Lately I came across an interesting bit of
theologizing. The author (who shall
remain nameless) spoke of his love for Psalm 139 (“one of my absolute favorite
psalms”). In it he said that “right
smack dab in the middle of this Psalm, King David calls for God to slay his
enemies and declares that he has nothing but hatred for them”. He refers, of course, to verse 21: “Do not I hate them that who hate You, O
Lord? And do I not loathe them that rise
up against You? I hate them with perfect
hatred; I count them my enemies”. The
author contrasts this attitude with Christ’s words about loving one’s enemies,
and characterizes the voice of David in this verse as “the sinful voice of a
human”. Though he says we ought not to
“throw the Old Testament out, nor read it flatly without any discernment”, and
though he asserts that though “Psalm 139 is full of inspiration”, he still says,
“David’s own paradigm comes through.
It’s all [David] knows in his time.
He can’t yet apply the awareness of his divine belovedness [sic] to his
enemies”. The upshot is that we must
“pick and choose in the Bible. Always
pick and choose Jesus”. That is, for him
some bits in the Scriptures are devoid of inspiration or authority, and ought
to be jettisoned since they are merely the voices of sinful humans, men
incapable of rising to a divine standard.
If something in the Old Testament mirrors the Gospel counsel in the New
Testament, it may be allowed to stand.
If not, out it goes. It is not
the sinful Old Testament author’s fault however; “it’s all he knows in his
time”. It is an extraordinary bit of
exegesis, worthy of the heretic Marcion himself—or perhaps of the Biblical
sceptics that made German theological liberalism so famous in the last century.
It
is difficult to deal with the author’s exegesis in any depth, since his thought
is not clear. Since he may or may not be
capitalizing pronouns referring to God (e.g. “David calls for God to slay his
enemies”), it is hard to be sure of his meaning: does he assert that smack dab in the middle
of the Psalm King David calls for God to slay David’s enemies, or God’s
enemies? The immediate contrast with
Christ’s counsel to love one’s own personal enemies would suggest the former,
in which case his exegesis is simply wrong.
King David declares his hatred not for his own foes, but for God’s
foes—that is the point of saying that he regards them as if they were his own
enemies. If he was talking about his own
personal enemies, the verse would make no sense—of course one regards one’s own
foes as foes. The point was David’s zeal
for God, which impelled him to make God’s cause his own. Though those men were not David’s personal
enemies, he regarded them as if they were in his zeal for God.
This
bit of confused theologizing is significant because many people fall into the same
trap of regarding bits of the Old Testament as unworthy, unspiritual, immoral,
and (frankly) as rather embarrassing.
No less a thinker than C.S. Lewis looked at the cursings in the Psalter
as something unfortunate, embarrassing, and to be explained away (in his
otherwise wonderful book Reflections on
the Psalms). But a view of Old
Testament Scripture which declares that “Whoever relaxes one of the least these
commandments and teaches men so shall be called least in the Kingdom of
heaven”, and that “it is easier for heaven and earth to pass away than for one
dot of the Law to become void” (Matthew 5:19, Luke 16:17) will not so easily jettison
chunks of those Scriptures. Neither ancient Marcionism nor modern Biblical
liberalism are live options for the Orthodox.
And
make no mistake: the offending bits are
indeed large chunks. Our unnamed author
spoke of his favourite Psalm 139, but similar citations could easily be
multiplied. Many other parts of the
Psalter extol holy hatred of unrighteousness and disgust at those who promote
it. Take for example Psalm 119, so
valued by the Orthodox that it is constantly used in Matins. Look at verse 53: “Hot indignation seizes me because of the
wicked who forsake Your Law”. Or look at
verse 113: “I hate double-minded men,
but I love Your Law”. Or verse
136: “My eyes shed streams of tears
because men do not keep Your Law”. Or
verse 139: “My zeal consumes me, because
my foes forget Your words”. Or verse
158: “I look at the faithless with
disgust because they do not keep Your commands”. Such an abundance of antipathy in a psalm
which has won such a place in the liturgical tradition of the Church cannot be
so easily dismissed by simply suggesting that “it’s all the Psalmist knows in
his time” as if the Holy Spirit found the task of inspiring a sinful Psalmist
too daunting. We cannot jettison it as
unworthy. The solution to our perceived
dilemma must lie elsewhere.
One
thing the unnamed author never did was to inquire what the word “hate” meant in
the offending verse. He apparently
assumed that it meant “to plan to hurt, to retaliate, to strive to inflict pain
and misery, to slay”. Christ indeed forbids
such a lust for revenge and for gleeful infliction of pain upon one’s personal
foes. We must not try to hurt our
personal foes—bashing them over the head or keying their car—but simply pray
for them and commend them to God. But
there is no evidence that the Psalmist in Psalms 139 or 119 was talking about
that kind vengeful action.
We may begin by
asking what the word “hate” actually means in its Biblical context. Briefly, it means to categorically and
emphatically reject. Thus Christ tells
us to “hate” our father and mother and wife and children and even our own life
if we would truly be His disciples (Luke 14:26). Obviously He does not mean one should
entertain personal loathing for our family or try to hurt them. He means that if it comes down to a choice
between family and Christ, we must categorically and emphatically reject all
the members of our family and their appeals to family loyalty, and choose
Christ instead. To hate=to reject. That is also the meaning of God’s declaration
in Malachi 1:2-3 (quoted in Romans 9:13): “I loved Jacob but I have hated Esau”. God did not loathe Esau personally. He “hated” him in that He rejected him as
bearer of Abraham’s covenant, and confirmed that covenant to his brother Jacob
instead.
Understanding
this allows us to return to the Psalter with fresh eyes. David (and the author of Psalm 119) were not
declaring that they personally loathed wicked and evil men and wanted to hurt
them so much as they decisively rejected their evil ways. David was declaring his decision to shun
their wicked ways however attractive they might have been and to choose
righteousness instead. That is why
immediately after saying that he hated God’s foes with perfect hatred, he went
on to say, “Search me, O God, and know my heart! Try me and know my thoughts and see if they
be any wicked way in me and lead me in the everlasting way”. He hated wickedness when he found it in
wicked men, and also when he found it in himself, which is why he asked for
God’s help to root it out from his heart.
The odd exegesis
with which this blog began provides a cautionary tale. We do not have the liberty to “pick and
choose in the Bible”. It is all God’s
Word and must be accepted as “inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for
reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness” (2 Timothy
3:16). If something seems to be
unfortunate and embarrassing that is almost certainly a sign that we are
missing something and not understanding what it is really saying. The Psalter contains many examples of holy
hatred (as do the letters of St. Paul—see for example 2 Corinthians 11:13f,
Galatians 5:12, Philippians 3:2, 18f).
Let us imitate this holy hatred and reject decisively the wickedness
that abounds in our world. Such a wicked
way may also lurk in our own thoughts and hearts. Let us pray that God may search us and root
it out.
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