Psalms Chapter 79

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October 13, 2025

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😢 A Cry for Help

God, enemy armies have come into the land You gave us! They’ve destroyed Your beautiful temple in Jerusalem and knocked down all the buildings. The city looks like a pile of broken rocks. These mean soldiers didn’t even bury the people they killed. They just left them outside for the birds and wild animals.ᵃ Blood was everywhere in the streets of Jerusalem, and nobody was left to help or to have proper funerals. Now all the countries around us make fun of us and laugh at us. They think we’re weak and say mean things about us.

🔥 How Long, Lord?

Yahweh, how much longer will this go on? Will You be angry with us forever? We know You love us like a father loves his children, but right now it feels like Your anger is burning hot like a fire. “Pour out Your anger on the nations that don’t even know You exist! Punish the kingdoms that never pray to You or worship You. They’re the ones who destroyed Your people Jacob’s family and turned our homes into wastelands.”ᵇ

💙 Please Forgive Us

God, please don’t punish us for all the wrong things our great-great-grandparents did a long time ago. We need Your love and kindness right now! Please hurry and help us, because we feel so sad and broken. You are the God who saves people! Please rescue us so that everyone will see how amazing You are. Forgive our sins—not because we deserve it, but because You are good and Your name is special.

🤔 Where Is Your God?

The enemy nations keep asking, “Where is your God? Why isn’t He helping you?” We want You to show them that You’re real! Let them see You punish them for hurting Your people. Listen to the prisoners crying in their jail cells, God. You are so powerful—please use Your strength to save the people who are about to be killed!ᶜ Those neighbors made fun of You, Lord. Now give them back seven times the trouble they gave us!

🙏🏼 We Will Always Thank You

We are Your people, Yahweh—like sheep that belong to You, their shepherd. We will thank You forever and ever! Our children and grandchildren and great-grandchildren will all tell stories about how wonderful You are. Generation after generation will sing Your praises!

👣 Footnotes:

  • No burial: In Bible times, not being buried properly was one of the worst things that could happen. It was very disrespectful and made families very sad. God’s people always wanted to honor those who died by burying them carefully.
  • Jacob’s family: Jacob was one of the most important people in the Bible. God changed his name to “Israel,” and all the Jewish people are his descendants—his great-great-great (many times!) grandchildren. When the Bible says “Jacob,” it often means all of God’s chosen people.
  • Prisoners doomed to die: Enemy armies would capture people and lock them up, planning to kill them later. These prisoners felt hopeless, but the psalm writer asks God to use His amazing power to set them free and save their lives.
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Footnotes:

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    A Psalm of Asaph. O God, the heathen are come into thine inheritance; thy holy temple have they defiled; they have laid Jerusalem on heaps.
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    The dead bodies of thy servants have they given [to be] meat unto the fowls of the heaven, the flesh of thy saints unto the beasts of the earth.
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    Their blood have they shed like water round about Jerusalem; and [there was] none to bury [them].
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    We are become a reproach to our neighbours, a scorn and derision to them that are round about us.
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    How long, LORD? wilt thou be angry for ever? shall thy jealousy burn like fire?
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    Pour out thy wrath upon the heathen that have not known thee, and upon the kingdoms that have not called upon thy name.
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    For they have devoured Jacob, and laid waste his dwelling place.
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    O remember not against us former iniquities: let thy tender mercies speedily prevent us: for we are brought very low.
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    Help us, O God of our salvation, for the glory of thy name: and deliver us, and purge away our sins, for thy name’s sake.
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    Wherefore should the heathen say, Where [is] their God? let him be known among the heathen in our sight [by] the revenging of the blood of thy servants [which is] shed.
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    Let the sighing of the prisoner come before thee; according to the greatness of thy power preserve thou those that are appointed to die;
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    And render unto our neighbours sevenfold into their bosom their reproach, wherewith they have reproached thee, O Lord.
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    So we thy people and sheep of thy pasture will give thee thanks for ever: we will shew forth thy praise to all generations.
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    A Psalm of Asaph. The nations, O God, have invaded Your inheritance; they have defiled Your holy temple and reduced Jerusalem to rubble.
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    They have given the corpses of Your servants as food to the birds of the air, the flesh of Your saints to the beasts of the earth.
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    They have poured out their blood like water all around Jerusalem, and there is no one to bury the dead.
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    We have become a reproach to our neighbors, a scorn and derision to those around us.
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    How long, O LORD? Will You be angry forever? Will Your jealousy burn like fire?
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    Pour out Your wrath on the nations that do not acknowledge You, on the kingdoms that refuse to call on Your name,
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    for they have devoured Jacob and devastated his homeland.
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    Do not hold past sins against us; let Your compassion come quickly, for we are brought low.
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    Help us, O God of our salvation, for the glory of Your name; deliver us and atone for our sins, for the sake of Your name.
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    Why should the nations ask, “Where is their God?” Before our eyes, make known among the nations Your vengeance for the bloodshed of Your servants.
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    May the groans of the captives reach You; by the strength of Your arm preserve those condemned to death.
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    Pay back into the laps of our neighbors sevenfold the reproach they hurled at You, O Lord.
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    Then we Your people, the sheep of Your pasture, will thank You forever; from generation to generation we will declare Your praise.

Psalms Chapter 79 Commentary

When Everything Falls Apart

What’s Psalm 79 about?

This is Asaph’s raw, unfiltered cry to God after Jerusalem’s destruction – a psalm that doesn’t sugarcoat devastation but instead brings honest anguish directly to the throne of grace. It’s what happens when everything you thought was secure crumbles, and you’re left asking where God is in the wreckage.

The Full Context

Picture Jerusalem in 586 BCE. The Babylonians have just finished what the Assyrians started a century earlier – the systematic destruction of everything that made Israel, well, Israel. The temple lies in ruins, priests are dead, and the holy city looks like a war zone. This isn’t just political upheaval; it’s a theological crisis of the highest order. How can God’s chosen people, in God’s chosen city, around God’s chosen temple, end up as carrion for wild animals?

Asaph, one of David’s chief musicians and a levitical worship leader, pens this communal lament during or shortly after this catastrophe. This psalm fits within a collection of Asaph psalms (Psalms 73-83) that wrestle with the problem of evil and God’s apparent absence during national trauma. Unlike individual laments that focus on personal suffering, Psalm 79 addresses collective devastation – the kind that makes you question everything you thought you knew about God’s faithfulness.

What the Ancient Words Tell Us

The Hebrew word chalal appears right at the beginning – “they have defiled your holy temple.” But chalal doesn’t just mean “made unclean.” It’s the same word used for a woman losing her virginity or a priest being disqualified from service. This is violation language – something pure and set apart has been brutally corrupted.

When Asaph writes that bodies have become “food for the birds of the heavens” (ma’akal le’of hashamayim), he’s describing the ultimate dishonor in ancient Near Eastern culture. Proper burial was so crucial that even enemies would typically allow the dead to be interred. To leave corpses exposed was to treat humans like animals – or worse.

Grammar Geeks

The phrase “How long, O LORD?” (ad-anah YHWH) appears in verse 5 with a specific grammatical intensity. The Hebrew uses the interrogative ad-anah with the sacred name YHWH, creating this desperate temporal urgency that literally means “until when, covenant-keeping God?” It’s not just asking about duration – it’s questioning whether God’s covenant promises still hold.

The word qin’ah (jealousy/zeal) in verse 5 is fascinating. It’s the same word used to describe God’s protective jealousy over Israel in Exodus 34:14. Asaph is essentially saying, “God, where’s that famous jealousy of yours? Why aren’t you defending what’s yours?”

What Would the Original Audience Have Heard?

Imagine you’re a Jewish exile in Babylon, hearing this psalm read aloud in a makeshift gathering. Every word would resonate with fresh trauma. The “reproach of our neighbors” wasn’t abstract – you’d lived it. Babylonian children probably taunted Jewish kids with “Where’s your God now?” The phrase “pour out your wrath on the nations” would sound like desperate hope rather than vindictive anger.

Did You Know?

Archaeological evidence from sites like Tel el-Ful and Ramat Rahel shows extensive destruction layers from this period. Pottery shards, burned olive pits, and collapsed walls tell the same story Asaph captures in poetry – a civilization utterly demolished.

Ancient Near Eastern treaty curses often included threats of corpses being left unburied and cities becoming waste places. Asaph’s audience would recognize that the covenant curses from Deuteronomy 28 had come to pass. But here’s what’s remarkable – instead of accepting this as final judgment, they’re appealing to God’s mercy and asking for reversal.

The phrase “we have become a reproach to our neighbors” would have cut deep. In honor-shame cultures, public humiliation was worse than death. Israel’s defeat wasn’t just military; it was cosmic. Their God appeared weaker than Marduk and the Babylonian pantheon.

Wrestling with the Text

Here’s where things get complicated. Verses 6-7 ask God to “pour out your wrath on the nations that do not know you.” But wait – didn’t God use these very nations as instruments of judgment against Israel? How can you ask God to punish the people he used to punish you?

This apparent contradiction reveals something profound about biblical faith. Asaph isn’t trying to solve a theological puzzle; he’s expressing raw human emotion in the presence of God. The psalm doesn’t resolve the tension between divine sovereignty and human responsibility – it lives in it.

Wait, That’s Strange…

Verse 8 says “Do not remember against us our former iniquities” – literally “don’t remember the iniquities of the first ones.” Who are these “first ones”? Some scholars think it refers to previous generations whose sins led to this judgment. Others see it as a reference to humanity’s original rebellion. Either way, Asaph is asking God to break the cycle of generational consequences.

The plea “Why should the nations say, ‘Where is their God?’” isn’t just about Israel’s reputation – it’s about God’s reputation. This is covenant language. When Israel suffers, it reflects on YHWH’s character in the eyes of watching nations. Asaph is essentially saying, “God, your own honor is at stake here.”

How This Changes Everything

This psalm transforms our understanding of what it means to bring honest emotion to God. Notice that Asaph never stops addressing God directly. Even in the depths of national trauma, faith doesn’t mean pretending everything is fine – it means staying in conversation with the One who can actually do something about it.

The movement from complaint to petition to confidence (verses 8-13) shows us the anatomy of biblical hope. It’s not optimism based on circumstances – it’s tenacious trust in God’s character despite circumstances.

“True biblical faith doesn’t avoid the darkness – it brings the darkness into the light of God’s presence and refuses to let go until something changes.”

When verse 13 promises to “give thanks to you forever,” it’s not because the situation has improved – it’s because Asaph has remembered who God is. The phrase “we your people, the sheep of your pasture” recalls Psalm 23 and God’s covenant commitment to shepherd Israel.

The final phrase about telling God’s praise “from generation to generation” is remarkable. Standing in the rubble of everything he held dear, Asaph commits to a future he can’t see, trusting that God’s story isn’t over even when his own story seems to have ended.

Key Takeaway

When everything falls apart, the path forward isn’t through denial or despair – it’s through honest conversation with God about the mess, coupled with stubborn confidence in his character even when his actions are incomprehensible.

Further Reading

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