Add parallel Print Page Options

Psalm 74[a]

Prayer in Time of Calamity

A maskil[b] of Asaph.

Why, O God, have you cast us off forever?
    Why[c] does your anger blaze forth
    against the sheep of your pasture?
Remember the people that you purchased long ago,
    the tribe that you redeemed as your own possession,[d]
    and Mount Zion that you chose as your dwelling.

Read full chapter

Footnotes

  1. Psalm 74:1 This lamentation expresses the soul of a stricken people who feel abandoned even by God. The deportees who have returned from the Exile (538–529 B.C.), or else the Jews persecuted by Antiochus IV Epiphanes (167–164 B.C.), mourn over their sanctuary, which the pagans have profaned (see 2 Ki 25:9-12; Isa 64:10 for the former and 1 Mac 4:38; 2 Mac 1:8 for the latter). Has the Lord forgotten the covenant and the wonders he once accomplished to free his people (Ps 74:13-14), to sustain them in the journey through the wilderness, and to open the Promised Land for them (v. 15)?
    Rightly, the past prevents the psalmist from despairing and enables him to believe in a better future. Israel has now lost all pretense of power; it is the community of the poor (vv. 19-21), conscious of its weakness; it is like the timid dove that God cannot abandon to the ferocity of the beasts (v. 19).
    Prolonging Christ’s presence and even identifying mysteriously with him, the Church is now God’s people on earth (see 1 Pet 2:9f). She is also the earthly, visible temple of God, his city and the spiritual capital of the world (see 1 Cor 3:16; 1 Pet 2:4-6). Hence, her members can pray this psalm in trials when Christ seems to have delivered them over to persecution without end.
  2. Psalm 74:1 Maskil: see note on Ps 32:1a. Asaph: see notes on Pss 73–89.
  3. Psalm 74:1 Why . . . ? Why . . . ?: see note on Ps 6:4. Forever: figuratively speaking; it seemed like forever. Sheep of your pasture: see note on Ps 23.
  4. Psalm 74:2 In this time of great calamity, the psalmist begs God to recall his exploits at the Exodus, the Conquest, and the establishment of the temple. You redeemed as your own possession: see Deut 9:29.