Psalms of Christ. Daniel H. Fletcher
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39. Garland, Luke, 954.
40. Longman and Groves, foreword to After God’s Own Heart, ix–xi.
41. Duguid, Is Jesus in the Old Testament?, 10.
42. Moyise, Jesus and Scripture, 65.
43. Duguid, Is Jesus in the Old Testament?, 10.
44. Wright, The Case for Psalms, 33.
45. Black, Luke, 393.
46. Culpepper, Luke, 486.
47. What is more, it is not clear until they share a meal with the resurrected Lord. Scriptural understanding is not just about cognition but also relationship. David Garland is worth quoting at length: “The meal after Jesus’ exposition of the Scriptures on the road reveals that the proclamation of the Word is necessary for understanding, but it alone does not bring understanding. Understanding comes in the meal fellowship of the community and in welcoming and feeding strangers. Meal fellowship alone is insufficient. It needs to be accompanied by instruction related to Jesus” (Luke, 168–69).
48. Hays, Reading Backwards, 14.
49. “ . . . to you we have written that you must understand the book of Moses and the words of the prophets and of David . . .” (4QMMT 96). See Martínez, Dead Sea Scrolls Translated, 79.
50. Culpepper, Luke, 967. The prologue to Sirach has “The Law, the Prophets, and the others.”
51. For the Granville Sharp Rule for definite articles in Gk., see Black, Greek, 80.
52. Green, “Christ’s Shepherd,” 37.
53. Martínez, Dead Sea Scrolls Translated, 309.
54. Green, “Christ’s Shepherd,” 37.
55. Ibid. David Mitchell notes that the figures whose names head various psalms—David, Asaph, Heman, Jeduthun, and Moses—were regarded as prophets from biblical times; therefore, the editor of the Psalter would have regarded the psalms bearing their names as future-predictive (“Remember David,” 529).
56. Culpepper, Luke, 967.
Psalm 1
“Christ most certainly came in the way of sinners by being born as sinners are, but he did not stand in it, for worldly allurement did not hold him.”—Augustine
History
Psalm 1 is the ideal introduction to the Psalter because it models the life of discipleship that delights in following God’s instruction, and calls the reader to do likewise. One cannot simply read this psalm and walk away without making a decision as to the direction of one’s life. As James Mays remarks, “Let the readers understand and ask in what way their feet are set.”57 In many ways, the remainder of the Psalter illustrates the difference between the “righteous” and the “wicked” and the respective paths on which they walk. This idea of two paths is pervasive in Hebrew wisdom literature, especially the book of Proverbs (Prov 2:20–22; 3:12–17), and it is in this context that Ps 1 also teaches that one’s life is a journey; one chooses a particular route for existence. While the word wisdom does not appear in the psalm, its main point is nonetheless clear: to show the reader the wisdom of walking in the ways of God and the folly of ungodly living.58 Therefore, Ps 1 has been classified as a wisdom psalm.59
While Ps 1 is a fitting introduction to the Psalter, it should not be read in isolation from Ps 2. In fact, Ps 2 immediately carries forward the distinction between the righteous and the wicked into the context of God’s anointed king and those who oppose him. Nancy deClaissé-Walford rightly points out that Pss 1—2 together form the introduction to the Psalter: “Psalm 1 urges the reader to meditate upon the Torah as the oath to right living, and Psalm 2 states that, regardless of the useless plotting of earthly rulers, the God who sits in the heavens is sovereign over the created order.”60 Psalm 1 offers a sharp contrast between those who seek God and those who ignore him. On one hand, it describes one who delights in the instruction of the Lord, which results in an intimate relationship with him. On the other hand, it sets in contrast to this one who spurns God’s instruction, opting instead for a life of autonomy resulting in wickedness.
“Blessed” (1:1) describes the individual who is content to walk with God rather than the wicked. It is possible to define “blessed” as happy because some Hebrew lexicons offer it as the first definition among others.61 This psalm, therefore, portrays the individual who exists in a state of happiness as an outgrowth of one’s covenant obedience.62 “Happy” may even be parallel to the “delight” that the individual has when meditating on God’s “law” (torah, v. 2). However, words get their connotations from the contexts in which they are used and from everyday use, not from dictionaries. A dictionary gives a range of possible meanings for a word based on common usage, and not a definitive definition in every case. While the word often translated “blessed” (ashrey) in most English translations of verse 1 can mean happy, in some cases (possibly even this one), it is important not to understand happiness here in the sense of a mere passing emotion. In the context of Ps 1, the close relationship between the righteous one (the “blessed” one in v. 1 is also “righteous” in vv. 5–6) and God brings blessedness, and is better understood in terms of “contentment.”63 That is, the blessed one is content in life because of the intimate relationship he has with God, and as a result avoids and abhors wickedness.
The one who is “blessed” is not anyone but a specific, although unknown, individual. More specifically, it is a certain “man” who is blessed. The original language of verse 1 reads: “Blessed is the man who . . . ” Patrick Reardon explains that the words here are “emphatically masculine—that is, gender specific.”64 In other words, the psalm