Psalms 106:31-41

31 This has been remembered in his favor ever since and will be for all time to come.
32 At the springs of Meribah the people made the Lord angry, 1 and Moses was in trouble on their account.
33 They made him so bitter that he spoke without stopping to think.
34 They did not kill the heathen, 2 as the Lord had commanded them to do,
35 but they intermarried with them and adopted their pagan ways.
36 God's people worshiped idols, and this caused their destruction.
37 They offered their own sons and daughters 3 as sacrifices to the idols of Canaan.
38 They killed those innocent children, 4 and the land was defiled by those murders.
39 They made themselves impure by their actions and were unfaithful to God.
40 So the Lord was angry with his people; 5 he was disgusted with them.
41 He abandoned them to the power of the heathen, and their enemies ruled over them.

Psalms 106:31-41 Meaning and Commentary

INTRODUCTION TO PSALM 106

This psalm is without the name of its author, as the Syriac interpreter observes. Aben Ezra, on Ps 106:47, says, that one of the wise men of Egypt (perhaps Maimonides) was of opinion that it was written in the time of the judges, when there was no king in Israel; and another, he says, thought it was written in Babylon: but he was of opinion it was wrote under the inspiration of the Holy Ghost, or by a prophetic spirit, concerning their present captivity; and so Kimchi. The petition in Ps 106:47, "gather us from among the Heathen", has led most interpreters to conclude that it was written either in the Babylonish captivity, or, as some, in the times of Antiochus: but by comparing it with 1Ch 16:7, it appears that it was written by David, at the time of the bringing up of the ark to Zion; since the first and two last verses of it are there expressly mentioned, in the psalm he gave Asaph to sing on that occasion, Ps 106:34-36, who therein might have respect to the Israelites that had been taken captive by some of their neighbours, as the Philistines, and still retained; though there is no difficulty in supposing that David, under a prophetic spirit, foresaw future captivities, and represents those that were in them. As the preceding psalm treats of the mercies and favours God bestowed upon Israel, this of their sins and provocations amidst those blessings, and of the goodness of God unto them; that notwithstanding he did not destroy them from being a people; for which they had reason to be thankful.

Cross References 5

  • 1. 106.32, 33Numbers 20.2-13.
  • 2. 106.34-36Judges 2.1-3; 3.5, 6.
  • 3. 106.37 2 Kings 17.17.
  • 4. 106.38Numbers 35.33.
  • 5. 106.40-46Judges 2.14-18.
Scripture taken from the Good News Translation - Second Edition, Copyright 1992 by American Bible Society. Used by Permission.