7.1 KiB
Psalm 78
- O my people, listen to my instructions.
Open your ears to what I am saying,
- for I will speak to you in a parable.
I will teach you hidden lessons from our past--
- stories we have heard and known,
stories our ancestors handed down to us.
- We will not hide these truths from our children;
we will tell the next generation about the glorious deeds of the LORD,
about his power and his mighty wonders.
- For he issued his laws to Jacob;
he gave his instructions to Israel.
He commanded our ancestors
to teach them to their children,
- so the next generation might know them--
even the children not yet born--
and they in turn will teach their own children.
- So each generation should set its hope anew on God,
not forgetting his glorious miracles
and obeying his commands.
- Then they will not be like their ancestors--
stubborn, rebellious, and unfaithful,
refusing to give their hearts to God.
- The warriors of Ephraim, though armed with bows,
turned their backs and fled on the day of battle.
- They did not keep God's covenant
and refused to live by his instructions.
- They forgot what he had done--
the great wonders he had shown them,
- the miracles he did for their ancestors
on the plain of Zoan in the land of Egypt.
- For he divided the sea and led them through,
making the water stand up like walls!
- In the daytime he led them by a cloud,
and all night by a pillar of fire.
- He split open the rocks in the wilderness
to give them water, as from a gushing spring.
- He made streams pour from the rock,
making the waters flow down like a river!
- Yet they kept on sinning against him,
rebelling against the Most High in the desert.
- They stubbornly tested God in their hearts,
demanding the foods they craved.
- They even spoke against God himself, saying,
"God can't give us food in the wilderness.
- Yes, he can strike a rock so water gushes out,
but he can't give his people bread and meat."
- When the LORD heard them, he was furious.
The fire of his wrath burned against Jacob.
Yes, his anger rose against Israel,
- for they did not believe God
or trust him to care for them.
- But he commanded the skies to open;
he opened the doors of heaven.
- He rained down manna for them to eat;
he gave them bread from heaven.
- They ate the food of angels!
God gave them all they could hold.
- He released the east wind in the heavens
and guided the south wind by his mighty power.
- He rained down meat as thick as dust--
birds as plentiful as the sand on the seashore!
- He caused the birds to fall within their camp
and all around their tents.
- The people ate their fill.
He gave them what they craved.
- But before they satisfied their craving,
while the meat was yet in their mouths,
- the anger of God rose against them,
and he killed their strongest men.
He struck down the finest of Israel's young men.
- But in spite of this, the people kept sinning.
Despite his wonders, they refused to trust him.
- So he ended their lives in failure,
their years in terror.
- When God began killing them,
they finally sought him.
They repented and took God seriously.
-
Then they remembered that God was their rock, that God Most High was their redeemer.
-
But all they gave him was lip service;
they lied to him with their tongues.
- Their hearts were not loyal to him.
They did not keep his covenant.
- Yet he was merciful and forgave their sins
and did not destroy them all.
Many times he held back his anger
and did not unleash his fury!
- For he remembered that they were merely mortal,
gone like a breath of wind that never returns.
- Oh, how often they rebelled against him in the wilderness
and grieved his heart in that dry wasteland.
- Again and again they tested God's patience
and provoked the Holy One of Israel.
- They did not remember his power
and how he rescued them from their enemies.
- They did not remember his miraculous signs in Egypt,
his wonders on the plain of Zoan.
- For he turned their rivers into blood,
so no one could drink from the streams.
- He sent vast swarms of flies to consume them
and hordes of frogs to ruin them.
- He gave their crops to caterpillars;
their harvest was consumed by locusts.
- He destroyed their grapevines with hail
and shattered their sycamore-figs with sleet.
- He abandoned their cattle to the hail,
their livestock to bolts of lightning.
- He loosed on them his fierce anger--
all his fury, rage, and hostility.
He dispatched against them
a band of destroying angels.
- He turned his anger against them;
he did not spare the Egyptians' lives
but ravaged them with the plague.
-
He killed the oldest son in each Egyptian family, the flower of youth throughout the land of Egypt.
-
But he led his own people like a flock of sheep,
guiding them safely through the wilderness.
- He kept them safe so they were not afraid;
but the sea covered their enemies.
- He brought them to the border of his holy land,
to this land of hills he had won for them.
- He drove out the nations before them;
he gave them their inheritance by lot.
He settled the tribes of Israel into their homes.
- But they kept testing and rebelling against God Most High.
They did not obey his laws.
- They turned back and were as faithless as their parents.
They were as undependable as a crooked bow.
- They angered God by building shrines to other gods;
they made him jealous with their idols.
- When God heard them, he was very angry,
and he completely rejected Israel.
- Then he abandoned his dwelling at Shiloh,
the Tabernacle where he had lived among the people.
- He allowed the Ark of his might to be captured;
he surrendered his glory into enemy hands.
-
He gave his people over to be butchered by the sword, because he was so angry with his own people--his special possession.
-
Their young men were killed by fire;
their young women died before singing their wedding songs.
- Their priests were slaughtered,
and their widows could not mourn their deaths.
- Then the Lord rose up as though waking from sleep,
like a warrior aroused from a drunken stupor.
- He routed his enemies
and sent them to eternal shame.
- But he rejected Joseph's descendants;
he did not choose the tribe of Ephraim.
- He chose instead the tribe of Judah,
and Mount Zion, which he loved.
- There he built his sanctuary as high as the heavens,
as solid and enduring as the earth.
- He chose his servant David,
calling him from the sheep pens.
- He took David from tending the ewes and lambs
and made him the shepherd of Jacob's descendants--
God's own people, Israel.
- He cared for them with a true heart
and led them with skillful hands.