STROPHE DIVISIONS OF MODERN TRANSLATIONS
NASB | NKJV | NRSV | TEV | NJB |
Unjust Judgment Rebuked MT Intro
A Psalm of Asaph |
A Plea For Justice | Liturgy of the Lord’s Judgment on pagan gods |
God the Supreme Ruler | Against the Judge of the Nations |
82:1-4 | 82:1-4 | 82:1-4 | 82:1-4 | 82:1 |
82:2-3 | ||||
82:4 | ||||
82:5-8 | 82:5 | 82:5 | 82:5-7 | 82:5-7 |
82:6-7 | 82:6-7 | |||
82:8 | 82:8 | 82:8 | 82:8 |
READING CYCLE THREE(see “Guide
to Good Bible Reading“)
FOLLOWING THE ORIGINAL AUTHOR’S INTENT AT
PARAGRAPH LEVEL
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.
Read the chapter in one sitting. Identify the subjects (reading cycle #3). Compare your subject divisions with the five translations
above. Paragraphing is not inspired, but it is the key to following the original
author’s intent, which is the heart of interpretation. Every paragraph has one
and only one subject.
1. First paragraph
2. Second paragraph
3. Third paragraph
4. Etc.
CONTEXTUAL INSIGHTS
A. The real question about this Psalm is “to whom
is it addressed”?
1. Israeli judges (Elohim used of Israeli
judges, Exod. 21:6; 22:8-9; also note Targums and possibly Ps. 58:1)
2. pagan judges (NRSV and NJB readings possibly
alluded to in Ps. 81:8) or pagan kings (NASB Study Bible, p. 825)
3. pagan gods (NET Bible, p. 953; AB, p. 268,
using Ezek. 28:1-10 as a parallel; and NIDOTTE, vol. 4, p. 216)
4. national angels (cf. Deut. 4:19; 32:8, angels
of the nations, cf. Dan. 10:13)
5. angels of the heavenly council (i.e., “sons of
Elohim, cf. Ps. 8:5; 95:3; 96:4; 97:7; 138:1; Job 1:6; 38:7
B. The judgments of Elohim (i.e., the One)
are contrasted with the judgments of
elohim (i.e., judges or the angels). Psalm 82:7 demands angels!
C. Jesus uses this Psalm in John 10:31-38, in
which He sees it as referring to human judges. I think Jesus is quoting Psalm 82
but alluding to Exod. 21:6; 22:8-9. His point is that “elohim” can be
used in several senses!
The NASB Study Bible asserts that Jesus is using a known rabbinical
interpretation to confound the charges against Him (p. 825).
D. It seems that the imagery of a Canaanite
pantheon, which included an angelic assembly, is being used to assert YHWH’s
1. moral character
2. universal reign
The OT often uses imagery from the ANE to communicate truth without affirming
the reality of pagan mythology (i.e., [1] defeat of chaos, watery monsters, [2]
tree of life; [3] actions and titles of Ba’al, etc.). Imagery
communicates reality in ways so that fallen mankind can grasp the central
truths! YHWH is much greater than humans can imagine and separation from Him is
much worse!
It is difficult to know for sure what is ANE imagery and what is biblical,
doctrinal truth. Westerners tend to be literalists whereas the Bible has a
literary quality. Literal does not always adequately or accurately convey the
original author’s intent.
WORD AND PHRASE STUDY
NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: 82:1-4
1God takes His stand
in His own congregation;
He judges in the midst of the
rulers.
2How long will you
judge unjustly
And show partiality to the
wicked? Selah.
3Vindicate the weak
and fatherless;
Do justice to the afflicted
and destitute.
4Rescue the weak and
needy;
Deliver them out of the
hand of the wicked.
82:1 “God” This is the title Elohim
(BDB 43, see SPECIAL TOPIC: NAMES FOR DEITY). It is used twice in this verse and
again in Ps. 82:6 and 8.
The general term El (BDB 42) is the common name for
deity in the ANE.
▣ “takes His stand” Here, this term
(BDB 662, KB 714,
Niphal participle) is used
of Elohim (the One, using
singular participle) taking the
authoritative position (same term is used in the sense of “presiding over” in 1
Sam. 19:20) in “the congregation of El.” This refers to the heavenly
council (cf. 1 Kgs. 22:19; 2 Chr. 18:18; Job 1:6; 2:1), possibly made up of
1. worshiping angels
2. national angels, Deut. 32:8; Ps. 89:5-8; Isa.
6:1; 24:19
3. servant angels, Job 38:7; Dan. 7:9-10
82:2-4 these verses represent YHWH’s
revealed will in the Pentateuch (i.e., Genesis – Deuteronomy). YHWH is the
speaker in Ps. 82:2-4.
1. show no partiality to the wicked (cf. Lev.
19:15; Deut. 1:17; 16:19; this is because YHWH judges impartially, Deut. 10:17)
2. vindicate the weak ‒ BDB 1047, KB 1622, Qal imperative
3. vindicate the fatherless (implied imperative from #2, cf. Deut. 24:17)
4. do justice to the afflicted ‒ BDB 842, KB 1003,
Hiphil imperative
5. do justice to the destitute ‒ implied imperative from #4
6. rescue the weak ‒ BDB 812, KB 930, Piel imperative
7. rescue the needy ‒ implied imperative from #6
8. deliver them out of the hand of the wicked
(ties back to Ps. 82:2b) ‒ BDB 664, KB 717, Hiphil
imperative
Human judges, even Israel’s judges, acted unfairly in their judgments.
Apparently they are influenced by the angelic rebellion and fall. Psalm 82:5-7
refers to inappropriate angelic actions and God’s judgment of them (cf. Ps.
82:7a).
82:2 There is an obvious contrast set
up between the Elohim (i.e., the one true God) and the
plural elohim (i.e., the angelic council). This implies that the
national angels also ignored YHWH’s covenant revelations to Israel, especially
the powerless and needy of society. God loves human beings made in His image,
all human beings!
▣ “show partiality” This verb (BDB 669, KB 724, Qal imperfect) is literally “to lift the face.” It
was a way to see if you recognized a person and accepted them (cf. Gen. 32:20;
Job 42:8-9). However, for a judge it became an act of showing favor or
partiality and was condemned (cf. Deut. 1:17; 16:19; Lev. 19:15; Job 13:8;
32:21; 34:19; Pro. 17:15; 18:5; 24:23; 28:21).
▣ “Selah” See notes at Psalm 3:2.
NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: 82:5-8
5They do not know
nor do they understand;
They walk about in darkness;
All the foundations of the
earth are shaken.
6I said, “You are
gods,
And all of you are sons of the
Most High.
7Nevertheless you
will die like men
And fall like any one
of the princes.”
8Arise, O God, judge
the earth!
For it is You who possesses
all the nations.
82:5-8 This strophe cannot refer to
humans but must refer to angels.
1. “all the foundations of the earth are shaken”
2. You are gods (i.e., elohim)
3. sons of the Most High (see
Special Topic: The
Sons of God [Genesis 6])
4. you will die like men
5. fall like one of the princes (“princes” used of
national angels in Dan. 10:5,20; but humans in Isa. 3:13-14)
6. judge the earth. . .possess all the nations
82:5 Those addressed by the Psalm are
characterized as
1. they do not know
2. they do not understand
3. they walk in darkness
These, like Ps. 82:2-4, can refer to Israelis. This is why some commentators
take “elohim” in Ps. 82:1b and 6a to refer to human judges (cf. Exod.
21:6; 22:8-9). I think the evidence of the Psalm as a whole points to national
angels.
If Ps. 82:2-4 shows YHWH speaking, who is speaking in Ps.
82:5-7? It must be the psalmist himself as the first words of Ps. 82:6, 7, and 8
as a whole, seem to demand. However, it must be admitted that they could also
reflect the words of YHWH Himself (UBS Handbook, p. 730).
▣ “They walk about in darkness” The verb “walk about” (BDB 229, KB 246,
Hithpael imperfect) denotes lifestyle action.
The “darkness” is a metaphor for evil or rejection of God’s
revelation. The concept is expressed in several idioms.
1. ways of darkness ‒ Pro. 2:13; 4:19; Isa. 9:2;
50:10; John 3:19-20
2. works of darkness ‒ Job 24:13-17; Jer. 23:12
3. grope in darkness ‒ Deut. 28:29; Job 5:14;
12:25; Isa. 59:9-10
4. call light darkness ‒ Job 17:12; Isa. 5:20
Spiritual, intentional blindness is a terrible thing. Both angels and humans
purposefully choose not to see (cf. Isa. 24:21)! They put out their own
spiritual eyes!
▣ “the foundations of the earth are shaken”
This could be taken in two senses.
1. the moral foundations, cf. Ps. 11:3; Isa.
24:7-13, esp. Ps. 82:5
2. the physical foundations, cf. Ps. 93:1; 96:10;
104:5
82:6 “sons of the Most High” See the
SPECIAL TOPIC: THE SONS OF GOD,
where I discuss the phrase in Genesis 6. I think it refers to angels there also.
For “Most High” see SPECIAL TOPIC: NAMES FOR DEITY.
82:7 “fall” AB asserts this refers to
falling into Sheol
and uses Isa. 14:12-15 and Ezek. 28:1-10 as examples (p. 270). Again, notice the
confusion between an angel (i.e., Satan) and humans (i.e., king of Babylon and
king of Tyre). There is mystery here! The OT is using imagery, analogy, and
idioms in ways moderns do not fully understand. In the ANE there was no division
between the spiritual realm and the physical realm.
82:8 These last two Qal imperatives (“arise” and “judge”) have a
universal focus. God is not only creator but also judge. He reigns over all
creation (cf. Ps. 2:8; Rev. 11:15).
As Jesus functioned as YHWH’s agent in creation (cf. John
1:3,10; Rom. 11:36; 1 Cor. 8:6; Col. 1:16; Heb. 1:2), He is also YHWH’s agent in
judgment (cf. John 5:22-23,27; 9:39; Acts 10:42; 17:31; 2 Tim. 4:1; 1 Pet. 4:5).
The last verb is
a Qal imperfect, not a Qal
imperative. It asserts that YHWH does possess, not should possess. It is
a statement of truth!
If the angelic interpretation is true (and there is some doubt
because of Jesus’ usage in John 10), then the psalmist is praying that YHWH
would defeat the pagan gods or national angels and set up His righteous system
on all the earth as He originally intended in Eden (before the Fall, the flood
and/or the tower of Babel). One day it will be so (cf. 1 Corinthians 15:24-28)!
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. Explain the concept of a heavenly council. Is
it made up of righteous or wicked angels?
2. Explain the two different usages of “elohim.”
3. List the elements in this Psalm that point
toward “humans” and those that point toward “angels.”
4. What do we mean when we say God created a moral
universe?
5. Do the psalmist and Jesus use Ps. 82:6 in the
same way?
6. Who are “the princes” of Ps. 82:7?
7. Explain how the universal thrust of Ps. 82:8
fits the rest of the Psalm.
8. Does Scripture use ANE imagery and mythology?
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