Psalms Through the Centuries, Volume 3. Susan Gillingham

Psalms Through the Centuries, Volume 3 - Susan Gillingham


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28). At the top left we see the wicked, reading from scrolls (verse 9), and in the bottom right is another group trampling on the poor and a different group gorging at a table full of food. The hand of God comes out from heaven to grasp the psalmist’s right hand (verse 23) and above a group of angels is another wingless angel holding a whip (suggested by the Latin ‘flagellabuntur’ and ‘flagellatus’ of verses 5 and 14), who is driving a large number of the wicked into a fiery pit of Hell (verse 27).20 The *Stuttgart Psalter (fol. 85r) depicts the psalmist sitting with a mare and colt (like Utrecht, following verse 22), thus illustrating in a single image a more Christian reading of the psalm, where Jesus enters Jerusalem on these animals in Matt. 21:2–7.21

      But as I rav’d and grew more fierce and wilde

      at every word

      Me thoughts I heard one calling, ‘Child!’

      And I reply’d, ‘My Lord.’

      The other prominent theme of the psalm, namely its vision of the wicked oppressors who are finally destroyed by God, is found in Lauryn *Hill’s track ‘The Final Hour’, on her 1998 solo album ‘The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill’:

      You can get the power

      But keep your eyes on the Final Hour…

      And I remain calm reading the 73rd Psalm

      It is nevertheless surprising to find that a psalm with such a clear theme of justice and injustice, with so many universal implications, has not produced a richer history of reception.

      Psalm 74: A Communal Lament about Ongoing Exile


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