Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 34:19
Many [are] the afflictions of the righteous: but the LORD delivereth him out of them all.
19. No exemption from evils is promised to the righteous man, but out of them all the Lord rescues him ( Psa 34:4 ; Psa 34:17).
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Many are the afflictions of the righteous – This is not intended to affirm that the afflictions of the righteous are more numerous or more severe than the afflictions of other men, but that they are subjected to much suffering, and to many trials. Religion does not exempt them from suffering, but it sustains them in it; it does not deliver them from all trials in this life, but it supports them in their trials, which it teaches them to consider as a preparation for the life to come. There are, indeed, sorrows which are special to the righteous, or which come upon them in virtue of their religion, as the trials of persecution; but there are sorrows, also, that are special to the wicked – such as are the effects of intemperance, dishonesty, crime. The latter are more numerous by far than the former; so that it is still true that the wicked suffer more than the righteous in this life.
But the Lord delivereth him out of them all – See the notes at Psa 34:17.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Psa 34:19-20
Many are the afflictions of the righteous: but the Lord delivereth them out of them all.
The trial of the righteous
The sum of this verse is as if he should say, Let the righteous look for more troubles than others, and likewise let them hope for greater comforts than others; for when they are well, they shall be eclipsed again, to show that their light was but borrowed; and when they are eclipsed, their light shall return, to show their difference from them whom God hateth, which fall from plague to plague, as they run from sin to sin.
I. what makes our troubles so hard to bear is our lack of patience, how great is our need of this grace! A sound spirit, saith Solomon, will bear his infirmity, but a wounded spirit what can sustain? (Pro 18:14). Therefore as the lid is made to open and shut, to save the eye, so patience is set to keep the soul, and save the heart; whole, to cheer the body again. Therefore if you mark, when you can go by an offence, and take a little wrong and suffer trouble quietly, you have a kind of peace and joy in your heart, as if you have gotten a victory, and the more your patience is, still the less your pain is. For as a light burden, borne at the arms end, weigheth heavier by much, than a burden of treble weight, if it be borne upon the shoulders, which are made to bear; so if a man set impatience to bear his cross, which is not fit to bear, it will grumble, and murmur, and let the burden fall upon his head, like a broken staff, which promiseth to help him over the water, and leaveth him in the ditch. But if you pug it to patience, and set her to bear it, which is appointed to bear, she is like the hearty spies that came from Canaan, and said, It is nothing to overcome them (Jos 2:1-24.). Among the strange cures of patience, David may report of his experience what this plaster hath done for him; for, being a figure of Christ, he was always hedged about with the Cross, which proved his patience like a touchstone every day. As Christ was contemned of his countrymen, so David was contemned of his brethren (1Sa 26:2); as Christ fled to Egypt, so David fled unto Gath; as Christ received food of women, so David received food of Abigail (Luk 8:2); as Herod persecuted Christ, so Saul persecuted David. Thus, by his own foot, David measured the condition of the righteous, and saith, Many are the troubles of the righteous; and then, by his own cure, he showeth how they should be healed, saying, The Lord will deliver him out of all. If ye mark, the Spirit hath directed David to those two things which make us take our troubles grievously: one, because we do not look for them before they come. Therefore, as Christ told Peter before he suffered, to strengthen him when he suffered (Joh 21:18); so the Holy Ghost doth run upon the cross to keep us in expectation of troubles, that we might prepare faith, and patience, and constancy for them, as Noah prepared an ark for the flood.
II. The second thing which makes us to start so at the cross is, because we are like the prophets servant, which did see his foes, but not his friends (2Ki 6:1-33.); so we see our sore, but not our salve, Comfort seems afar off, like Abraham in the heavens (Luk 16:1-31.), as though it would never come so low. Therefore we go about to deliver ourselves, as it is said, Psa 2:1-12., Let us break his bands, as though we could deliver ourselves. But hold your peace, saith Moses, the Lord shall fight for you (Exo 14:14). So David comes in like a pacifier, and saith, Vex not yourselves, for the Lord will deliver you. Bear both these sentences in mind, that you must go through a sea of troubles, and that then you shall come to the haven of rest, and no affliction shall take you before you be armed for it, or you be without your remedy: Many are the troubles of the righteous, but the Lord delivereth him out of all. Here be the two hands of God, like a wound and a plaster, one casteth down, and the other raiseth up. It is good for a man to know his troubles before they come, because afflictions are lightened in the expectation (Act 9:16; Mat 16:24; Joh 2:10). This is the manner of Gods proceedings to send good after evil, as He made light after darkness (Gen 1:3). The knife of correction must prune and lop off mens rotten twigs before they can bring forth fruit.
III. yet our troubles are but troubles. When God doth visit the wicked, His punishments are called plagues and destructions; the plagues of Egypt, the curse of Cain, the destruction of Sodom. But when He doth visit the righteous, His punishments are called corrections, and chastisements, and rods, which proceed from a Father, not to destroy us, but to try us, and purge us, and instruct us. And as Jacob was blessed and halted both at one time, so a man may be blessed and afflicted both together. Afflictions do not hinder our happiness, but our happiness cometh by affliction, as Jacobs blessing came with halting (Gen 32:1-32.), and as peace is procured by war. (Henry Smith.)
The good man under afflictions
I. afflictions often befall the best of men; some, that are common to them with the rest of mankind, and others, that are peculiar to persons of this character. The righteous man, as well as others, may be deserted by his friend, and abused by his enemies. Death may deprive him of those dear to him, and swell his heart with sorrow. His virtue will not secure him from infamy and contempt, from losses and disappointments in his worldly affairs; from poverty, and the thousand hardships that attend it, from bad health and painful distempers. Then, besides his own private afflictions, the good man, through the tenderness of his heart, feels the calamities of his fellow-creatures, and shares in the manifold evils he sees them suffer. Righteousness or virtue sometimes draws upon itself the hatred of bad men, with all the evils they are able to inflict. Eminent worth, which outshines others, and makes them appear despicable and mean, provokes their envy, the most bitter and deadly of human passions. Besides, integrity may lead a man to oppose the wicked in their unjust and mischievous designs; wherefore these will join themselves to such as envy him, and increase the number of his enemies.
II. why the righteous are afflicted. If God lays affliction upon the righteous, it is not because He has no distinguishing regard for them; but because their sufferings may answer many valuable purposes both to others and themselves.
1. I say, others may reap various advantages by observing the sufferings of good men. By such events God may intend to admonish us, that prosperity is not the best of blessings, nor adversity the worst of evils; since He frequently dispenses the one, and denies the other to His own children. The suffering of the righteous may also be of service to the world; as by this means their virtues are more clearly displayed, and recommended with greater force to the imitation of mankind.
2. Their afflictions often produce great advantages to the sufferers themselves. Among these, I am not afraid to mention the glory they derive from hence. Suffering virtue at least may surely be allowed to comfort itself with the foresight of that veneration, which is wrongfully withheld from it when living; but which posterity will pay with interest to its surviving memory. ,Nor is it a small advantage, that by means of their sufferings the righteous may attain a comfortable assurance of their own constancy. Sometimes also adversity is profitable to good men, as it helps to cure them of their remaining imperfections.
III. the righteous mans supports under afflictions.
1. The native strength of his virtue, which enables him to break their forte by opposing to them a firm and constant mind.
2. Religion also lends him a powerful aid. (John Holland.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 19. Many are the afflictions of the righteous] No commander would do justice to a brave and skilful soldier, by refusing him opportunities to put his skill and bravery to proof by combating with the adversary; or by preventing him from taking the post of danger when necessity required it. The righteous are God’s soldiers. He suffers them to be tried, and sometimes to enter into the hottest of the battle and in their victory the power and influence of the grace of God is shown, as well as their faithfulness.
Delivereth him out of them all.] He may well combat heartily, who knows that if he fight in the Lord, he shall necessarily be the conqueror.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Many [are] the afflictions of the righteous,…. This may be understood of some one particular righteous person, since the singular number is here made use of; whereas the plural is always used before, when the righteous are made mention of; and the Lord Jesus Christ may be designed, who is eminently and emphatically “the righteous”; he is righteous both as God and man, and as Mediator, in the discharge of every branch of his office; and his afflictions were many, which he endured from men, from devils, and from God himself: many were the afflictions of his body, which he bore when buffeted, scourged, and crucified; and many were the afflictions of his soul, when he bore the sins of his people, endured the wrath of God for them, and was forsaken by him; though none of these were for any sins of his own, but for the sins of others; and out of them all the Lord delivered him at last, and set him at his own right hand; or this may be understood of everyone of the righteous; who, though they are justified from sin, and are saved from wrath, yet have many afflictions; which are “evils” in themselves, as the word m may be rendered, and are very troublesome and distressing; and these are great and grievous for quality, and many and abundant for quantity; though no more than it is the will of God should be, and not one too many;
but the Lord delivereth him out of them all; as Christ was, and all his people will be; if not in this life, by giving respites and intervals, as he sometimes does; yet hereafter, when the righteous are completely delivered out of all their trials and exercises, so as that they shall never return more upon them. The word translated “afflictions”, as it signifies “evils”, may be safely interpreted of moral evils, as well as of evils of afflictions: it is the same word that is used for moral evil in Ps 34:21; and then the sense is, that many are the sins committed by righteous persons; for there are none without sin, in many things they all offend; yet they shall not perish by them, but they shall be delivered from them; as, from the dominion of them by the power of grace, and from the guilt of them by the blood of Christ, and from condemnation for them through his righteousness; so hereafter from the very being of them, and all molestation and disturbance by them.
m “mala”, Pagninus, Montanus, Musculus, Cocceius, Gejerus, Michaelis; so Ainsworth.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
19. Many are the afflictions of the righteous. The Psalmist here anticipates the thought which often arises in the mind, “How can it be that God has a care about the righteous, who are continually harassed with so many calamities and trials? for what purpose does the protection of God serve, unless those who are peaceably inclined enjoy peace and repose? and what is more unreasonable, than that those who cause trouble to no one should themselves be tormented and afflicted in all variety of ways?” That, therefore, the temptations by which we are continually assailed may not shake our belief in the providence of God, we ought to remember this lesson of instruction, that although God governs the righteous, and provides for their safety, they are yet subject and exposed to many miseries, that, being tested by such trials, they may give evidence of their invincible constancy, and experience so much the more that God is their deliverer. If they were exempted from every kind of trial, their faith would languish, they would cease to call upon God, and their piety would remain hidden and unknown. It is, therefore, necessary that they should be exercised with various trials, and especially for this end, that they may acknowledge that they have been wonderfully preserved by God amidst numberless deaths. If this should seldom happen, it might appear to be fortuitous, or the result of chance; but when innumerable and interminable evils come upon them in succession, the grace of God cannot be unknown, when he always stretches forth his hand to them. David, therefore, admonishes the faithful never to lose their courage, whatever evils may threaten them; since God, who can as easily deliver them a thousand times as once from death, will never disappoint their expectation. What he adds concerning their bones, seems not a little to illustrate the truth of this doctrine, and to teach us that those who are protected by God shall be free from all danger. He therefore declares, that God will take care that not one of their bones shall be broken; in which sense Christ also says, that
“
the very hairs of our head are all numbered,” (Luk 12:7.)
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
Psa 34:19 Many [are] the afflictions of the righteous: but the LORD delivereth him out of them all.
Ver. 19. Many are the troubles, &c. ] Dei sunt nuntii, these are God’s messengers, saith Kimchi, and they seldom come single. See Jas 1:2 . See Trapp on “ Jam 1:2 “ Sent they are also to the wicked, Psa 32:10 , but on another errand, and for another end. The righteous, per augusta ad augustum, per spinas ad rosas, per motum ad quietem, per procellas ad portum, per crucem ad caelum contendunt, through many tribulations they enter into God’s kingdom. Not so the wicked; their crosses are but a typical hell.
But the Lord delivereth him out of them all
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: Psa 34:19-22
19Many are the afflictions of the righteous,
But the Lord delivers him out of them all.
20He keeps all his bones,
Not one of them is broken.
21Evil shall slay the wicked,
And those who hate the righteous will be condemned.
22The Lord redeems the soul of His servants,
And none of those who take refuge in Him will be condemned.
Psa 34:19-22 This strophe continues the emphasis of the previous one, but emphasizing the different outcomes between the godly and godless. The last two strophes are parallelism at a second level.
1. YHWH’s actions toward His faithful followers
a. He delivers them from all their many afflictions, Psa 34:19
b. He keeps all their bones unbroken (i.e., imagery for health), Psa 34:20
c. He redeems (see SPECIAL TOPIC: RANSOM/REDEEM ) His servants, Psa 34:22 a
d. none of those who take refuge in Him will be condemned, Psa 34:22 b
2. YHWH’s actions toward the unfaithful
a. He shall slay the wicked, Psa 34:21 a (cf. Psa 34:16)
b. those who hate the righteous will be condemned, Psa 34:21 b
Psa 34:19 There need to be two points made about this verse.
1. The righteous did/do/will suffer in this fallen world (cf. Psa 37:39; Psa 50:15; Dan 12:1; Mat 5:10-12; Joh 15:18-21; Joh 16:1-3; Joh 17:14; Act 14:22; Rom 5:3-4; Rom 8:17-23; 2Co 4:16-18; 2Co 6:3-10; 2Co 11:23-30; Php 1:29; 1Th 3:3; 2Ti 3:12; Jas 1:2-4; 1Pe 4:12-16).
2. God is with them in and through these afflictions. Sometimes He chooses to miraculously deliver but often He does not (see SPECIAL TOPIC: IS HEALING GOD’S PLAN FOR EVERY AGE? ). His presence is our greatest need and promise. He knows what we are going through (cf. Exo 3:7).
Psa 34:20 The breaking of a person’s bones was an idiom for the judgment of God (cf. Psa 51:8; Isa 38:13; Lam 3:4). Therefore, no bones broken was an idiom of no judgment necessary (i.e., a righteous person).
This verse is quoted in John’s Gospel (cf. Joh 19:36, along with Zec 12:10 in Joh 19:37) as a prophetic prediction. I think it is better understood as a typological understanding. Psa 34:20 is not a prediction about the Messiah’s death but about a promise of health and well being to a faithful follower.
Here is the problem, hermeneutical theory asserts that the original intent of the inspired author is the place to begin how to understand a text, in a literary and historical context. This is surely true. But we must allow NT inspired authors the right to use typology. We cannot reproduce their method because we are not inspired, but they were. So, in these cases the NT usage must be valid, but often would have been a surprise to the OT author.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
This is a study guide commentary, which means that you are responsible for your own interpretation of the Bible. Each of us must walk in the light we have. You, the Bible, and the Holy Spirit are priority in interpretation. You must not relinquish this to a commentator.
These discussion questions are provided to help you think through the major issues of this section of the book. They are meant to be thought-provoking, not definitive.
1. Who is the angel of the Lord? Where else is he mentioned in the Psalms?
2. How and why is Psa 34:8 quoted twice in the NT (Heb 6:5; 1Pe 2:3)?
3. Why does the author call his hearers children?
4. List the parts of the human body used to describe YHWH in Psa 34:15-17.
5. What does the Hebrew idiom keeps all his bones mean?
6. What are the implications of Psa 34:19 in a fallen world?
7. What does the word soul mean in the OT?
Fuente: You Can Understand the Bible: Study Guide Commentary Series by Bob Utley
the righteous = a righteous one. Compare “him”, next clause.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Many: Psa 71:20, Job 5:19, Job 30:9-31, Job 42:12, Pro 24:16, Joh 16:33, Act 14:22, 2Co 4:7-12, 2Co 4:17, 2Co 11:23-27, 1Th 3:3, 1Th 3:4, 2Ti 3:11, 2Ti 3:12, Heb 11:33-38, Jam 5:10, Jam 5:11, 1Pe 4:12, 1Pe 4:13, Rev 7:14-17
but: Psa 34:6, Psa 34:17
Reciprocal: Gen 12:10 – was a Gen 42:36 – all these things are against me Rth 1:3 – and she was 1Sa 19:10 – he slipped 1Sa 19:12 – Michal 1Sa 30:3 – burned 2Sa 20:1 – And there 2Sa 22:1 – in 1Ki 1:29 – hath Job 1:18 – Thy sons Psa 18:1 – in the day Psa 18:27 – save Psa 25:17 – General Psa 32:10 – Many Psa 37:24 – Though Psa 41:1 – Lord Psa 54:7 – For he Psa 73:14 – For all Psa 119:107 – afflicted Psa 129:2 – yet they have Psa 143:11 – bring Pro 12:13 – but Isa 54:11 – thou afflicted Jer 30:7 – but Dan 3:23 – fell Luk 16:20 – full Act 26:17 – Delivering 2Co 1:10 – General Phi 2:27 – but God 1Pe 1:6 – manifold
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Psa 34:19-20. Many are the afflictions of the righteous In the world they may have tribulation, and their afflictions and troubles may be many, (for they must not promise themselves such prosperity as will exempt them from the trial of their faith and patience;) but the Lord delivereth him out of them all That is, in due time, when it will be best for them to be so delivered. And in this they ought to think themselves happy, that God will both support them under their trials, and will also put an end to them when he hath sufficiently proved them thereby. He keepeth all his bones Not only his soul, but his body, and all the parts and members thereof; not one of them is broken God will not suffer any real mischief to befall him; though he may be often afflicted, yet he shall not be destroyed. But these words, though they may be understood of righteous men in general, of whom they are true in a metaphorical sense; yet have a further meaning in them, being designed by the Spirit of God to signify a great mystery, namely, that none of Christs bones should be broken when he was put to death, contrary to the usual custom of treating those who were crucified, whose legs were wont to be broken, in order to put them sooner out of their pain. See Joh 19:32; Joh 19:36. Dr. Kennicotts translation of this and the preceding verse renders the application of them to Christ perfectly natural and easy, and is well worth the readers attention. It is thus, Many are the afflictions of the Just One; but from them all Jehovah delivereth him: Jehovah keepeth all his bones; not one of them shall be broken. This translation the Hebrew will well bear.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
The Lord also delivers the righteous out of his troubles. Keeping his bones from breaking (Psa 34:20) expresses complete protection in spite of cruel opposition. The Apostle John used this verse in Joh 19:36 to describe God’s care of His Son during His crucifixion.