people that
shall be born: The declaration of God’s righteousness is the
preaching of Christ (the gospel) to every generation. The gospel has been preached throughout the
dispensation of the Church and will be preached to those who will be born
during the millennial age.
(All Adam’s descendants, of any and every
age are born of the flesh and because of the inherent nature of Adam must be
born of the Spirit to enter the kingdom of God (John 3:5-7). This includes those “that shall be born” during the millennial phase of the kingdom of
heaven. Those who are not ‘born of the
Spirit’ will take part in the final rebellion and its consequences (Revelation
20:7-9)).
No comments:
Post a Comment