7 Our soul H5315 is escaped H4422 as a bird H6833 out of the snare H6341 of the fowlers: H3369 the snare H6341 is broken, H7665 and we are escaped. H4422
And Saul H7586 went H3212 on this side H6654 of the mountain, H2022 and David H1732 and his men H582 on that side H6654 of the mountain: H2022 and David H1732 made haste H2648 to get away H3212 for fear H6440 of Saul; H7586 for Saul H7586 and his men H582 compassed H5849 David H1732 and his men H582 round about H5849 to take H8610 them. But there came H935 a messenger H4397 unto Saul, H7586 saying, H559 Haste H4116 thee, and come; H3212 for the Philistines H6430 have invaded H6584 the land. H776
After H310 whom is the king H4428 of Israel H3478 come out? H3318 after H310 whom dost thou pursue? H7291 after H310 a dead H4191 dog, H3611 after H310 a H259 flea. H6550 The LORD H3068 therefore be judge, H1781 and judge H8199 between me and thee, and see, H7200 and plead H7378 my cause, H7379 and deliver H8199 me out of thine hand. H3027
And it came to pass, after H310 they were departed, H3212 that they came up H5927 out of the well, H875 and went H3212 and told H5046 king H4428 David, H1732 and said H559 unto David, H1732 Arise, H6965 and pass quickly H4120 over H5674 the water: H4325 for thus hath Ahithophel H302 counselled H3289 against you. Then David H1732 arose, H6965 and all the people H5971 that were with him, and they passed over H5674 Jordan: H3383 by the morning H1242 light H216 there lacked H5737 not one H259 of them that was not gone over H5674 Jordan. H3383
Worthy.Bible » Commentaries » Keil & Delitzsch Commentary » Commentary on Psalms 124
Commentary on Psalms 124 Keil & Delitzsch Commentary
The Deliverer from Death in Waters and in a Snare
The statement “the stream had gone over our soul” of this fifth Son of degrees, coincides with the statement “our soul is full enough” of the fourth; the two Psalms also meet in the synonymous new formations גּאיונים and זידונים , which also look very much as though they were formed in allusion to contemporary history. The לדוד is wanting in the lxx, Codd. Alex. and Vat. , here as in Psalms 122:1-9, and with the exception of the Targum is wanting in general in the ancient versions, and therefore is not so much as established as a point of textual criticism. It is a Psalm in the manner of the Davidic Psalms, to which it is closely allied in the metaphors of the overwhelming waters, Psalms 18:5, Psalms 18:17 (cf. Psalms 144:7), Psalms 69:2., and of the little bird; cf. also on לוּלי Psalms 27:13, on אדם used of hostile men Psalms 56:12, on בּלע חיּים Psalms 55:16, on בּרוּך ה Psalms 28:6; Psalms 31:22. This beautiful song makes its modern origin known by its Aramaizing character, and by the delight, after the manner of the later poetry, in all kinds of embellishments of language. The art of the form consists less in strophic symmetry than in this, that in order to take one step forward it always goes back half a step. Luther's imitation (1524), “Were God not with us at this time” ( Wäre Gott nicht mit uns diese Zeit ), bears the inscription “The true believers' safeguard.”
It is commonly rendered, “If it had not been Jahve who was for us.” But, notwithstanding the subject that is placed first (cf. Genesis 23:13), the שׁ belongs to the לוּלי ; since in the Aramaizing Hebrew (cf. on the other hand Genesis 31:42) לוּלי שׁ (cf. Arab. lawlâ an ) signifies nisi (prop. nisi quod ), as in the Aramaic ( דּ ) שׁ ( לואי ) לוי , o si (prop. o si quod ). The אזי , peculiar to this Psalm in the Old Testament, instead of אז follows the model of the dialectic אדין , Arab. iḏan , Syr. hāden ( הידין , הדין ). In order to begin the apodosis of לוּלי ( לוּלא ) emphatically the older language makes use of the confirmatory כּי , Genesis 31:42; Genesis 43:10; here we have אזי (well rendered by the lxx ἄρα ), as in Psalms 119:92. The Lamed of היה לנו is raphe in both instances, according to the rule discussed above, p. 373. When men ( אדם ) rose up against Israel and their anger was kindled against them, they who were feeble in themselves over against the hostile world would have been swallowed up alive if they had not had Jahve for them, if they had not had Him on their side. This “swallowing up alive” is said elsewhere of Hades, which suddenly and forcibly snatches away its victims, Psalms 55:16; Proverbs 1:12; here, however, as Psalms 124:6 shows, it is said of the enemies, who are represented as wild beasts. In Psalms 124:4 the hostile power which rolls over them is likened to an overflowing stream, as in Isaiah 8:7., the Assyrian. נחלה , a stream or river, is Milel ; it is first of all accusative: towards the stream (Numbers 34:5); then, however, it is also used as a nominative, like לילה , המּותה , and the like (cf. common Greek ἡ νύχθα, ἡ νεόντητα ); so that תה - is related to ת - ( ה - ) as נה -, מו - to ן - and ם - (Böttcher, §615). These latest Psalms are fond of such embellishments by means of adorned forms and Aramaic or Aramaizing words. זידונים is a word which is indeed not unhebraic in its formation, but is more indigenous to Chaldee; it is the Targum word for זדים in Psalms 86:14; Psalms 119:51, Psalms 119:78 (also in Psalms 54:5 for זרים ), although according to Levy the MSS do not present זידונין but זידנין . In the passage before us the Targum renders: the king who is like to the proud waters ( למוי זידוניּא ) of the sea (Antiochus Epiphanes? - a Scholium explains οἱ ὑπερήφανοι ). With reference to עבר before a plural subject, vid., Ges. §147.
After the fact of the divine succour has been expressed, in Psalms 124:6 follows the thanksgiving for it, and in Psalms 124:7 the joyful shout of the rescued one. In Psalms 124:6 the enemies are conceived of as beasts of prey on account of their bloodthirstiness, just as the worldly empires are in the Book of Daniel; in Psalms 124:7 as “fowlers” on account of their cunning. According to the punctuation it is not to be rendered: Our soul is like a bird that is escaped, in which case it would have been accented בפשׁנו כצפור , but: our soul (subject with Rebia magnum ) is as a bird ( כּצפור as in Hosea 11:11; Proverbs 23:32; Job 14:2, instead of the syntactically more usual כּצּפור ) escaped out of the snare of him who lays snares ( יוקשׁ , elsewhere יקושׁ , יקוּשׁ , a fowler, Psalms 91:3). נשׁבר (with ā beside Rebia ) is 3rd praet. : the snare was burst, and we - we became free. In Psalms 124:8 (cf. Psalms 121:2; Psalms 134:3) the universal, and here pertinent thought, viz., the help of Israel is in the name of Jahve, the Creator of the world, i.e., in Him who is manifest as such and is continually verifying Himself, forms the epiphonematic close. Whether the power of the world seeks to make the church of Jahve like to itself or to annihilate it, it is not a disavowal of its God, but a faithful confession, stedfast even to death, that leads to its deliverance.