Psalms Chapter 83

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October 13, 2025

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🎵 A Prayer When Enemies Surround You 🎵

This is a song written by Asaphᵃ, one of King David’s worship leaders. Asaph saw that many enemy nations were ganging up against God’s people, Israel. So he wrote this prayer-song to ask God for help!

😰 God, Please Don’t Be Silent!

God, please don’t stay quiet right now! We really need You to do something! Your enemies are making a lot of noise and causing trouble. The people who hate You are acting like they’re so tough and powerful. They’re coming up with sneaky plans against Your people—the ones You love and protect like precious treasure.

😠 The Bad Guys Make Evil Plans

These enemies were saying mean things like, “Let’s destroy Israel completely! Let’s make it so no one even remembers their nation ever existed!” Can you imagine? They wanted to erase God’s special people from the map! All these enemy nations got together and made a deal with each other. They said, “Let’s all work together to fight against Israel and their God!”

🗺️ A Whole Bunch of Enemy Nations

Who were all these enemies? There were the Edomitesᵇ (relatives of Israel who should have been friends but weren’t), the Ishmaelitesᶜ (desert people who traveled around), the Moabitesᵈ, the Hagarites, the people from Gebal, Ammon, Amalek, Philistia, and Tyre. Even the super-powerful nation of Assyriaᵉ joined them! That’s like if all the biggest, strongest countries in the world teamed up against one small country. It seemed really scary and impossible!

🙏 Asaph Remembers What God Did Before

But Asaph remembered something important. He remembered all the amazing times God had rescued His people before! So he prayed: God, do to these enemies what You did to the Midianitesᶠ! Remember how You helped Gideon and his tiny army of 300 men beat a huge army? Do it again! Remember Sisera and Jabinᵍ—those bad guys whose army got stuck in the mud by the Kishon River, and You defeated them? Their bodies became fertilizer for the ground at En-dor. Do that again, God! Make these new enemies end up like Oreb and Zeeb, and like Zebah and Zalmunnaʰ—those proud princes and kings who said, “We’re going to take God’s land for ourselves!” But You defeated them all!

🌪️ Make Them Like Tumbleweeds!

Then Asaph prayed something that might sound a little funny to us: God, make these enemies like tumbleweeedsⁱ rolling around in the desert! Make them like dust that gets blown away by the wind—here one second, gone the next! When a wildfire races through a forest and flames spread across the mountains, burning everything in its path—chase these enemies like that! Send Your powerful storm after them! Let Your hurricane winds terrify them!

😳 The Real Reason for This Prayer

Now here’s the really important part. Asaph wasn’t just being mean or wanting revenge. Listen to why he prayed this: Make them so embarrassed and ashamed that they’ll finally start looking for You, Yahwehʲ! Let them be so scared and confused that they realize how powerful You are. I want them to know that You alone—whose name is Yahweh—are the Most High God over the whole entire earth! See? Asaph wanted these enemies to stop fighting and start following the one true God! He wanted them to learn that God is the King of everything, and that it’s much better to be His friend than His enemy.

💭 What This Means for You

Sometimes it might feel like everyone is against you—maybe kids at school, or problems that seem too big to handle. This psalm reminds us that God is more powerful than any enemy or problem we face! We can pray to Him and ask for His help, just like Asaph did. And remember—God wants even our “enemies” to become His friends. That’s how loving He is!

Footnotes:

  • Asaph: A talented musician and worship leader who worked in God’s temple. He wrote 12 different psalms in the Bible!
  • Edomites: These people were actually distant cousins of the Israelites (they came from Esau, Jacob’s twin brother), but instead of being friends, they were enemies. Sometimes family can be complicated!
  • Ishmaelites: Nomadic people who lived in the desert and traveled from place to place with their tents and animals. They were descended from Abraham’s son Ishmael.
  • Moabites: A nation that lived east of the Dead Sea. They worshiped a false god named Chemosh instead of the true God.
  • Assyria: Think of this as the biggest, scariest superpower of the ancient world—like if the strongest country today suddenly joined all your enemies. That’s how threatening this was!
  • Midianites: God helped a man named Gideon defeat this huge enemy army with only 300 soldiers! God used trumpets, torches, and jars to confuse the enemy. You can read this cool story in Judges 7!
  • Sisera and Jabin: Bad guys who had 900 iron chariots (like ancient tanks!) but God sent a rainstorm that made the river flood, and all those chariots got stuck in the mud. The Israelites won! (Judges 4-5)
  • ʰ Oreb, Zeeb, Zebah, and Zalmunna: These were princes and kings of Midian who thought they were so tough, but God helped Gideon defeat every single one of them.
  • Tumbleweeds: These are dried-up plants that break off and roll across the desert when the wind blows them. They look like big balls bouncing around with no control over where they go—perfect picture of defeated enemies!
  • ʲ Yahweh: This is God’s special personal name that He told Moses. It means “I AM”—the One who has always existed and always will. It’s the most sacred and holy name for God.
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Footnotes:

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    A Song [or] Psalm of Asaph. Keep not thou silence, O God: hold not thy peace, and be not still, O God.
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    For, lo, thine enemies make a tumult: and they that hate thee have lifted up the head.
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    They have taken crafty counsel against thy people, and consulted against thy hidden ones.
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    They have said, Come, and let us cut them off from [being] a nation; that the name of Israel may be no more in remembrance.
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    For they have consulted together with one consent: they are confederate against thee:
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    The tabernacles of Edom, and the Ishmaelites; of Moab, and the Hagarenes;
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    Gebal, and Ammon, and Amalek; the Philistines with the inhabitants of Tyre;
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    Assur also is joined with them: they have holpen the children of Lot. Selah.
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    Do unto them as [unto] the Midianites; as [to] Sisera, as [to] Jabin, at the brook of Kison:
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    [Which] perished at Endor: they became [as] dung for the earth.
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    Make their nobles like Oreb, and like Zeeb: yea, all their princes as Zebah, and as Zalmunna:
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    Who said, Let us take to ourselves the houses of God in possession.
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    O my God, make them like a wheel; as the stubble before the wind.
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    As the fire burneth a wood, and as the flame setteth the mountains on fire;
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    So persecute them with thy tempest, and make them afraid with thy storm.
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    Fill their faces with shame; that they may seek thy name, O LORD.
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    Let them be confounded and troubled for ever; yea, let them be put to shame, and perish:
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    That [men] may know that thou, whose name alone [is] JEHOVAH, [art] the most high over all the earth.
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    A song. A Psalm of Asaph. O God, be not silent; be not speechless; be not still, O God.
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    See how Your enemies rage, how Your foes have reared their heads.
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    With cunning they scheme against Your people and conspire against those You cherish,
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    saying, “Come, let us erase them as a nation; may the name of Israel be remembered no more.”
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    For with one mind they plot together, they form an alliance against You—
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    the tents of Edom and the Ishmaelites, of Moab and the Hagrites,
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    of Gebal, Ammon, and Amalek, of Philistia with the people of Tyre.
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    Even Assyria has joined them, lending strength to the sons of Lot. Selah
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    Do to them as You did to Midian, as to Sisera and Jabin at the River Kishon,
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    who perished at Endor and became like dung on the ground.
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    Make their nobles like Oreb and Zeeb, and all their princes like Zebah and Zalmunna,
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    who said, “Let us possess for ourselves the pastures of God.”
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    Make them like tumbleweed, O my God, like chaff before the wind.
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    As fire consumes a forest, as a flame sets the mountains ablaze,
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    so pursue them with Your tempest, and terrify them with Your storm.
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    Cover their faces with shame, that they may seek Your name, O LORD.
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    May they be ever ashamed and terrified; may they perish in disgrace.
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    May they know that You alone, whose name is the LORD, are Most High over all the earth.

Psalms Chapter 83 Commentary

When the Whole World Seems Against You

What’s Psalm 83 about?

This is the psalm for when you feel completely outnumbered and surrounded. Asaph cries out as enemy nations form an unprecedented coalition against Israel, seeking nothing less than total annihilation – to wipe out even the memory of God’s people from the earth.

The Full Context

Psalm 83 emerges from one of Israel’s darkest moments when multiple enemy nations formed an alliance with a single, terrifying goal: the complete destruction of God’s people. While scholars debate the exact historical setting – some pointing to the reign of Jehoshaphat (2 Chronicles 20:1-30), others to various periods of Assyrian or Babylonian pressure – what’s clear is that this represents a moment of existential crisis. Asaph, the worship leader and seer, penned this desperate plea when Israel faced not just military defeat, but potential genocide. The enemy coalition wasn’t content with conquest; they wanted to “cut them off from being a nation, that the name of Israel may be remembered no more” (Psalm 83:4).

This psalm stands as the final composition in the collection of Asaph psalms (Psalms 73-83), creating a powerful crescendo of faith tested by overwhelming circumstances. Literarily, it’s structured as a classic lament psalm, but with an unusual twist – it spends more time detailing the enemy’s plot than expressing personal anguish. The theological weight is staggering: this isn’t just about Israel’s survival, but about whether God’s promises can withstand coordinated human rebellion. For ancient readers, this psalm would have resonated with their deepest fears about divine abandonment, while also providing a template for crying out to God when facing seemingly impossible odds.

What the Ancient Words Tell Us

The opening word chārash (“keep not silent”) literally means “to be deaf” or “to hold one’s peace.” Asaph isn’t just asking God to speak – he’s begging Him to stop acting like He can’t hear what’s happening. It’s the cry of someone who feels like they’re shouting into a void while their world collapses.

Grammar Geeks

The phrase “hold not thy peace” uses the Hebrew shāqaṭ, which describes the kind of dangerous calm before a storm. Asaph isn’t asking for God’s gentle whisper – he’s pleading for divine intervention that will shatter the eerie silence of apparent divine inaction.

When the enemies declare “let us cut them off from being a nation” (Psalm 83:4), the Hebrew kārath is the same word used for cutting covenant. These nations aren’t just planning military victory – they’re attempting to sever Israel’s covenant relationship with God by erasing their very existence.

The list of enemies in verses 6-8 reads like a “who’s who” of Israel’s historical opponents: Edom, Ishmaelites, Moab, Hagrites, Gebal, Ammon, Amalek, Philistines, and Tyre. But notice the climax – “Asshur also is joined with them” (Psalm 83:8). Assyria, the ancient world’s superpower, lending military support to this coalition transforms a regional conflict into an existential nightmare.

What Would the Original Audience Have Heard?

Ancient Israelites hearing this psalm would have felt their blood run cold. The enemy list wasn’t just a roster of hostile neighbors – it represented a complete geographical encirclement. From Edom in the south to Assyria in the north, from the Mediterranean coast to the eastern desert tribes, Israel was surrounded by a coordinated network of hostility.

Did You Know?

The phrase “they have consulted together with one consent” (Psalm 83:5) uses Hebrew that suggests not just military alliance, but shared ideological hatred. This wasn’t opportunistic warfare – it was a unified campaign of ethnic and religious cleansing.

The historical precedents Asaph invokes – Midian, Sisera, Jabin, Oreb, Zeeb, Zebah, and Zalmunna (Psalm 83:9-11) – would have immediately transported listeners to stories of miraculous deliverance. Gideon’s victory over Midian with just 300 men (Judges 7), Deborah and Barak’s triumph over Sisera (Judges 4-5) – these weren’t just military victories, but displays of God’s power to transform impossible odds into stunning vindication.

For temple worshippers, this psalm served as both a war cry and a desperate plea. They understood that Israel’s survival wasn’t just about political independence, but about whether God’s covenant promises could withstand coordinated human rebellion.

Wrestling with the Text

Here’s what’s genuinely puzzling about this psalm: why does Asaph spend so much energy detailing the enemy’s strategy? Most lament psalms focus on the psalmist’s anguish or God’s apparent absence. But Psalm 83 reads almost like an intelligence briefing – enemy positions, their unified purpose, even their secret meetings.

Wait, That’s Strange…

Notice that Asaph never actually describes any current battle or immediate threat. The entire psalm deals with enemy planning and desired outcomes. This suggests the conspiracy was discovered before military action began – making the prayer both preventive and prophetic.

The shift from detailed strategic analysis (verses 1-8) to passionate imprecatory prayer (verses 9-18) reveals something profound about biblical faith. Asaph doesn’t just want God to protect Israel – he wants divine vindication so complete that “men may know that thou, whose name alone is JEHOVAH, art the most high over all the earth” (Psalm 83:18).

This isn’t personal vengeance – it’s theological necessity. If this coalition succeeds in erasing Israel, what happens to God’s promises to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob? The psalm wrestles with the fundamental question: can human conspiracy thwart divine purpose?

How This Changes Everything

Psalm 83 transforms how we understand prayer in desperate circumstances. Asaph doesn’t minimize the threat or spiritualize the danger – he names every enemy, details their plan, and begs for divine intervention. This psalm gives us permission to be brutally honest about overwhelming odds while simultaneously appealing to God’s track record of impossible rescues.

“When the whole world seems aligned against God’s purposes, that’s exactly when divine intervention becomes most spectacular.”

The historical examples Asaph cites reveal a pattern: God’s greatest victories often come through the most unlikely circumstances. Gideon’s 300 defeating thousands, Deborah leading when military leaders failed, insignificant judges bringing down mighty kings – these weren’t accidents, but demonstrations of divine power working through human weakness.

For modern believers facing seemingly insurmountable opposition – whether personal, professional, or spiritual – this psalm offers both realism and hope. It acknowledges that sometimes the threat is real, the opposition is coordinated, and the odds are genuinely impossible. But it also insists that impossible circumstances are exactly where God’s power becomes most visible.

The psalm’s conclusion is stunning: the desired outcome isn’t just Israel’s safety, but universal recognition of God’s sovereignty (Psalm 83:18). Asaph envisions enemy defeat leading to global acknowledgment that YHWH alone is “most high over all the earth.” Personal deliverance becomes a platform for divine revelation.

Key Takeaway

When you feel completely outnumbered and surrounded, remember that coordinated human opposition often precedes spectacular divine intervention – and your rescue can become others’ revelation of God’s power.

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