Verses 1–4
Introduction
The next three songs of ascents show not only the outward restoration, as we have seen in the previous psalms, but also the spiritual restoration. In this order, their complete restoration takes place. First comes the Feast of the blowing of trumpets, then the Day of atonement. The Lord Jesus is the Savior of their enemies, He is also the Savior of their sins.
This psalm is about a remembrance, whereas the two previous psalms are about a prospect. There they look forward, here they look back. The remnant is looking back to the time of their youth and the discipline. It is also the time when the LORD has not betrayed their trust (cf. Psalms 125:1) and saved them (Psalms 129:1-Numbers :). This gives them a strong, renewed trust in the LORD in the face of their haters (Psalms 129:5-Ruth :), that those haters will naturally wither.
Persecuted and Delivered
In this “Song of Ascents”, the tenth, the God-fearing looks back (Psalms 129:1). He remembers: “Many times they have persecuted me from my youth up” (cf. Jeremiah 2:2; Ezekiel 23:3; Hosea 2:14; Hosea 11:1). He is the personification of God’s people; he speaks for all the people. From the youth of that people, from its birth as a nation, it has been persecuted. We can think of their sojourn in Egypt where they were severely oppressed.
Even after that, they have often been persecuted, under the rule of cruel nations. With the call, “let Israel now say”, the God-fearing one urges the people of Israel to give clear audible testimony of that long time of persecution.
The greatest persecution, that is the time of the great tribulation, they have just finished. The enemies have brought the people into great distress, but they have not succeeded in putting God’s people to death (Psalms 129:2; cf. Revelation 12:13-Esther :). The word “yet” indicates the futility of the enemy’s frantic attempts to bring down the people. There can be so much persecution of those who belong to the Lord, yet that persecution will never be able to undo God’s plan for His own. He will bring them safely to the goal He has set for them: to be with Him.
They have endured great suffering (Psalms 129:3). The heathen rulers have rolled over them like a farmer plowing a piece of land. During the great tribulation, which is called “a time of distress for Jacob” (Jeremiah 30:7), these are the king of the north with in his wake the armies of the Assyrians, supported by Gog, which is the superpower Russia.
The long furrows plowed in a land that is being plowed can be compared to the lashes of a scourge on someone’s back. The back is imagery for the recent history behind them, the past, which is a history of suffering. That the furrows are lengthened refers to the length of time, the long period of suffering and especially the time of the great tribulation.
This is specifically a picture used in Isaiah 28 for the LORD’s disciplining through Assyria (Isaiah 28:23-Joel :). The Lord Himself also suffered, His back was beaten (Isaiah 50:6; cf. Isaiah 53:5). Prophetically, Psalms 129:3 is about the wrath of the LORD, the discipline He used to purge Israel (Isaiah 10:5; Isaiah 10:25Isaiah 26:20).
That God’s people can look back proves that they are still here. They owe that not to themselves, but exclusively to the LORD. Now He appears. They know that “the LORD”, Who “is righteous”, “cut in two the cords of the wicked” (Psalms 129:4; cf. Jeremiah 30:8). The cords, with which ‘the oxen’ pulled the plow and split Israel’s back, the LORD cut in two with one stroke of His sword. As a result, the wicked were unable to inflict any further furrows.
He did this not so much out of pity, but because He is “righteous”. He keeps His covenant with them, which He can do because He has a righteous basis for doing so. That basis is the work of Christ on the cross. Christ, through the blood of the new covenant (Luke 22:20; Hebrews 8:6), has fulfilled all the conditions to make His covenant true.
Even in the case where God has had to discipline His people because of their sins, because of that work He has remained faithful to His plan with them to finally do them good. He has met the expectations He has raised, and He has not betrayed the trust He has asked of His people.
The LORD has cut in two the cords of the wicked with which they had bound the remnant as captives (Psalms 126:1; cf. Psalms 124:7). He has, to stay in the picture, cut the knot and now taken the reins Himself. It has sometimes seemed as if He paid no attention to His suffering people. Now it appears that He has kept His eye relentlessly fixed on them in grace. He has stood up for His people and set them free. Now He is leading them on.