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Psalms 1:5

Context

1:5 For this reason 1  the wicked cannot withstand 2  judgment, 3 

nor can sinners join the assembly of the godly. 4 

Psalms 22:22

Context

22:22 I will declare your name to my countrymen! 5 

In the middle of the assembly I will praise you!

Psalms 35:18

Context

35:18 Then I will give you thanks in the great assembly; 6 

I will praise you before a large crowd of people! 7 

Psalms 82:1

Context
Psalm 82 8 

A psalm of Asaph.

82:1 God stands in 9  the assembly of El; 10 

in the midst of the gods 11  he renders judgment. 12 

Psalms 89:5

Context

89:5 O Lord, the heavens 13  praise your amazing deeds,

as well as your faithfulness in the angelic assembly. 14 

Psalms 89:7

Context

89:7 a God who is honored 15  in the great angelic assembly, 16 

and more awesome than 17  all who surround him?

Psalms 149:1

Context
Psalm 149 18 

149:1 Praise the Lord!

Sing to the Lord a new song!

Praise him in the assembly of the godly! 19 

1 tn Or “Therefore.”

2 tn Heb “arise in,” but the verb is used metonymically here in the sense of “stand”; “endure,” as in 1 Sam 13:14 and Job 8:15. The negated Hebrew imperfect verbal form is here taken as indicating incapability or lack of potential, though one could understand the verb form as indicating what is typical (“do not withstand”) or what will happen (“will not withstand”).

3 tn Heb “the judgment.” The article indicates a judgment that is definite in the mind of the speaker. In the immediate context this probably does not refer to the “final judgment” described in later biblical revelation, but to a temporal/historical judgment which the author anticipates. Periodically during the OT period, God would come in judgment, removing the wicked from the scene, while preserving a godly remnant (see Gen 6-9; Ps 37; Hab 3).

4 tn Heb “and sinners in the assembly (or “circle”) of [the] godly.” The negative particle and verb from the preceding line are assumed by ellipsis here (“will not arise/stand”).

sn The assembly of the godly is insulated from divine judgment (Ps 37:12-17, 28-29).

5 tn Or “brothers,” but here the term does not carry a literal familial sense. It refers to the psalmist’s fellow members of the Israelite covenant community (see v. 23).

6 sn The great assembly is also mentioned in Ps 22:25.

7 tn Heb “among numerous people.”

8 sn Psalm 82. The psalmist pictures God standing in the “assembly of El” where he accuses the “gods” of failing to promote justice on earth. God pronounces sentence upon them, announcing that they will die like men. Having witnessed the scene, the psalmist then asks God to establish his just rule over the earth.

9 tn Or “presides over.”

10 tn The phrase עֲדַת אֵל (’adatel, “assembly of El”) appears only here in the OT. (1) Some understand “El” to refer to God himself. In this case he is pictured presiding over his own heavenly assembly. (2) Others take אֵל as a superlative here (“God stands in the great assembly”), as in Pss 36:6 and 80:10. (3) The present translation assumes this is a reference to the Canaanite high god El, who presided over the Canaanite divine assembly. (See Isa 14:13, where El’s assembly is called “the stars of El.”) In the Ugaritic myths the phrase ’dtilm refers to the “assembly of the gods,” who congregate in King Kirtu’s house, where Baal asks El to bless Kirtu’s house (see G. R. Driver, Canaanite Myths and Legends, 91). If the Canaanite divine assembly is referred to here in Ps 82:1, then the psalm must be understood as a bold polemic against Canaanite religion. Israel’s God invades El’s assembly, denounces its gods as failing to uphold justice, and announces their coming demise. For an interpretation of the psalm along these lines, see W. VanGemeren, “Psalms,” EBC 5:533-36.

11 sn The present translation assumes that the Hebrew term אֱלֹהִים (’elohim, “gods”) here refers to the pagan gods who supposedly comprise El’s assembly according to Canaanite religion. Those who reject the polemical view of the psalm prefer to see the referent as human judges or rulers (אֱלֹהִים sometimes refers to officials appointed by God, see Exod 21:6; 22:8-9; Ps 45:6) or as angelic beings (אֱלֹהִים sometimes refers to angelic beings, see Gen 3:5; Ps 8:5).

12 sn The picture of God rendering judgment among the gods clearly depicts his sovereign authority as universal king (see v. 8, where the psalmist boldly affirms this truth).

13 tn As the following context makes clear, the personified “heavens” here stand by metonymy for the angelic beings that surround God’s heavenly throne.

14 tn Heb “in the assembly of the holy ones.” The phrase “holy ones” sometimes refers to God’s people (Ps 34:9) or to their priestly leaders (2 Chr 35:3), but here it refers to God’s heavenly assembly and the angels that surround his throne (see vv. 6-7).

15 tn Heb “feared.”

16 tn Heb “in the great assembly of the holy ones.”

17 tn Or perhaps “feared by.”

18 sn Psalm 149. The psalmist calls upon God’s people to praise him because he is just and avenges them.

19 tn Heb “his praise in the assembly of the godly ones.”



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