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Psalms Chapter 78

CPDV
PSALMS

Psalms 78

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Chapter Analysis & Study Guide

The Parable of the Past and the Bread of Angels

The seventy-eighth psalm is a massive historical maskil (teaching) that recounts the rebellious history of Israel to warn the coming generation. The setting is a parable and dark sayings from of old, designed so that the children might set their hope in God and not be like their fathers—a stubborn and rebellious generation. The atmosphere is one of persistent ingratitude met by persistent grace (and judgment). It is a portrait of a people who forgot his works and tested God in their heart, demanding food for their craving even after the sea had been split before their eyes.

History here is not just a record, but a cycle of miracle and unbelief. God gave them manna (grain of heaven) and meat (birds like dust), but they still sinned. He struck them down, and they sought Him; He was merciful and atoned for their iniquity, remembering that they were but flesh. The story moves through the plagues of Egypt to the conquest of the land, detailing the failure of Ephraim (the northern kingdom) and the final election of the tribe of Judah, Mount Zion, and David the servant. The movement concludes with the image of David shepherding them with an upright heart and a skillful hand, symbolizing the shift from the failed judges to the chosen king.

In this lecture, the amnesia of sin is exposed as the root of rebellion. The bread of angels works a testimony to God’s supernatural provision, yet the human heart remains unsatisfied without a spiritual change. The rejection of Shiloh (Ephraim) and the choice of Zion (Judah) demonstrates the sovereignty of election. To set hope in God is shown to require a rigorous education in history. It teaches us to move from the craving of the wilderness to the covenant of the King. Memory is the fuel of the Morality.

The True Shepherd who feeds His people not with manna but with His own body, the Bread of Life, is Jesus Christ (John 6:32-35). While Israel ate the bread of angels and died, Christ offers the bread that sustains eternal life. He is the ultimate "David" chosen from the sheepfolds to shepherd the people with a perfectly upright heart and skillful hands. This psalm reminds us that despite our repeated forgetting and "testing," God has chosen Zion (the Church) in Christ and will never abandon His inheritance. We are invited to learn the dark sayings of old, trusting that our history is redeemed by His Fidelity. Our sustenance is His Sacrifice.