Psalms 44:10-20

10 You make us retreat from the foe, and those who hate us have taken plunder for themselves.
11 You hand us over to be eaten like sheep and scatter us among the nations.
12 You sell Your people for nothing; You make no profit from selling them.
13 You make us an object of reproach to our neighbors, a source of mockery and ridicule to those around us.
14 You make us a joke among the nations, a laughingstock among the peoples.
15 My disgrace is before me all day long, and shame has covered my face,
16 because of the voice of the scorner and reviler, because of the enemy and avenger.
17 All this has happened to us, but we have not forgotten You or betrayed Your covenant.
18 Our hearts have not turned back; our steps have not strayed from Your path.
19 But You have crushed us in a haunt of jackals and have covered us with deepest darkness.
20 If we had forgotten the name of our God and spread out our hands to a foreign god,

Psalms 44:10-20 Meaning and Commentary

To the chief Musician for the sons of Korah, Maschil. It is not certain who was the writer of this psalm, nor when it was written, and to what time it belongs: some have thought it was composed by one of the Babylonish captivity, and that it gives an account of the church and people of God in those times; but what is said in Psalm 44:17 does not seem to agree with Daniel 9:5. It is most likely it was written by David, and to him the Targum ascribes it; though it does not respect his times; since what is said in Psalm 44:9 cannot agree with them; yet he being a prophet might, under a prophetic influence, speak of future times, and represent the church in them. Some are of opinion that he prophetically speaks of the times of the Maccabees and of Antiochus, when the church and people of God suffered much for the true religion, and abode steadfast in it; so Theodoret: but rather the whole may be applied to the times of the New Testament, since Psalm 44:22 is cited by the Apostle Paul, Romans 8:36, and is applied to his times, and as descriptive of the suffering state and condition of the church then; and which seems to be the guide and key for the opening of the whole psalm.

Footnotes 1

  • [a]. Lit shaking of the head
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