Final Instructions
I have not turned aside from Your judgments, for You Yourself have taught me. Psalm 119:102 NASB
You Yourself – Emphasis added. The actual Hebrew text just uses ʾattâ, the second person singular pronoun, “you.” “It is appended to verbs for emphasis. Its use in oblique cases (genitive and accusative) is to afford stress to a preceding suffix.”[1] But not here. In this verse it stands by itself, connected only to the preposition kî (“for”). The Chabad translation acknowledges this: “From Your judgments I did not turn away, for You guided me.” So why the added “Yourself”? It makes for powerful reading, like a sort of spiritual exclamation point, and it makes us think that somehow the psalmist has some direct, personal pupil connection with the Almighty, but the text doesn’t actually say that. It simply says that God taught him—directly or indirectly. Instead of pining for that “special” status we might attribute to someone who was taught directly by God, like, say, Moses, we should be asking a different question, a question for everyone except Moses. “How does God teach me His judgments?”
Well, first we need to know what “judgments” means. We find a familiar word, mišpāṭ, the entire order of governance of the creation. Perhaps a reminder:
The meaning of šāpaṭ is further complicated by the fact that although the ancients knew full well what law—whether civil, religious, domestic or otherwise—was, they did not think of themselves as ruled by laws rather than by men as modern people like to suppose themselves to be. The centering of law, rulership, government in a man was deeply ingrained. “The administration of justice in all early eastern nations, as among the Arabs of the desert to this day, rests with the patriarchal seniors … Such … would have the requisite leisure, would be able to make their decisions respected, and through the wider intercourse of superior station would decide with fuller experience and riper reflection.”[2]
In other words, when the poet says that God taught him, he could easily be saying that God’s direction of the entire society had an educational effect. Since mišpāṭ encompasses all governance of the created order, we should expect a poet who also wrote “When I consider your heavens, the work of your fingers, . .” to find God’s instruction in every part of life. Thus, the Chabad translation renders the term “guided me.” In fact, that’s what we experience. Yes, we have written texts, now more than this poet ever dreamed of having, but the order and constancy of the world, and of a righteous society, is also God’s teaching method. If we discover the awe that Heschel reminds us is so important, haven’t we heard God’s “voice”? And yes, perhaps we hear the audible sound of the spirit, occasionally, but the government of God speaks to us constantly if we’re listening.
Topical Index: taught, mišpāṭ, ʾattâ, Yourself, government, guide, Psalm 119:102
[1] Feinberg, C. L. (1999). 189 אַתָּה. In R. L. Harris, G. L. Archer Jr., & B. K. Waltke (Eds.), Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament(electronic ed., p. 84). Moody Press.
[2] Culver, R. D. (1999). 2443 שָׁפַט. In R. L. Harris, G. L. Archer Jr., & B. K. Waltke (Eds.), Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament(electronic ed., p. 947). Moody Press.
I hope you’re planning to compile this series into a book. I’d like to preorder it as of today.
It’s a possibility. Won’t happen until next year.
3+ decades ago, I was compelled to read this psalm as my devotional each morning for a couple of months. I didn’t study it I just soaked in it. The result was my conviction to begin living a Torah lifestyle beginning with Shabbat and eventually embracing it all as best I could manage. Thank you for tackling this commentary on It. Paired with our Leviticus study on Sunday mornings it couldn’t be timelier for me.
BTW I’m appreciating the Chabad translation more than ever.
Put me on the preorder list also!
“… the government of God speaks to us constantly if we’re listening.” Emet! Thanks be to God!
Skip, the understanding you’ve conveyed herein is similarly reflected in this NT passage… “Let every person be subject to the governing authorities, for there is no authority except by God, and those that exist are put in place by God” (Romans 13:1) The spirit of God also demarcates those whom God has vested with His authority… may we have ears to hear and eyes to see!
Without love all knowledge is nothing… (Cf. 1 Corinthians 13:2)… and (we are) to know the love of Christ that surpasses knowledge, in order that you/we may be filled up to all the fullness of God. (Cf. Ephesians 3:19)