Matthew Henry
The former chapter let us know what great things God had done for Israel; in this we have the thankful returns they made to God, that all ages of the church might learn that work of heaven to praise God.
Isa. any merry? Let him sing; and holy joy is the very soul and root of praise and thanksgiving. God is pleased to reckon himself glorified by our joy in him, and in his wondrous works. His servants’ joy is his delight, and their sons are melody to him.
one generationwould thus
praise God’s works to another, and
declare his mighty acts, Ps 145:4
Till I Deborah arose. And the first words should be rendered,
Then she sang, even Deborah.
Praise(or
bless, for that is the word)
you the Lord, Judg 5:2. The design of the song is to give glory to God; this therefore is put first, to explain and direct all that follows, like the first petition of the Lord’s prayer,
Hallowed be thy name. Two things God is here praised for:—
The Lord is knownas a righteous God, and the God to whom vengeance belongs
by the judgments which he executeth.
when the people willingly offered themselvesto serve in this war. God is to have the glory of all the good offices that are at any time done us; and the more willingly they are done the more is to be observed of that grace which gives both to will and to do. For these two things she resolves to leave this song upon record, to the honour of the everlasting God (Judg 5:3):
I, even I, will sing unto the Lord, Jehovah, that God of incontestable sovereignty and irresistible power, even to
the Lord God of Israel, who governs all for the good of the church.
Hear, O you kings! give ear, O you princes!
He praised the gods of gold and silver. She bespeaks them as the psalmist (Ps 2:10, Ps 2:11),
Be wise now therefore, O you kings! serve the Lord with fear.
Lord, when thou wentest our of Seir. This may be understood either,
the earth trembled, and the heavens dropped, etc. Compare Deut 33:2, Ps 68:7, Ps 68:8. Let all the kings and princes know that this is the God whom Deborah praises, and not such mean and impotent deities as they paid their homage to. The Chaldee paraphrase applies it to the giving of the law, but has a strange descant on those words,
the mountains melted. Tabor, Hermon, and Carmel, contended among themselves: one said, Let the divine majesty dwell upon me; the other said, Let it dwell upon me; but God made it to dwell upon Mount Sinai, the meanest and least of all the mountains. I suppose it means the least valuable, because barren and rocky.