Charles Ellicott Commentary


Charles Ellicott Commentary
"Our soul hath waited for Jehovah: He is our help and our shield. For our heart shall rejoice in him, Because we have trusted in his holy name. Let thy lovingkindness, O Jehovah, be upon us, According as we have hoped in thee." — Psalms 33:20-22 (ASV)
Hope — wait — trust. —The Hebrew language was naturally rich in words expressive of that attitude of expectancy which was characteristic of a nation whose golden age was not in the past, but in the future—a nation for which its great ancestor left in his dying words so suitable a motto—
“I have waited for your salvation, O Lord,”
and which, while itself held back outside the promised land of the hope of immortality, was to be the birth-race of the great and consoling doctrine that alone could satisfy the natural craving expressed by the moralist in the well-known line—
“Man never is, but always to be, blessed;”
and by the Christian apostle—
“For here we have no continuing city, but we seek one to come.”