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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 73:13

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 73:13

Verily I have cleansed my heart [in] vain, and washed my hands in innocency.

13. Verily ] The same word ak as in Psa 73:1. R.V. Surely in vain have I cleansed my heart. If the wicked prosper thus, his endeavours after holiness have been wasted. There is no reward for the righteous: nay ( Psa 73:14) his own reward has been chastisement. He would not have claimed to be sinless any more than Job (cp. Job 20:9), but he has a good conscience. For the second line cp. Psa 26:6. The metaphor is derived from the ceremonies of the Levitical ritual. See Exo 30:17 ff.; cp. Deu 31:6.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Verily I have cleansed my heart in vain – That is, There is no advantage in all my efforts to become pure and holy. It does not assist me in obtaining the favor of God; and it would be just as well to live a sinful life – to indulge in the pleasures of sense – to make the world my portion. Nothing is to be gained by all my painful efforts at self-discipline; by all my endeavors to become righteous. It would have been as well for me – or better – if I had lived a life of sin like other people. The righteous obtain from God fewer blessings than the wicked; they have less happiness and less prosperity in this world; they are subjected to more trouble and sorrow; and to all else there must be added the struggles, the conflict, the warfare, the painful effort to be pure, and to lead a holy life, all of which is now seen to be of no advantage whatever. Such thoughts as these were not confined to the psalmist. They are thoughts which will start up in the mind, and which it is not easy to calm down.

And washed my hands in innocency – That is, It has been of no use that I have washed my hands in innocency. The word innocency here means purity. He had washed his hands in that which was pure; as, pure water. To wash the hands is emblematic of innocence or purity. See the notes at Psa 26:6.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Psa 73:13

Verily I have cleansed my heart in vain, and washed my hands in innocency.

Trust and trouble

The innocent suffer with the guilty, often suffer for them, that so the guilty, spared, may be led by Gods goodness to repentance; to be helpful in such a ministry is an abundant recompense for all its pain. This the Gospel teaches us; it tells us that we have not cleansed our hearts in vain, and washed our hands in innocency; for that the fellowship of the righteous Saviour is the fellowship of the Man of Sorrows. But it brings us face to face with deeper mysteries than those which it solves. If we ask the reason of this–why God has so constituted the world as that all this is true; if we are not content with seeing how God acts, but want to know the reason, then there is no answer for us. We can do nothing but wait and trust. God is doing for us in the Gospel what He did for Asaph in the sanctuary; He is bringing us to trust in Him. He is confirming our faith, enlarging our conceptions of His righteousness, calling us to a broader view of His counsel, deepening our confidence that He is good. There is no mystery in life so dark but we can bear it, if only we are persuaded that God is pursuing His purpose in it. Let us consider, then–


I.
How forgetfulness of God leads us to chafe under the painful dispensations of human life (Psa 73:8). No doubt Asaph was perfectly familiar with the pious sayings in which the experience of the godly is gathered up and afterwards repeated by others. Doubtless he could have talked as sagely as we about the prosperity of the wicked being transient, of the Lords loving whom He chastens, and scourging every son whom He receives. But the feebleness of his hold upon these truths is seen in that he cannot bear their actual sight. When he sees the prosperity of the foolish; when he marks their pride and self-complacency, that seem to laugh his lowly trust in God to scorn; then he finds that his maxims do not serve him much, he gives way to envy of them. He needs more than maxims, however sage. It is the actual stress of life, contact with all its hard and trying realities, that tests our faith. We can talk well about Gods favour being our chief joy. But can we bear to see the prosperity of the wicked while we ourselves are in adversity? That is the real test and strain. Notice, too, how envy grows into self-righteousness. Verily I have cleansed my heart in vain. Such words suggest that the man is pretty well satisfied with himself, because he is free front blame. And Psa 73:10-14 show deep distrust in God, as well as flippant self-satisfaction. It suggests, We good men ought not to be treated thus, we are not being dealt with righteously. They even venture to ask, Is there knowledge in the Most High? Does God Almighty know what He is doing? This is what is meant. Asaph is startled when he sees where the speculation he has begun is leading him. Hence he says, If I say, I will speak thus, behold I should offend against, etc.


II.
Notice some considerations which may help us to trust that God is good in ordaining for us the painful dispensations of human life. Perhaps we could not have borne prosperity. When Asaph went into the sanctuary of God and saw the end of the wicked, he learned that they had been set in slippery places, that the pride which compassed them about as a chain, that their having more than heart could wish, had but sealed them up against the day of desolation, and the terrors that should utterly consume them. Because they were prosperous, they were self-confident, and their self-confidence was their destruction. And then there opens upon him an awful vision of what prosperity might have done for him. With the memory of his sinful murmuring upon him, he feared that he might have grown sinfully proud. The heart which tribulation had grieved would have been hardened by prosperity. So foolish was he, and ignorant in his adversity, as a beast before God; what would he have been if he had known no trouble? Then think, how hopeless would be the restoration of the wicked, which the Gospel bids us hope for, and not for their destruction, if all the sufferings of life were apportioned to them, and the righteous were never troubled. They would be consciously and irrevocably doomed, and they would sink into worse despair. It is to save them from this end that God does them good: He would spare them, that so His goodness may lead them to repentance; He would save them from the hopeless agony of seeing themselves already condemned. It is the grace of God that restores the ungodly, not His punishments. And then let us look on Christ–what a life was His! Trouble, anguish, and at the end the Cross. And yet He was Gods well-beloved Son. Would we not be with Him? God has better things for His children than prosperity. (A. Mackennal, D. D.)

A right act but a wrong opinion


I.
Here is a right act. Cleansing the heart and washing the hands mean the cultivation of personal holiness; and this is certainly a right work for man. It implies three things:–

1. The consciousness of personal defilement.

2. The possession of a cleansing element.

3. The effort of personal application. Moral evil is the defilements–Christianity is the cleansing element–and practical faith is the personal application.


II.
Here is a wrong opinion. The writer thought that it was in vain. Three facts show that this is a great mistake:–

1. That moral holiness involves its own reward.

2. That moral holiness is pro-meted by temporal adversity.

3. That moral holiness will meet with its perfect recompense hereafter.

No; this cleansing the heart is no vain work. No engagement is so real and profitable. Every fresh practical idea of God is a rising in the scale of being and of bliss; every conquest over sense, appetite, and sin, is a widening and strengthening of our spiritual sovereignty; every devout sentiment, earnest resolve, and generous sacrifice attunes our natures to higher music. (Homilist.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 13. I have cleansed my heart in vain] It is no advantage to us to worship the true God, to walk according to the law of righteousness, and keep the ordinances of the Most High.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

Hence I was sometimes tempted to think that religion was a vain and unprofitable thing, at least as to the happiness of this life, which yet God had promised as a reward to piety. True religion is here fitly and fully described by its two principal parts and works, the cleansing of the heart from sinful lusts and passions, and of the hands, or outward man, from a course of sinful actions, And although it be Gods work to cleanse the heart, yet he saith,

I have cleansed it, because every good man doth co-operate with Gods grace in cleansing it. Compare 2Co 6:1; 7:1.

Washed my hands in innocency, i.e. kept my hands (the great instruments of action, and consequently the rest of the members of my body) innocent and pure from evil practices. I have washed my hands, not only ceremonially with water, wherewith hypocrites satisfy themselves, but also morally, or with the waters of Gods grace and Spirit, innocency or purity.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

13, 14. The Psalmist, partakingof these troubles, is especially disturbed in view of his own case,that with all his diligent efforts for a holy life, he is stillsorely tried.

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

Verily, I have cleansed my heart in vain,…. Which supposes that his heart had been unclean, as every man’s is, and which appears by what is in it, and by what comes out of it; that it was now cleansed, not in an absolute and legal sense, as if it was wholly free from sin, for this no man can say; but in an evangelical sense, being purified by faith in the blood of Christ; that he had himself some concern in the cleansing of his heart, which seems to be contrary to Pr 20:9 and besides, this is the Lord’s own work, Ps 51:10 wherefore this may be considered as a wrong and rash expression of his; for as he was wrong in one part of it, its being cleansed in vain, so he might be in the other, in ascribing it to himself; though it may be allowed, consistent with what is before observed, that a believer has a concern in the cleansing of his heart; for, being convinced of the impurity of it, he owns and laments it before the Lord; and, seeing the fountain of the Redeemer’s blood opened, he applies to it, and to him for cleansing; and expresses a love unto, a great and studious concern for purity of heart as well as life; and, under the influence of divine grace, is enabled to keep a watch over it, whereby, through the same grace, it is preserved from much pollution; and by fresh application to the blood of Christ, is cleansed from what it daily contracts:

and washed my hands in innocency: that is, “in vain”, as before; which denotes the performance of good works, a course of holy life and conversation, which when right springs from purity of heart;

[See comments on Ps 26:6], now the psalmist under temptation concluded that all his religion and devotion were in vain, all his hearing, and reading, and attending on ordinances, all his concern for purity of heart and life; since those who showed no regard to these things prospered in the world, and increased in riches, abounded in ease and plenty, and seemed to be rather the favourites of heaven than religious men; and this temptation was strengthened by the following observation.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

13. Verily I have cleansed my heart in vain “Verily” has the force of wholly. Wholly in vain have I cleansed my heart. So it appeared, but this was his temptation: in Psa 73:1; Psa 73:22, after the temptation, he asserts the contrary.

Washed my hands in innocency In protestation of innocency. The allusion is to Deu 21:6-7. Compare Mat 27:24; Psa 26:6. The Septuagint understands this as the language of personal experience, not as that of a representative man, and introduces “And I said, Verily I have washed,” etc.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

The Believer’s Trust at the Realization of the Truth

v. 13. Verily, I have cleansed my heart in vain, in view of the offense given by the prosperity of the ungodly, and washed my hands in innocency, making diligent efforts to live a holy life before the Lord.

v. 14. For all the day long have I been plagued, buffeted with troubles on every hand, and chastened every morning, some new visitation of the Lord striking him with every new day. The psalmist, however, guards against such blasphemous utterances; he does not want to become guilty of speeches against the Lord.

v. 15. If I say, I will speak thus, his thoughts being on the point of being uttered, behold, I should offend against the generation of Thy children, giving offense to the Lord’s people by an act of perfidy against Jehovah, that is, he found himself in the position of Paul, Romans 7, when he speaks of the quarrel in his members.

v. 16. When I thought to know this, to get a satisfactory explanation of the riddle presented in the situation, it was too painful for me, his pondering remained a toil, did not offer him a satisfactory solution,

v. 17. until I went into the Sanctuary of God, to the Tabernacle, or Temple, where the Word of the Lord was kept, which reveals also the mysteries of God’s government of the world, so far as God wants the believers to know them; then understood I their end, then he found out what would be the final disposition of the ungodly, what fate God had in store for them.

v. 18. Surely Thou didst set them in slippery places, they who believed themselves so safe and secure against misfortune were in reality in danger of slipping every moment; Thou castedst them down into destruction, bringing sudden ruin upon them.

v. 19. How are they brought into desolation, as in a moment! They are utterly consumed with terrors, wasted away, reduced to nothing, by the horror of the fate which overtook them.

v. 20. As a dream when one awaketh, from the moment when a person arouses himself from his sleep, so, O Lord, when Thou awakest, Thou shalt despise their image. A dream may seem real enough while it lasts. but upon awaking a person shakes it off with its effects, as lacking in material substance. Thus the ungodly, with all their show of prosperity, are nothing but a dream-picture in the eyes of God; there is no place for them in the eternal city of God, their fate is decided.

v. 21. Thus my heart was grieved, and I was pricked in my reins, that is, if his heart should become embittered, if it should hurt him inside, in his inward parts, in his feelings;

v. 22. so foolish was I and ignorant; I was as a beast before Thee, he would have been foolish and like an irrational animal before God if he had yielded to dissatisfaction and bitterness. But he shakes off the attack and states what his true comfort consists in.

v. 23. Nevertheless I am continually with Thee, in spite of all the offense given by the unbelievers and their apparent good fortune; Thou hast holden me by my right hand, keeping the believer from falling, holding him secure with His almighty power.

v. 24. Thou shalt guide me with Thy counsel for God shows each of His children on which paths they should go forward, and afterward receive me to glory, when he has reached the goal, his soul’s salvation, receiving the reward of mercy. Therefore every believer is constrained to call out with Asaph:

v. 25. Whom have I in heaven but Thee? God is his highest Good; in Him there is complete satisfaction. And there is none upon earth that I desire beside Thee, he no longer finds true pleasure in this world and all its goods.

v. 26. My flesh and my heart faileth, they faint, pine, dwindle away under the attacks of misery and tribulation; but God is the Strength of: my heart, the dependable Rock of his faith, and my Portion forever, the inheritance which will give the believer eternal satisfaction and enjoyment. The psalmist therefore, in conclusion, offers a summary of his meditations.

v. 27. For, lo, they that are far from Thee shall perish, they who have left God, have become estranged to Him by means of their pride and arrogance, will become victims of eternal destruction; Thou hast destroyed all them that go a-whoring from Thee, in spiritual adultery, in idolatry, by their disobedience and faithlessness.

v. 28. But it is good for me, it is his greatest pleasure and happiness, to draw near to God, to be united with Him in the fellowship of faith; I have put my trust in the Lord God that I may declare all Thy works, that he may have reason to praise the works of God for his own salvation. In heaven we shall have the full revelation of the fact that it was the mercy and kindness of God which directed Him in His entire relation toward us, even during periods which seemed dark to us, which we could not explain at the time, and that the end and goal was the salvation of our souls and the glory of heaven.

Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann

Psa 73:13 Verily I have cleansed my heart [in] vain, and washed my hands in innocency.

Ver. 13. Verily I have cleansed my heart in vain ] For all is to little purpose, if the cards play on this fashion, if the good must be thus extremely under, and the bad on top of the wheel. Surely I have troubled myself to no purpose or profit; if it be so, why am I thus? as she said. I read of a profane soldier, who at the siege of a town, passing a place of danger, was heard swearing, and when one that stood by warned him, saying, Fellow soldier, do not swear, the bullets fly, he answered, They that swear come off as well as those that pray; but soon after this a shot hit him, and down he fell. It is not safe for saints to symbolize with sinners in such desperate speeches; lest the Lord hear it and be displeased.

Omne trahit secum numinis ira malum (Ovid).

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

Verily. See note on “Truly”, Psa 73:1.

I have cleansed. This is the result of occupation with others. Distraction. Compare Structure, above.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

Psa 73:13-14

Psa 73:13-14

“Surely in vain have I cleansed my heart,

And washed my hands in innocency;

For all the day long have I been plagued,

And chastened every morning.”

These verses represent the thoughts that came into the mind of the tempted Psalmist; but he never permitted such words to escape from his lips. These verses were indeed whispered into his ear by Satan himself; but the Psalmist, although feeling the appeal of such thoughts tugging at his heart, nevertheless rejected them and did not utter them. Many a child of God in all generations has been assailed by such wicked thoughts.

E.M. Zerr:

Psa 73:13. David did not teach that it was useless for a man to be righteous as it concerned the Lord. He meant that all the righteousness that he could practice would be unavailable as far as his enemies were concerned.

Psa 73:14. Another construction of this verse would be to say that every morning the chastening began and continued all through the day.

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

Verily: Job 9:27, Job 9:31, Job 21:15, Job 34:9, Job 35:3, Mal 3:14

washed: Psa 24:4, Psa 26:6, Psa 51:10, Heb 10:19-22, Jam 4:8

Reciprocal: Gen 20:5 – and innocency Deu 21:6 – wash their hands 1Ki 17:20 – hast thou also Job 9:29 – General Job 17:9 – clean Psa 58:11 – Verily there is Ecc 8:14 – there be just Mat 15:9 – in 1Co 15:14 – General 1Co 15:32 – what 1Co 15:58 – is not 1Th 2:1 – in vain

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Psa 73:13-14. Verily I have cleansed my heart in vain, &c. Hence I have been tempted to think, that religion is a vain and unprofitable thing; that all my faith, my charity, and my devotion; all my watching and fastings, in short, all the labour and pains I have taken in the way of goodness, have been altogether vain and fruitless; since, while the rebellious enemies of God enjoy the world and themselves at pleasure, I, who continue his servant, am in perpetual tribulation and affliction. Horne. True religion is properly and fully described in this verse, by its two principal parts and works, the cleansing of the heart from sinful lusts and passions, and of the hands, or outward man, from a course of sinful actions. And although it be Gods work to cleanse the heart, yet he says, I have cleansed it, because every pious man co-operates with Gods grace in cleansing his heart. Compare 2Co 6:1; 2Co 7:1. And washed my hands in innocency That is, kept my hands (the chief instruments of action, and, consequently, the rest of the members of my body) innocent and pure from evil practices. I have washed my hands, not only ceremonially with water, wherewith hypocrites satisfy themselves, but also morally, with the waters of Gods grace and Spirit, in innocency or purity. For all the day long I have been plagued, &c. While their ungodliness hath been attended with constant prosperity, my piety hath been exercised with continual afflictions.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

After observing the wicked, Asaph felt his commitment to follow God faithfully was a mistake. Instead of prospering, he experienced more problems. God seemed to be punishing the pure in heart and prospering the proud.

"He had not been guilty of bloodshed or oppressive activities; so he could say that his hands were washed ’in innocence’ (cf. Psa 26:6; Mat 27:24)." [Note: VanGemeren, p. 479.]

 

". . . we don’t serve God because of what we get out of it but because He is worthy of our worship and service regardless of what He allows to come to our lives." [Note: Wiersbe, The . . . Wisdom . . ., p. 222. Author’s italics omitted.]

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)