Biblia

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 18:13

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 18:13

The LORD also thundered in the heavens, and the Highest gave his voice; hail [stones] and coals of fire.

13. and the Highest &c.] R.V., and the Most High uttered his voice. The Most High is the title of God as the Supreme Ruler of the Universe. See Psa 7:17; and Appendix, Note II. Thunder is the voice of God. See Psa 29:3; Job 37:2-5. The words hailstones and coals of fire have no proper grammatical construction, and are wanting in the LXX and in 2 Sam. They seem to have been added here from Psa 18:12 by an error of transcription.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

The Lord also thundered in the heavens – Thunder is often in the Scriptures described as the voice of God. See the magnificent description in Psa 29:1-11; compare Job 40:9, Canst thou thunder with a voice like him? So 1Sa 7:10; 1Sa 12:18; Psa 77:18; Job 37:4.

And the Highest gave his voice – God, the most exalted Being in the universe, uttered his voice in the thunder; or, the thunder was his voice.

Hail-stones, and coals of fire – Accompanying the thunder. The repetition seems to be because these were such striking and constant accompaniments of the storm.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Psa 18:13

The Lord also thundered in the heavens.

The terrors of an Eastern thunderstorm

There is said to be something peculiarly terrific in an Oriental thunderstorm. Its vivid lightning and intense darkness, succeeding each other with startling rapidity, are appalling. This is indicated in the words, at the brightness that was before Him, His thick clouds passed; that is, passed away. So intense is the light of the lightnings flash that the whole mass of dark clouds seems to pass away, and their place to be occupied for an instant by a mass of solid light, shedding its beams over everything upon the earth like a midday sun. The light, however, is only for an instant–and then a darkness, that may be felt, shuts up the whole from every vision but His, to whom the darkness and the light are both alike. Meanwhile the roar of the thunder, the voice of the Most High in the clouds, is incessant; the lightnings flashing from cloud to cloud, from the clouds to the earth, and from the earth back again to the clouds. Moreover, it seems as if He who measureth the waters in the hollow of His hand had poured them out, for the rain descends in torrents, mingled at times with destructive hail, while coals of fire–balls of meteoric flame–run along the ground (Exo 9:23). (David Caldwell, A. M.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 13. The Lord also thundered in the heavens, and the Highest gave his voice] And then followed the hail and coals of fire. The former verse mentioned the lightning, with its effects; this gives us the report of the thunder, and the increasing storm of hail and fire that attended it. Some think the words hail-stones and coals of fire are entered here by some careless transcribers from the preceding verse; and it is true that they are wanting in the Septuagint and the Arabic, in the parallel place in 2 Samuel, and in five of Kennicott’s and De Rossi’s MSS. I should rather, with Bishop Horsley, suppose them to be an interpolation in the preceding verse: or in that to have been borrowed from this; for this most certainly is their true place.

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

The Lord also thundered, to wit, against my adversaries. Thunder is a sign of Gods anger, 1Sa 2:10; 7:10.

His voice, i.e. thunder, oft so called. The same thing expressed in other words.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

13. The storm breaksforththunder follows lightning, and hail with repeated lightning,as often seen, like balls or coals of fire, succeed (Ex9:23).

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

The Lord also thundered in the heavens,…. By his apostles and ministers, some of which were Boanergeses, sons of thunder, whose ministry was useful to shake the consciences of men, and bring them to a sense of themselves, Mr 3:17;

and the Highest gave his voice; the same with thunder; for thunder is often called the voice of the Lord, Job 37:5; compare with this Ps 68:11; the Targum interprets it, “he lifted up his word”; the same effects as before follow,

hail [stones] and coals of fire; [See comments on Ps 18:12].

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

(Heb.: 18:14-16) Amidst thunder, Jahve hurled lightnings as arrows upon David’s enemies, and the breath of His anger laid bare the beds of the flood to the very centre of the earth, in order to rescue the sunken one. Thunder is the rumble of God, and as it were the hollow murmur of His mouth, Job 37:2. , the Most High, is the name of God as the inapproachable Judge, who governs all things. The third line of Psa 18:14 is erroneously repeated from the preceding strophe. It cannot be supported on grammatical grounds by Exo 9:23, since , edere vocem, has a different meaning from the , dare tonitrua, of that passage. The symmetry of the strophe structure is also against it; and it is wanting both in 2 Sam. and in the lxx. , which, as the opposite of Neh 2:12; Isa 10:7, means adverbially “in abundance,” is the parallel to . It is generally taken, after the analogy of Gen 49:23, in the sense of , Psa 144:6: in pause = (the o passing over into the broader like instead of in Gen 49:3) = , cognate with , ; but the forms , , here, and in every other instance, have but a very questionable existence, as e.g., , Isa 54:13, is more probably an adjective than the third person praet. (cf. Bttcher, Neue Aehrenlese No. 635, 1066). The suffixes em do not refer to the arrows, i.e., lightnings, but to David’s foes. means both to put in commotion and to destroy by confounding, Exo 14:24; Exo 23:27. In addition to the thunder, the voice of Jahve, comes the stormwind, which is the snorting of the breath of His nostrils. This makes the channels of the waters visible and lays bare the foundations of the earth. (collateral form to ) is the bed of the river and then the river or brook itself, a continendo aquas (Ges.), and exactly like the Arabic mesk , mesak , mesek (from Arab. msk , the VI form of which, tamasaka , corresponds to ), means a place that does not admit of the water soaking in, but on account of the firmness of the soil preserves it standing or flowing. What are here meant are the water-courses or river beds that hold the water. It is only needful for Jahve to threaten (epitiman Mat 8:26) and the floods, in which he, whose rescue is undertaken here, is sunk, flee (Psa 104:7) and dry up (Psa 106:9, Nah 1:4). But he is already half engulfed in the abyss of Hades, hence not merely the bed of the flood is opened up, but the earth is rent to its very centre. From the language being here so thoroughly allegorical, it is clear that we were quite correct in interpreting the description as ideal. He, who is nearly overpowered by his foes, is represented as one engulfed in deep waters and almost drowning.

Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament

13. Jehovah thundered. David here repeats the same thing in different words, declaring that God thundered from heaven; and he calls the thunder the yoke of God, that we may not suppose it is produced merely by chance or by natural causes, independent of the appointment and will of God. Philosophers, it is true, are well acquainted with the intermediate or secondary causes, from which the thunder proceeds, namely, that when the cold and humid vapours obstruct the dry and hot exhalations in their course upwards, a collision takes place, and by this, together with the noise of the clouds rushing against each other, is produced the rumbling thunder-peal. (405) But David, in describing the phenomena of the atmosphere, rises, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, above the mere phenomena themselves, and represents God to us as the supreme governor of the whole, who, at his will, penetrates into the hidden veins of the earth, and thence draws forth exhalations; who then, dividing them into different sorts, disperses them through the air; who again collects the vapours together, and sets them in conflict with the subtile and dry heats, so that the thunder which follows seems to be a loud pealing voice proceeding from his own mouth. The song in 2 Samuel also contains the repetition to which we have referred in the commencement of our remarks on this verse; but the sense of this and the preceding verse, and of the corresponding verses in Samuel, are entirely similar. We should remember what I have said before, that David, under these figures, describes to us the dreadful power of God, the better to exalt and magnify the divine grace, which was manifested in his deliverance. He declares a little after, that this was his intention; for, when speaking of his enemies, he says, (verse 14,) that they were scattered, or put to flight, by the arrows of God; as if he had said, They have been overthrown, not by the hands or swords of men, but by God, who openly launched his thunderbolts against them. Not that he means to affirm that this happened literally, but he speaks in this metaphorical language, because those who were uninstructed and slow to acknowledge the power of God, (406) could not otherwise be brought to perceive that God was the author of his deliverance. The import of his words is, Whoever does not acknowledge that I have been preserved by the hand of God, may as well deny that it is God who thunders from heaven, and abolish his power which is manifested in the whole order of nature, and especially in those wonderful changes which we see taking place in the atmosphere. As God shoots lightnings as if they were arrows, the Psalmist has, in the first place, employed this metaphor; and then he has expressed the thing simply by its proper name.

(405) “ De ce combat et aussi du bruit des nuees allans l’une contre l’autre, se fait un son.” — Fr.

(406) “ Et tardifs a reconnaistre la vertu de Dieu.” — Fr.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(13) In the heavens.The version in Samuel is from the heavens, which is better. For the thunder as Gods voice see Psa. 29:3, and Note.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

13. The Lord also thundered Highest gave his voice This was the word of command to the elements to discharge their burden of wrath upon his enemies.

Hail and coals of fire The allusion is to Exo 9:24; Jos 10:11. Compare “hot thunderbolts,” Psa 78:48; on which see note.

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

Psa 18:13. The Lord also thundered in the heavens, &c. The former verse mentioned the lightning, with its effects: this gives us the report of the thunder, and the increasing storm of hail and fire which attended it; and the omission of the hail and fire after the thunder, would have made it a sort of brutum fulmen, harmless thunder, and almost disarmed the artillery of the Almighty of its vengeance. I cannot, therefore, but wonder, that some learned men should imagine, that these words were here taken unnecessarily from the former verse by careless transcribers. It is indeed said, that the fire and hail in this last verse are omitted in the parallel place in Samuel. This is true; but then the whole description there differs from this in the Psalms; as the reader will see by comparing the two places together. See Chandler, and Kennicott’s Dissert. vol. 1:

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

Psa 18:13 The LORD also thundered in the heavens, and the Highest gave his voice; hail [stones] and coals of fire.

Ver. 13. The Lord also thundered in the heavens ] Quasi pro classico, et auspicio proelii ineundi.

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

in. Some codices, with Aramaean, Septuagint, and Vulgate, read “from” (1Sa 22:14).

HIGHEST. Hebrew. Elyon. App-4.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

thundered: Psa 78:48, Psa 104:7, Exo 20:18, 1Sa 7:10, Job 40:9, Joh 12:29, Rev 4:5, Rev 8:5, Rev 19:6

Highest: Psa 29:3, Psa 29:4, Eze 10:5

coals: Psa 120:3, Psa 120:4, Psa 140:10, Deu 32:24, *marg. Hab 3:5

Reciprocal: Exo 9:23 – and hail Exo 14:24 – looked unto 1Sa 2:10 – he thunder 1Ch 14:11 – God Job 36:29 – the noise Psa 144:6 – Cast forth Pro 12:26 – but Isa 30:30 – the Lord Jer 10:13 – uttereth Jer 51:16 – he uttereth Eze 1:24 – as the voice Eze 10:2 – coals Eze 13:11 – there shall Eze 13:13 – and great Rev 8:7 – hail

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Psa 18:13-14. The Lord also thundered, &c. The preceding verse mentioned the lightning with its effects; this gives us the report of the thunder, and the increasing storm of hail and fire that attended it. Yea, he sent out his arrows Namely, lightnings, as it is expressed in the next clause; and scattered them Namely, mine enemies, which is sufficiently understood from Psa 18:3; Psa 18:17, and from the whole context. Thus magnificently does the psalmist describe the discharge of the celestial artillery upon Gods enemies. Terrible was the execution of the divine vengeance upon them, as when lightnings and thunders, hail-stones and balls of fire, making their way through the dark clouds which contain them, strike terror and dismay into the hearts of men. Such is the voice, and such are the arrows of the Lord Almighty, wherewith he discomfiteth all who oppose the execution of his counsels, and obstruct the salvation of his chosen. Every display and description of this sort, and indeed every thunder-storm which we behold, should remind us of that exhibition of power and vengeance which is hereafter to accompany the general resurrection. Horne.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

18:13 The LORD also thundered in the heavens, and the Highest gave {i} his voice; hail [stones] and coals of fire.

(i) Thunders, lightnings and hail.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes