Tyndale House Podcast
Tyndale House, Cambridge, brings you insights from high-level Bible research to help you understand the Bible more and explore reasons why it can be trusted.
Tyndale House Podcast
Interview 4: Christopher Ash on the Psalms, Part 2
In this episode, Tony continues his conversation with writer-in-residence, Christopher Ash, on his new four-volume commentary on the Psalms. They discuss how Christ would have prayed the Psalms during his earthly life, the structure of the 5 books of the Psalms, and how we approach different genres of psalms such as imprecatory psalms.
This is part 2 of the interview and you can catch up on part 1 wherever you get your podcasts from.
Editing by Tyndale House.
Music: Acoustic Happy Background used via Adobe Stock with a standard license.
Edited by Tyndale House
Music – Acoustic Happy Background used with a standard license from Adobe Stock.
Follow us on: X | Instagram | Facebook | YouTube
00:00:08:11 - 00:00:09:04
Hello and
00:00:09:16 - 00:00:12:16
welcome to another episode
of the Tyndale House podcast.
00:00:12:16 - 00:00:15:16
And today we are carrying
on our conversation with Christopher
00:00:15:16 - 00:00:21:01
Ash, talking about his wonderful four-volume commentary on Psalms, published
00:00:21:01 - 00:00:27:14
by Crossway, which is such a gift
to any pastors, I think, today.
00:00:27:14 - 00:00:30:22
So, again, as we said last time,
thank you very much for doing
00:00:30:22 - 00:00:37:13
that, Christopher, putting in a few years
of very hard work on that. So we, we talked about,
00:00:38:16 - 00:00:42:16
the, the centrality of Christ in the Psalms and how the New Testament
00:00:42:16 - 00:00:45:16
sees that and how we’ve lost, lost sight of that in particular
00:00:46:18 - 00:00:48:18
in the, in the modern world.
00:00:48:18 - 00:00:50:18
You've commented on Christ as the sufferer,
00:00:50:18 - 00:00:53:18
and Christ as the king and Christ as the teacher.
00:00:54:18 - 00:00:56:18
All very key in the Psalms.
00:00:56:18 - 00:00:58:18
How else do we see?
00:00:58:18 - 00:01:00:18
What are other ways do we see Christ in the Psalms?
00:01:00:22 - 00:01:02:22
We see Christ as the one
00:01:02:22 - 00:01:05:22
who is the man who's going to judge the world in righteousness.
00:01:06:22 - 00:01:08:22
I forget the Psalm numbers.
00:01:08:22 - 00:01:12:22
There are two Psalms where we read that the Lord is going to judge
00:01:12:22 - 00:01:15:22
the world in righteousness, which is clearly echoed in Acts 17.
00:01:16:22 - 00:01:17:22
Right.
00:01:17:22 - 00:01:20:22
This is the man who's going to judge the world in righteousness.
00:01:20:22 - 00:01:23:22
And given the clarity of the echo, you think.
00:01:23:22 - 00:01:26:22
Yeah, you know, this is, this is … he is the,
00:01:26:22 - 00:01:29:22
the man with divine authority to judge the world.
00:01:29:22 - 00:01:34:22
I mean, Psalm 45, where the king is addressed as God
00:01:35:03 - 00:01:38:02
and Hebrews 1quotes
00:01:38:04 - 00:01:41:04
this of Jesus,
00:01:41:04 - 00:01:44:22
is one of the most striking examples –
00:01:45:09 - 00:01:49:09
that he comes with the authority of, of, of God.
00:01:49:09 - 00:01:52:09
There's also the … this is, I suppose, a sort of sub-
00:01:52:09 - 00:01:55:09
motif really, that
00:01:55:09 - 00:01:58:09
Jesus is the King in David's line,
00:01:58:09 - 00:02:02:09
the anointed King, the leader of God's people. But
00:02:03:09 - 00:02:04:09
it also makes
00:02:04:09 - 00:02:07:09
sense of the times
when the psalmists, and particularly David,
00:02:08:09 - 00:02:11:09
speak as though his enemies are God's enemies.
00:02:12:09 - 00:02:15:09
And there’s a sort of one-to-one equivalence.
00:02:15:09 - 00:02:17:09
And for most of us, you're thinking,
00:02:17:09 - 00:02:21:09
you know, as I'm reading a Psalm,
just as a believer, I'm thinking,
00:02:21:09 - 00:02:26:09
I'm not sure I can simply say that people
who are against me are against God.
00:02:26:09 - 00:02:28:09
It's not quite as simple as that. There are plenty of good reasons
00:02:28:09 - 00:02:30:09
somebody might be against me.
00:02:30:09 - 00:02:32:11
Yeah, right.
00:02:32:11 - 00:02:38:09
but there is one man for whom his enemies are precisely God’s enemies.
00:02:38:09 - 00:02:40:09
So that was a, that was another way. I'm trying to
00:02:40:09 - 00:02:44:09
remember if there were others, but those were
some of the major ways.
00:02:45:09 - 00:02:46:09
Yeah.
00:02:46:09 - 00:02:50:09
And also the … a number of the themes of salvation
00:02:52:09 - 00:02:55:09
that Jesus Christ is the … God's ‘Yes’ to all
00:02:55:09 - 00:02:57:09
the covenant promises – 2 Corinthians 1.
00:02:57:09 - 00:02:58:09
Right.
00:02:58:09 - 00:03:01:09
And that's a really big thing
because there's so much
00:03:01:09 - 00:03:04:09
covenantal language in the Psalms.
00:03:04:09 - 00:03:09:09
And if we take it that Paul is right in 2 Corinthians 1,
00:03:09:09 - 00:03:14:09
that the Lord Jesus Christ is God's, ‘Yes’ to all the promises of the covenant,
00:03:15:09 - 00:03:18:09
then suddenly all that covenantal language becomes
00:03:19:09 - 00:03:22:09
in foreshadowing Christ
00:03:22:09 - 00:03:25:09
T: Yeah. Right.
C: focused in, in some way.
00:03:25:09 - 00:03:29:09
And I guess that the Psalm 8, that he's the last Adam.
00:03:31:09 - 00:03:32:09
He's the manna.
00:03:32:09 - 00:03:35:09
He's the, he's the one who brings Exodus redemption.
00:03:35:09 - 00:03:38:09
He's the one who brings us back from exile.
00:03:39:09 - 00:03:43:09
He's the temple and Zion, the ‘greater than the temple’,
00:03:43:09 - 00:03:49:09
the one whose body will be destroyed and and rebuilt in three days.
00:03:49:09 - 00:03:52:09
He's the one who brings his people into the promised land,
00:03:53:09 - 00:03:57:09
the inheritance, which will be the new heavens and the new earth.
00:03:58:09 - 00:04:00:09
All these themes.
00:04:00:09 - 00:04:02:09
It's such a richness, really.
Right. It's
00:04:02:09 - 00:04:06:09
It is sounding rather like all of the major biblical theological
00:04:06:09 - 00:04:10:09
themes that, that one would trace through Scripture
00:04:10:09 - 00:04:12:09
C: Yes
T: mostly through the historical
00:04:12:09 - 00:04:15:09
T: and prophetic books, not through the poetic books.
C: Yes.
00:04:15:09 - 00:04:17:09
T: but they’re here too.
C: Yes, yes.
00:04:17:09 - 00:04:18:09
T: What a surprise.
00:04:18:09 - 00:04:19:09
C: What a surprise.
00:04:19:09 - 00:04:20:09
And we and we,
00:04:20:09 - 00:04:24:09
we read them in the light of the whole of the Scriptures and we think, oh, yes,
00:04:24:09 - 00:04:29:09
I can see. You know, here's a Psalm talking about return from exile or praying for return from exile.
00:04:29:09 - 00:04:31:09
How's that going to happen?
00:04:31:09 - 00:04:35:09
And and it’s, so it's profoundly unoriginal.
00:04:36:09 - 00:04:39:09
Yes. What about the structure of the
the Psalter?
00:04:39:09 - 00:04:43:09
So we have the five books of the Psalms
that most of us, most of the time, pay
00:04:43:09 - 00:04:44:09
no attention to.
00:04:44:09 - 00:04:46:09
And yet there is clearly this
00:04:46:09 - 00:04:48:09
fivefold division.
00:04:48:09 - 00:04:49:09
Is it
00:04:49:09 - 00:04:53:09
at the end of the, Book two where it says, ‘This is the end of the Psalms of David’?
00:04:53:09 - 00:04:54:09
Yes. It is.
00:04:54:09 - 00:04:57:09
Yes. The end of Psalm 72.
And then we have two books where there aren’t many David Psalms,
00:04:57:09 - 00:04:59:09
But there are some.
But as you say.
And there are more in book five
00:04:59:09 - 00:05:01:09
Yeah.
So what about that fivefold structure?
00:05:01:09 - 00:05:03:09
How is, how have we got that?
00:05:03:09 - 00:05:05:09
Why does it matter?
00:05:05:09 - 00:05:07:09
How has that played into your thinking?
00:05:07:09 - 00:05:09:09
Yes, I think quite a lot.
00:05:09:09 - 00:05:13:09
I mean there's been a lot of thinking done
on that in recent decades,
00:05:13:09 - 00:05:16:09
much of it really good as far as I can make out.
00:05:16:09 - 00:05:20:09
And the signals that the five books … at the end of each book there’s a benediction.
00:05:20:09 - 00:05:24:09
Then the end of book five, there's a whopping great benediction on steroids.
00:05:25:09 - 00:05:28:09
146 to 150.
00:05:28:09 - 00:05:31:09
Um, and the benedictions seem to come out of nowhere.
00:05:31:09 - 00:05:35:09
I mean, the end of Psalm 89, which is lamenting the dis…,
00:05:36:09 - 00:05:39:09
the breaking of the covenant, really, with the King.
00:05:39:09 - 00:05:42:09
Suddenly – I forget the words at the end of Psalm 89 –
00:05:42:09 - 00:05:45:09
but there's a benediction, rather a strong one.
00:05:48:09 - 00:05:50:09
Er, yes. Suddenly: ‘Blessed be the Lord forever.
00:05:50:09 - 00:05:51:09
Amen and amen.’
00:05:51:09 - 00:05:52:09
Yes, yes. You think
00:05:52:09 - 00:05:54:09
where did that come from?
Yes.
00:05:54:09 - 00:05:58:09
Because when you've been reading through the Psalm by that stage, you're thinking …
00:05:58:09 - 00:06:00:09
you're not thinking of saying that at all.
00:06:00:09 - 00:06:03:09
Have we missed a bit?
Have we missed something?
00:06:03:09 - 00:06:07:09
So these benedictions are kind of punctuation marks at the end of the books.
00:06:07:09 - 00:06:08:09
I … it's interesting,
00:06:08:09 - 00:06:11:19
I mean, the end of Psalm 72, you've got the benediction,
00:06:11:19 - 00:06:14:09
but you've also ‘the prayers of David are ended’
00:06:15:09 - 00:06:18:09
and that I … is usually taken
00:06:18:09 - 00:06:24:17
to indicate that Books 1 and 2 were put together probably first,
00:06:24:17 - 00:06:29:15
and they are overwhelmingly Davidish.
Right.
00:06:29:15 - 00:06:30:24
Not entirely.
00:06:30:24 - 00:06:34:09
but, you know, Book 1 is overwhelmingly Davidish;
00:06:34:09 - 00:06:37:09
Book 2 significantly.
00:06:37:09 - 00:06:42:09
And in one sense, they're not ended because there are some later on.
00:06:42:09 - 00:06:45:09
But it seems to be an indication this is, this is the earliest collection.
00:06:46:09 - 00:06:49:09
Book 3 kind of smells of exile.
00:06:50:09 - 00:06:53:23
It’s not that every Psalm is necessarily from the exile
00:06:53:23 - 00:06:58:19
but you read Psalm 74 or 79
and then, of course, 89 at the end
00:06:59:09 - 00:07:03:09
and, you’re thinking the exile sets
00:07:03:09 - 00:07:06:09
the tone of the atmosphere for Book 3.
00:07:06:09 - 00:07:11:08
I find that really helpful because then I think, okay, this Psalm’s in Book 3
00:07:11:08 - 00:07:16:01
I need to keep the exile in my mind.
Yes, that is very helpful.
00:07:16:01 - 00:07:19:09
And then Book 4 … I mean, it’s interesting at the end of Book 4,
00:07:19:09 - 00:07:23:23
in Psalm 106, you've got a prayer: ‘Gather us from the nations’.
00:07:24:09 - 00:07:27:09
And then in Psalm 107 at the beginning of Book 5,
00:07:27:09 - 00:07:31:23
‘Let those who've been gathered from north and south and east and west …’
00:07:32:09 - 00:07:35:09
So you're thinking, oh, well that's probably not an accident.
00:07:35:09 - 00:07:38:09
There's something going on there about coming back from exile.
00:07:38:09 - 00:07:39:09
Right.
00:07:39:09 - 00:07:43:09
So Book 4 is probably still sort of exile-ish,
00:07:44:09 - 00:07:46:09
but not quite so painful.
00:07:46:09 - 00:07:48:09
Right, right.
00:07:48:09 - 00:07:50:20
And then Book 5, presumably
00:07:50:20 - 00:07:56:01
after the … put together after the exile. I just find it helpful because it helps us
00:07:56:01 - 00:07:59:09
to think what historical context,
00:07:59:09 - 00:08:02:09
what in the history of Israel
00:08:02:09 - 00:08:05:09
at least shaped the putting together of the book.
00:08:05:09 - 00:08:07:09
It doesn't mean that all the Psalms in the book
00:08:07:09 - 00:08:10:09
came from, were written in that time.
00:08:10:09 - 00:08:17:00
No.
But, but they … the Spirit-inspired editors have put them together
00:08:17:00 - 00:08:20:09
probably at that sort of time.
Yes.
00:08:20:09 - 00:08:24:09
So, so some … in Book 3, somebody in the exile, presumably,
00:08:24:09 - 00:08:28:20
is, is gathering those Psalms and saying, these speak to our situation.
00:08:28:20 - 00:08:32:09
Yes.
These feel like, okay, we've got the first two books
00:08:32:09 - 00:08:35:09
of David’s Psalms, but we've got a whole bunch of others.
00:08:35:09 - 00:08:37:09
Yes.
Or, or not David Psalms, but other Psalms by other people …
00:08:37:09 - 00:08:39:09
Yeah, yeah.
00:08:39:09 - 00:08:40:22
er … maybe now’s a good time to bring some of these together
00:08:40:22 - 00:08:42:22
Yes.
because it fits with where we're at now.
00:08:42:22 - 00:08:44:22
Yes, yes.
00:08:44:22 - 00:08:50:05
And that helps us in reading or singing
or speaking them today.
00:08:50:05 - 00:08:53:20
Yes it does.
because we're, we're thinking we are …
00:08:53:20 - 00:08:56:17
there's a sense in which we are exiles.
00:08:56:22 - 00:08:58:22
We're away from our home.
00:08:58:22 - 00:09:01:22
And something of the pain of that
00:09:02:22 - 00:09:05:22
is, is … fits with, with us.
00:09:05:22 - 00:09:09:18
One of the things I'd like to talk about is that there are different kinds
00:09:09:18 - 00:09:11:22
of Psalm. So
00:09:12:22 - 00:09:15:23
the, the royal Psalms or the enthronement Psalms, it's
00:09:15:23 - 00:09:19:22
very easy to see for a Christian how they point to Christ.
00:09:19:22 - 00:09:24:09
So Psalm 2, you know, is a gift of … well, they’re all gifts aren’t they?
00:09:24:09 - 00:09:26:22
But Psalm 2 at the beginning, very early in the Psalter.
00:09:27:22 - 00:09:29:22
Oh, yes, I can, I can see Jesus here.
00:09:29:22 - 00:09:32:22
So, okay, so there are those kinds of Psalms.
00:09:32:22 - 00:09:35:22
There are, there are laments.
00:09:35:22 - 00:09:40:22
To what extent do we have to see the,
see the laments in Christ?
00:09:40:22 - 00:09:44:19
Because, you know,
Jesus is the Son of God.
00:09:44:19 - 00:09:47:10
Does he need to lament?
And what about imprecatory Psalms?
00:09:47:10 - 00:09:47:22
So
Yes.
Yeah.
00:09:47:22 - 00:09:52:10
Tell us about the different types of Psalm and whether those categories
00:09:52:22 - 00:09:56:13
are even really meaningful for you
00:09:56:13 - 00:10:00:00
in some ways.
Yes. It’s been a fashion in scholarship
00:10:00:00 - 00:10:03:09
for quite a long time to classify
00:10:03:09 - 00:10:06:23
Psalms and so you read a number of commentaries
00:10:06:23 - 00:10:10:06
where the commentator feels duty bound to tell you,
00:10:10:22 - 00:10:16:04
this is a hymn, or this is a communal psalm of lament or something.
00:10:16:04 - 00:10:19:10
The trouble is, the categories seem to morph and
T: Right
00:10:19:10 - 00:10:23:13
C: I've never found it tremendously helpful, but there clearly are different kinds of psalms.
00:10:23:13 - 00:10:26:02
There are Psalms where an individual speaks.
00:10:26:02 - 00:10:28:22
There are Psalms where the people speak corporately.
00:10:28:22 - 00:10:30:24
There are Psalms
where you get a bit of both.
00:10:30:24 - 00:10:35:06
There are Psalms where you … it's predominantly
00:10:35:22 - 00:10:39:14
lament, Psalms where it’s predominantly praise,
00:10:39:14 - 00:10:43:18
sometimes overwhelmingly lament or overwhelmingly praise.
00:10:43:22 - 00:10:48:09
There clearly are different Psalms … Psalms feel different.
00:10:48:09 - 00:10:51:06
If you were setting them to music, you’d set them to different kinds of,
00:10:51:06 - 00:10:54:12
of, of music. That’s undoubtedly true.
00:10:54:12 - 00:10:56:09
But your point, Tony, about,
00:10:56:22 - 00:10:58:22
in a sense, the
00:10:58:22 - 00:11:02:16
so far as Christ is concerned,
the easy ones
00:11:02:16 - 00:11:06:11
– you know, Psalm 2 or Psalm 110 where they're like sort of hyperlinks,
00:11:06:11 - 00:11:09:23
they just kind of bounce around the New Testament and you think,
00:11:09:23 - 00:11:11:22
I don't need to be a
00:11:11:22 - 00:11:13:22
biblical genius to work out
00:11:13:22 - 00:11:16:22
that this is to do with Jesus.
Yeah.
00:11:16:22 - 00:11:19:22
And then you get others where there doesn't seem to be any …
00:11:19:22 - 00:11:23:09
certainly no quotation
and maybe no clear echo.
00:11:23:22 - 00:11:27:16
And, and some like Psalm 74, which is a corporate
00:11:27:22 - 00:11:30:22
prayer of lament,
00:11:32:22 - 00:11:36:24
pretty, pretty clearly triggered by exile,
00:11:37:00 - 00:11:39:22
by the Babylonian destruction of Jerusalem.
00:11:39:22 - 00:11:42:22
And you're thinking, so what has this got to do
00:11:42:22 - 00:11:45:04
with Christ?
00:11:46:10 - 00:11:49:06
I think I've found it very helpful to,
00:11:49:06 - 00:11:51:22
to remember that,
00:11:51:22 - 00:11:54:16
even when you've got a corporate voice,
00:11:54:16 - 00:11:57:15
the whole psalm is we, us, our …
00:12:00:15 - 00:12:01:15
there's always
00:12:01:15 - 00:12:04:22
implicitly some sort of leadership.
00:12:05:17 - 00:12:07:05
You know, the, the Old Testament people
00:12:07:05 - 00:12:10:22
never just spoke … Always in the
background
00:12:10:22 - 00:12:15:22
there was a king, or the hopes for a king, or a covenant head, or leader,
00:12:15:22 - 00:12:20:14
or a prophet who was leading the people or …implicitly.
00:12:20:22 - 00:12:25:06
And so it’s, it's not sort of fanciful to think,
00:12:25:22 - 00:12:32:21
um, this is people with a leader rather than just a random group of people who got together.
T: That's a good point.
00:12:32:22 - 00:12:35:22
So that, I found that helpful … \
The Psalms were not written by committee.
00:12:35:22 - 00:12:39:22
No, Psalms not written by committee, which is a good thing.
00:12:39:22 - 00:12:40:22
Yeah. Okay.
00:12:40:22 - 00:12:43:22
Yeah.
00:12:43:22 - 00:12:47:06
So the laments presumably
00:12:47:22 - 00:12:50:22
are...particularly relate to,
00:12:50:22 - 00:12:53:22
to the suffering of, of Jesus and his … the …
00:12:53:22 - 00:12:56:22
So the humanity of Jesus seems to be,
00:12:56:22 - 00:13:00:08
an essential thing to keep in mind
as we, as we read the Psalms.
00:13:00:08 - 00:13:02:22
That?
Really, really important.
Right.
00:13:02:22 - 00:13:07:22
And, and I wonder
if in some of our churches,
00:13:07:22 - 00:13:12:17
you know, a child in a Christian home
often is taught
00:13:12:17 - 00:13:16:20
Jesus is God
and sort of assumes that God is Jesus.
00:13:18:08 - 00:13:20:08
And Jesus is
00:13:20:08 - 00:13:23:08
God incarnate or God the Son incarnate,
00:13:23:08 - 00:13:26:08
so it’s, it's … that can get lost.
00:13:26:08 - 00:13:31:08
And, and sometimes I wonder if in some of our circles, we, we've become
00:13:31:08 - 00:13:34:08
carelessly docetic
00:13:34:08 - 00:13:36:21
and we just speak of Jesus
00:13:36:21 - 00:13:40:15
as if he didn't have human feelings.
00:13:40:15 - 00:13:43:08
And I mean, that's …
00:13:43:08 - 00:13:44:08
we’re on holy ground, aren’t we?
00:13:44:08 - 00:13:49:04
But there's a sense in which the Psalms give us a window into the human
00:13:49:04 - 00:13:53:10
nature of Jesus in the … and, you know, you ask the question,
00:13:53:10 - 00:13:57:13
what did it feel like to be
Jesus of Nazareth?
00:13:57:22 - 00:14:01:22
And, you know,
we have to be prepared to be told
00:14:02:22 - 00:14:05:15
you don't know
and you can't know.
00:14:05:15 - 00:14:10:23
But it may be that the Psalms, if … because they they give us a real sense
00:14:10:23 - 00:14:15:14
of what it's like, what it feels like to be a believer, and
00:14:15:22 - 00:14:19:11
therefore, I don't think we should discount the idea
00:14:19:11 - 00:14:23:20
that the Psalms might be a window into what it felt like
00:14:24:22 - 00:14:27:22
to be Jesus in his incarnate …
00:14:27:22 - 00:14:31:03
That's very interesting
C: state on earth.
00:14:31:03 - 00:14:34:22
and if that’s so, there's something very precious about that.
00:14:34:22 - 00:14:36:23
Very precious about that.
00:14:36:23 - 00:14:37:22
Yeah, yeah.
00:14:37:22 - 00:14:41:05
But then what about,
00:14:41:05 - 00:14:43:04
er, penitential psalms?
00:14:43:04 - 00:14:45:15
So I mean, the, the classic example,
of course, is
00:14:45:22 - 00:14:48:11
Psalm 51, isn't it?
00:14:48:11 - 00:14:49:22
Yes, yes, yes.
00:14:49:22 - 00:14:53:24
Where this…the Superscription tells us that it's
00:14:54:22 - 00:14:58:22
a Psalm of David after Nathan the prophet went to him after he gone into Bathsheba.
00:14:58:22 - 00:15:02:16
So here is, here is David the rapist and the murderer
00:15:04:22 - 00:15:07:22
being penitent in this Psalm,
00:15:07:22 - 00:15:11:19
but Jesus never needed to be penitent.
00:15:11:19 - 00:15:14:18
So what … how do you …
What do we do with that?
00:15:14:18 - 00:15:15:18
How do you wiggle around that
00:15:15:18 - 00:15:19:18
one, Christopher?
I think, I think we we need to recognize that,
00:15:19:22 - 00:15:23:19
er, prayers of acknowledgment of sinfulness
00:15:23:19 - 00:15:27:09
are sort of woven into the Psalms,
00:15:27:22 - 00:15:29:22
and it's a bit like trying to…
00:15:29:22 - 00:15:34:22
like the 19th century liberals trying
to get rid of miracles in the Gospels:
00:15:34:22 - 00:15:39:18
once you start chopping them out,
you tear the whole fabric to shreds.
00:15:39:22 - 00:15:43:19
It's a little bit like that in the Psalms,
and it's just interesting,
00:15:43:22 - 00:15:45:22
I've jotted down
00:15:45:22 - 00:15:49:18
a couple where part of a psalm
00:15:49:18 - 00:15:52:14
may be quoted of or by Jesus.
00:15:52:22 - 00:15:57:22
So Psalm 31: ‘into your hands I commit my spirit’,
00:15:57:22 - 00:15:59:22
Psalm 31, verse 5.
00:15:59:22 - 00:16:02:22
And the same psalm includes verse 10:
00:16:02:22 - 00:16:07:15
‘My strength fails because of my iniquity.’
So…
00:16:07:22 - 00:16:09:19
you've got two alternatives.
00:16:09:19 - 00:16:14:01
You can say, well, Jesus says one bit,
but he doesn't say the other bit
00:16:14:01 - 00:16:16:22
because he had no iniquity.
00:16:16:22 - 00:16:19:22
And then the New Testament writers
cherry pick the best…
00:16:19:22 - 00:16:24:16
Yes, that’s it. Or Psalm 40, where verses 4 to 6 are
00:16:24:22 - 00:16:29:04
quoted of Christ in Hebrews 10,
00:16:29:22 - 00:16:33:10
verses 5 to 7, offering himself,
00:16:33:10 - 00:16:37:12
bringing himself, his body, as an offering to God.
00:16:37:22 - 00:16:42:22
But later in the Psalm, in verse 12, my iniquities have overtaken me.
00:16:42:22 - 00:16:44:20
So you have the same problem.
00:16:44:20 - 00:16:46:22
Yeah. And,
00:16:46:22 - 00:16:51:01
it's possible that we’re to imagine
00:16:51:01 - 00:16:55:13
Jesus saying or singing the Psalm, or whatever they did in the synagogue,
00:16:55:13 - 00:17:00:22
but just shutting his mouth at the, at those moments.
Right.
00:17:00:22 - 00:17:03:22
I think that's a little bit difficult.
00:17:03:22 - 00:17:07:14
And the reason, the reason
I'm inclined to think that Jesus
00:17:07:14 - 00:17:12:20
does say that is, is partly
when he came for his baptism.
00:17:12:20 - 00:17:14:22
I was just about to ask about this.
00:17:14:22 - 00:17:16:13
It’s very striking, isn't it?
00:17:16:13 - 00:17:20:10
He comes for a baptism which signifies repentance.
Yes.
00:17:20:10 - 00:17:25:04
And John the Baptist understandably says, you don’t need this.
00:17:25:04 - 00:17:27:02
And he says, no, no, I'm going to do this.
00:17:27:02 - 00:17:29:14
This fulfils all righteousness.
Yeah.
00:17:29:14 - 00:17:34:20
And there's some sense in which the shadow
of our sin fell on him,
00:17:35:22 - 00:17:39:07
not just in those terrible hours on the cross,
00:17:39:13 - 00:17:42:13
and, and that he …
00:17:42:22 - 00:17:43:22
our sins were
00:17:43:22 - 00:17:49:08
counted to him
so that he became sin for us.
00:17:49:08 - 00:17:51:22
Right.
And therefore
00:17:51:22 - 00:17:54:22
there was a sense in which he
00:17:54:22 - 00:17:57:22
could lead his people in
00:17:57:22 - 00:17:59:22
repentance. Not that he repents
00:17:59:22 - 00:18:04:05
C: instead of us repenting
T: No, No.
C: we do need to be a bit careful about that
00:18:04:05 - 00:18:04:22
Yeah.
00:18:04:22 - 00:18:07:22
But that's, that's sort of persuaded me
that actually it's more
00:18:07:22 - 00:18:10:22
natural to, to read
00:18:10:22 - 00:18:15:04
Jesus as the one who is paying
the penalty of a sinner
00:18:15:22 - 00:18:18:22
because he is
00:18:18:22 - 00:18:22:06
a sinner by imputation.
00:18:22:06 - 00:18:25:22
Our sin has been imputed to him.
00:18:25:22 - 00:18:29:10
And therefore, when he's punished, it's right
00:18:29:10 - 00:18:33:05
that he should be punished because of that.
I mean, it's a very deep thing.
00:18:33:05 - 00:18:36:17
Just on Psalm 51, I mean, Psalm
00:18:36:17 - 00:18:40:00
51 is, as you rightly say, the most…
00:18:40:22 - 00:18:42:22
the strongest of those
00:18:42:22 - 00:18:47:16
because we're told that it's after
David has gone into Bathsheba.
00:18:47:16 - 00:18:51:09
And, you know, all of that in 1 Samuel 11 and
00:18:52:22 - 00:18:54:14
the, the, the acute problem
00:18:54:14 - 00:18:57:14
with Psalm 51 is that David seems to
00:18:57:22 - 00:19:01:23
acknowledge what we would call, what I think
00:19:01:23 - 00:19:05:12
we'd probably call original sin.
sin in his origins.
00:19:05:22 - 00:19:09:15
And I had … when I was working on this,
I had a fascinating correspondence
00:19:09:15 - 00:19:11:22
with two friends,
00:19:11:22 - 00:19:15:01
– both people I trust,
00:19:15:22 - 00:19:17:22
both good scholars,
00:19:17:22 - 00:19:22:11
who've … one’s written on Psalms; the other’s a systematic theologian.
00:19:22:11 - 00:19:27:07
One of them said,
I don't think Jesus could say Psalm 51
00:19:27:07 - 00:19:31:13
C: because he had no original sin
T: Right
C: to confess.
00:19:31:13 - 00:19:36:22
The other said, no, I think the becoming sin for us includes that.
00:19:36:22 - 00:19:39:22
And he could.
00:19:39:22 - 00:19:43:07
I came down on the side of the latter,
but cautiously,
00:19:43:07 - 00:19:46:14
C: just aware that
T: Yeah
C: this is really difficult.
00:19:46:22 - 00:19:49:22
yeah, yeah, indeed.
00:19:49:22 - 00:19:53:17
But yes.
But the, the, the basic thing
00:19:53:17 - 00:19:58:15
that, that he bears sins
00:19:58:22 - 00:20:01:22
and therefore
00:20:02:05 - 00:20:04:05
iniquities become his iniquities
00:20:04:05 - 00:20:05:05
T: Yeah.
C: in a sense.
00:20:05:05 - 00:20:08:05
Yeah.
We, we talk about him identifying with sinners,
00:20:08:05 - 00:20:09:05
but, but it is …
00:20:09:05 - 00:20:13:05
but bearing our sin is is an extraordinary
degree of identification with us
00:20:13:05 - 00:20:14:23
sinners.
It really is.
00:20:14:23 - 00:20:17:12
‘God made him who knew no sin to be sin for us,
00:20:17:12 - 00:20:20:05
so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.’
00:20:20:05 - 00:20:22:10
That’s, that's a staggering concept.
00:20:22:10 - 00:20:25:13
I read a … I read a really profound meditation,
00:20:25:13 - 00:20:30:05
on Gethsemane by 19th century Scottish writer called Hugh Martin,
00:20:30:05 - 00:20:35:05
and he, he, he says that we tend to assume that
00:20:35:05 - 00:20:37:05
although Jesus bore the punishment, at least
00:20:37:05 - 00:20:41:18
he had the benefit of a clear conscience,
that he knew that he didn't deserve it.
00:20:42:05 - 00:20:43:05
And Hugh Martin
00:20:43:05 - 00:20:47:17
is saying, well, I wonder if that's right. Was it not that actually he
00:20:48:05 - 00:20:52:24
he knew everything about that
awful feeling in some sense?
00:20:53:05 - 00:20:56:05
And I, I don't know the answer,
00:20:56:05 - 00:21:01:19
but it made me think, I may have read his
sufferings rather superficially.
00:21:02:05 - 00:21:04:05
Yeah.
00:21:04:05 - 00:21:05:05
Wow.
00:21:05:05 - 00:21:07:05
Another tricky chara …
00:21:07:05 - 00:21:10:05
category of Psalm or category of Psalm material,
00:21:10:05 - 00:21:13:12
not necessarily whole Psalms, is, is the imprecatory stuff.
00:21:14:05 - 00:21:16:05
So we love Psalm 139,
00:21:16:05 - 00:21:21:05
but often public readings of Psalm 139 stop before the end because
C: Yes.
00:21:21:07 - 00:21:24:07
T: Aargh, I don't want to talk about that last bit
00:21:24:07 - 00:21:26:05
C: Please destroy the wicked. Yes.
00:21:26:05 - 00:21:27:05
Okay.
00:21:27:05 - 00:21:29:05
What do we do there? How do we handle those?
00:21:29:05 - 00:21:32:05
And I’ve …
00:21:33:04 - 00:21:36:05
I’ve worked quite hard on this,
00:21:36:05 - 00:21:40:13
and I've got a sort of a chapter in volume one trying to outline this.
00:21:41:05 - 00:21:43:05
The solution that’s often been offered
00:21:43:24 - 00:21:47:14
is that these expressions of ‘O Lord,
00:21:47:14 - 00:21:51:07
please destroy the wicked, please defeat the wicked,
00:21:52:11 - 00:21:54:20
please give judgment against the wicked’,
00:21:54:20 - 00:21:57:23
that these things are entirely understandable
00:21:58:19 - 00:22:01:19
and the comfortable westerners don't understand it,
00:22:01:19 - 00:22:04:13
but people in persecuted churches really get it.
00:22:04:13 - 00:22:05:24
Yeah.
00:22:05:24 - 00:22:07:19
In countries where wickedness
00:22:07:19 - 00:22:10:19
is just written large, they really get that.
00:22:10:19 - 00:22:11:06
Yeah.
00:22:11:06 - 00:22:16:04
So …
T: I’ve heard Ukrainians say that the imprecatory Psalms have come alive for them.
00:22:16:04 - 00:22:18:08
Yes, yes yes, yes.
00:22:18:08 - 00:22:22:07
And and so the argument has been
it's entirely understandable.
00:22:23:06 - 00:22:25:09
Derek Kidner, I think,
00:22:25:09 - 00:22:28:09
says it has the immediacy of a scream.
00:22:29:21 - 00:22:32:10
But they usually go on to say
00:22:32:10 - 00:22:35:04
it's nonetheless wrong.
00:22:35:04 - 00:22:40:03
And one of the most well-known voices
who say that they're wrong is C.S.
00:22:40:03 - 00:22:41:07
C: Lewis.
T: Yes.
00:22:41:07 - 00:22:44:12
C: in his ‘Reflections on the Psalms’, which personally I think is
00:22:45:01 - 00:22:46:08
perhaps his least good book.
00:22:46:08 - 00:22:47:14
Yes, absolutely. I …
00:22:47:14 - 00:22:50:00
It's a very mixed bag.
00:22:51:05 - 00:22:53:13
I love Lewis, but not ‘Reflections on the Psalms’.
00:22:53:13 - 00:22:55:01
There's some good things in it but …
00:22:55:01 - 00:22:56:07
Yes, but quite influential
00:22:56:07 - 00:22:59:10
Because he's rightly so well known.
00:23:00:20 - 00:23:03:20
And I think that that ‘it's understandable
00:23:03:20 - 00:23:08:09
but wrong’ is problematical
for a variety of reasons,
00:23:08:13 - 00:23:14:09
one of which is that the New Testament … I mean, in Acts 1, speaking of Judas
00:23:14:09 - 00:23:18:02
Iscariot, quotes from two of the strongest of those Psalms –
00:23:18:02 - 00:23:21:23
from Psalm 69 and Psalm 109 – with no sense of,
00:23:22:24 - 00:23:25:17
you know … Luke doesn't say, this is a bit awkward, but
00:23:25:17 - 00:23:30:23
I think maybe you, you know, should get … He just he just cheerfully quotes
00:23:31:04 - 00:23:31:12
Yeah.
00:23:31:12 - 00:23:34:12
from these very strong Psalms
00:23:35:06 - 00:23:38:06
and says, this is, this is this is right,
00:23:38:06 - 00:23:41:24
and this is how it is, and this is a fulfilment of prophecy and so on.
00:23:42:13 - 00:23:45:24
So I'm not sure we can get away with just saying these bits …
00:23:46:05 - 00:23:49:10
it also puts us in the position
of judge and jury.
00:23:49:10 - 00:23:50:04
Right.
00:23:50:04 - 00:23:53:11
We read a psalm, we think, this bit's good, this bits good.
00:23:53:15 - 00:23:56:05
This bit – ooh, this bit isn't so good.
00:23:56:05 - 00:24:01:02
And that's a dangerous position to be in when reading Scripture.
00:24:02:02 - 00:24:04:14
I found it very helpful to
00:24:04:14 - 00:24:07:14
reflect that the,
00:24:09:13 - 00:24:10:13
they're not,
00:24:10:13 - 00:24:13:13
properly speaking, imprecations,
00:24:13:16 - 00:24:17:15
because an imprecation is a curse
which is given
00:24:18:03 - 00:24:21:06
from one person to another.
00:24:21:06 - 00:24:22:13
Ignore God.
00:24:22:22 - 00:24:25:01
So Bernard Anderson,
one of the...Old Testament
00:24:25:01 - 00:24:29:10
scholars, points out
that it's actually a misapplication, of the word.
00:24:30:02 - 00:24:32:22
So I do use the word imprecation, imprecatory,
00:24:32:22 - 00:24:35:23
but I put it in, in, scare quotes
00:24:35:23 - 00:24:38:18
Because I don't much like that.
00:24:38:18 - 00:24:40:18
Right.
00:24:40:18 - 00:24:44:06
But it's the fact that they’re prayers
00:24:44:16 - 00:24:47:23
rather than curses is important.
00:24:48:09 - 00:24:51:17
And also that they’re prayers for God to do
00:24:51:17 - 00:24:54:17
what God has promised to do.
00:24:54:23 - 00:24:56:23
So they’re prayers that God will do what
00:24:56:23 - 00:25:00:20
in the covenant
he has committed himself to do.
00:25:00:20 - 00:25:01:10
Yeah, right.
00:25:01:10 - 00:25:06:11
They’re not, let me think of the most vindictive things I can …
00:25:06:23 - 00:25:08:18
think out of my nasty mind.
00:25:08:18 - 00:25:11:02
T: Yeah, right.
C: And pray for God to do those.
00:25:11:21 - 00:25:15:17
So in Oracle against Babylon in Isaiah,
00:25:16:02 - 00:25:21:10
the echo of Psalm 137 – children
being dashed against the rocks...
00:25:21:10 - 00:25:22:22
Yeah, yeah.
It's there.
00:25:22:22 - 00:25:27:08
So it's not, it's not, it's not that the Psalmists are praying for something
00:25:28:10 - 00:25:31:02
out of the top of their heads, out of their meanness. They’re praying
00:25:31:02 - 00:25:34:02
God will do something
that he's committed to doing.
00:25:34:02 - 00:25:37:09
But I do find that the er, the ....
00:25:39:20 - 00:25:43:16
seeing the Psalms as often,
00:25:44:03 - 00:25:47:00
if not always, the words of Jesus helps,
00:25:47:00 - 00:25:50:06
because if I, as an individual pray,
00:25:51:05 - 00:25:55:00
Lord, please punish the wicked, I'm praying for my own destruction.
00:25:55:00 - 00:25:58:00
T: Yeah, right. Yeah.
00:25:58:07 - 00:26:02:08
Whereas
Jesus can pray that, while at the same time
00:26:02:08 - 00:26:05:09
praying for the salvation of those
who are going to be saved.
00:26:05:22 - 00:26:06:12
So
00:26:06:12 - 00:26:09:14
does that...that relates
also to the individualism
00:26:09:14 - 00:26:13:05
that we read the Psalms
with, again, doesn't it, that that
00:26:13:20 - 00:26:16:22
that the, the imprecatories so called
imprecatory things
00:26:17:05 - 00:26:20:14
they are problematic for us
when we read them individualistically
00:26:20:19 - 00:26:22:08
because it
looks like us against the world.
00:26:22:08 - 00:26:26:14
But what you're saying is you know, this
is this is part of the bigger picture.
00:26:26:14 - 00:26:29:03
God is opposed to evil.
C: Yes.
00:26:29:03 - 00:26:34:11
T: And therefore we can pray those kinds
of things with
C: with great humility
00:26:35:10 - 00:26:36:08
and with trembling.
00:26:36:08 - 00:26:39:02
Really. And in
00:26:39:02 - 00:26:41:23
Christ, I guess there's a sense in which
00:26:41:23 - 00:26:45:16
when we pray the Lord's Prayer,
your kingdom come, your will be done.
00:26:45:18 - 00:26:47:12
on earth as it is in heaven.
00:26:47:12 - 00:26:49:03
We're praying for the final judgment
00:26:49:03 - 00:26:50:17
really.
T: Yeah.
00:26:50:17 - 00:26:53:09
C: And that will be a good thing.
00:26:53:09 - 00:26:54:17
Yeah,
00:26:54:17 - 00:26:57:01
well, it will indeed be a good thing.
00:26:57:01 - 00:26:59:15
But a sobering thing too. So
00:26:59:15 - 00:27:01:20
Christopher,
thank you so much for these conversations.
00:27:01:20 - 00:27:03:08
It's been, it's been great.
00:27:03:08 - 00:27:05:11
We've we've just scratched the surface.
00:27:05:11 - 00:27:08:11
There's a, there's a lot of psalms, aren’t there?
C: There’s a lot of psalms
00:27:08:12 - 00:27:11:12
Yeah. And, I think you've had,
00:27:11:13 - 00:27:15:03
well some frustrations, but I think you've had
a lot of great enjoyment writing these.
00:27:15:13 - 00:27:18:23
I get the sense from the conversations
we've had over coffee time
00:27:18:23 - 00:27:22:21
here, that you've had to scratch
your head and dig deep,
00:27:24:01 - 00:27:26:05
but also have found, found great joy.
00:27:26:05 - 00:27:29:21
And that just oozes out
of, of of what I've read so far
00:27:29:21 - 00:27:32:08
in the first volume, so thank you.
00:27:32:08 - 00:27:34:06
Thank you Tony and thank you for your encouragement.
00:27:34:06 - 00:27:35:06
Thanks very much.
00:27:35:06 - 00:27:36:02
Thank you for joining us.
00:27:36:02 - 00:27:39:02
Please do join us for more interviews and,
00:27:39:16 - 00:27:41:22
other things
coming up in the Tyndale House podcast.
00:27:41:22 - 00:27:45:16
We've got a series coming up soon
on manuscripts,
00:27:45:16 - 00:27:49:03
New Testament manuscripts,
so watch out for that coming soon.
00:27:49:11 - 00:27:52:22
There's a second series of names
which you may have seen already,
00:27:53:02 - 00:27:55:24
or you may still be waiting for it.
00:27:55:24 - 00:27:57:23
It depends when you watch this
or listen to it.
00:27:57:23 - 00:27:58:05
But thanks for joining us. Bye bye.