Table of Contents
Psalm 80
Psalm 80
1 Give ear, O Shepherd of Israel, thou that leadest Joseph like a flock; thou that dwellest between the cherubims, shine forth.
2 Before Ephraim and Benjamin and Manasseh stir up thy strength, and come and save us.
3 Turn us again, O God, and cause thy face to shine; and we shall be saved.
4 O Lord God of hosts, how long wilt thou be angry against the prayer of thy people?
5 Thou feedest them with the bread of tears; and givest them tears to drink in great measure.
6 Thou makest us a strife unto our neighbours: and our enemies laugh among themselves.
7 Turn us again, O God of hosts, and cause thy face to shine; and we shall be saved.
8 Thou hast brought a vine out of Egypt: thou hast cast out the heathen, and planted it.
9 Thou preparedst room before it, and didst cause it to take deep root, and it filled the land.
10 The hills were covered with the shadow of it, and the boughs thereof were like the goodly cedars.
11 She sent out her boughs unto the sea, and her branches unto the river.
12 Why hast thou then broken down her hedges, so that all they which pass by the way do pluck her?
13 The boar out of the wood doth waste it, and the wild beast of the field doth devour it.
14 Return, we beseech thee, O God of hosts: look down from heaven, and behold, and visit this vine;
15 And the vineyard which thy right hand hath planted, and the branch that thou madest strong for thyself.
16 It is burned with fire, it is cut down: they perish at the rebuke of thy countenance.
17 Let thy hand be upon the man of thy right hand, upon the son of man whom thou madest strong for thyself.
18 So will not we go back from thee: quicken us, and we will call upon thy name.
19 Turn us again, O Lord God of hosts, cause thy face to shine; and we shall be saved.
Notes
Cross Reference
Concordance
Commentary
Rashi
Verse 1
<html><b>to the roses</b> To Israel. <b>a testimony, of Asaph, a song</b> A song of testimony in which he alluded to the three exiles and prayed about them. For it is mentioned in this psalm three times: “Return us, cause Your countenance to shine, and we shall be saved,” and in it, he alluded to the troubles that were destined to befall them in the days of the house of Jehu, from the kings of Aram. For it is stated (II Kings 13:7): “for the king of Aram had destroyed them and made them like dust to trample.”</html>
Verse 2
<html><b>O Shepherd of Israel</b> Their leader and supporter. <b>Joseph</b> All Israel are called by the name Joseph because he sustained and supported them in time of famine. <b>He Who dwells between the cherubim</b> As it is said (Exod. 25:22): “There I shall meet with you at appointed times, etc.” <b>appear</b> Demonstrate Your might.</html>
Verse 3
<html><b>Before Ephraim, Benjamin, and Manasseh</b> when they need Your salvation. Although they are wicked and undeserving, arouse Your might for them. But why? Because it is for You to save us. It is fitting for You and it is incumbent upon You to save, whether guilty or innocent, as it was said to Moses in Egypt (Exod. 3:7): “I have seen the affliction of My people.” Why is the word for seeing repeated? I see that they are destined to provoke Me. Nevertheless, I have seen their affliction, because of the oath that I swore to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. <b>Ephraim</b> in the war with Aram, when he besieged Samaria and sent emissaries to Ahab (I Kings 20:3): “Your silver and gold are mine; your beautiful wives and children are mine.” <b>Manasseh</b> in the days of Jehoash the son of Jehoahaz, as it is said (II Kings 13:4, 7): “for He saw Israel’s oppression, etc., for the king of Aram had destroyed them and made them like dust to trample.” And he beat him in war three times, as it is said (II Kings 13: 25): “Joash overcame him three times and recovered the cities of Israel.” <b>Benjamin</b> in the time of Ahasuerus, when Mordechai and Esther were in danger, and all Israel depended on them. <b>and it is for You to save us</b> Heb. ולכה. This is not an expression of going, but is like לְךָ, and so it is in the Masorah of (Gen. 27:37): “and for you (ולכה) then,” of Jacob; (II Sam. 18:22) “since for you (ולכה) there is no [reward] given for news”; (Isa. 3:6), “You have (לכה) a garment; be an officer to us, etc.”</html>
Verse 4
<html><b>return us</b> from the Babylonian exile, where Mordechai was.</html>
Verse 5
<html><b>how long have You been wroth</b> [This refers to] the troubles brought about by the Greek kings, who harmed Israel considerably.</html>
Verse 6
<html><b>You have fed them bread of tears</b> in Egypt. <b>and You have given them to drink tears in large measure</b> Heb. שליש. In Babylon, where they were for seventy years, a third (שליש) of the two hundred and ten of Egypt. I learned this from the work of Rabbi Moshe Hadarshan. It may also be interpreted as regards the kingdom of Greece, which represents the third trouble. If you ask, is that [not] the fourth, because Persia and Media came before, all the seventy years of the Babylonian exile are only one exile. Menachem (p. 175) interprets שליש as the name of a drinking vessel. So he explained (Isa. 40:12): “and He measured with a ‘shalish’ the dust of the earth.” Our Sages explained it (Mid. Ps. 80: 4) as referring to the three tears that Esau shed, concerning whom it is said (Gen. 27:34): “and he cried a cry.” That is one. “A great one.” That is two. “And a bitter one.” That is three. Because of them, he merited to live by his sword, as it is said (Gen. 27:40): “and it will come to pass when you complain, etc.”</html>
Verse 7
<html><b>You have made us the target of strife</b> You have made us the target of strife to all our neighbors, for the Greeks have quarreled with us.</html>
Verse 8
<html><b>return us, etc., and we shall be saved</b> from the Greeks.</html>
Verse 9
<html><b>You uprooted a vine from Egypt</b> He went back and alluded to the exile of the Romans. The vine of Israel, which You uprooted from Egypt. You uprooted them from there, as (Job 19:10): “He has uprooted (ויסע) my hope like a tree.” Afterwards, You drove out the seven nations and planted Israel in their land.</html>
Verse 10
<html><b>You cleared before it</b> those dwelling there.</html>
Verse 11
<html><b>and its branches were great cedars</b> Heb. ארזי אל, like strong cedars, i.e., mighty kings.</html>
Verse 12
<html><b>It sent forth its branches</b> Heb. קצירה. It sent forth its branches, as (Job 14:9): “and it will produce a branch (קציר).” <b>until the sea</b> Its boundary was until the Mediterranean Sea. <b>and to the river its tender shoots</b> The width of Eretz Israel is from the desert to the Euphrates River.</html>
Verse 13
<html><b>Why</b> now? <b>have You breached its fences</b> of that vineyard? <b>so that all wayfarers have plucked its fruit</b> וארוה. All who came plucked it, as (Song 5:1): “I gathered (אריתי) my myrrh with my spices.” Similarly, in the language of the Mishnah (Shevi’ith 1:2): “as much space as is required by a picker (אורה) and his basket.”</html>
Verse 14
<html><b>The boar from the forest gnaws at it</b> Heb. יכרסמנה, as (Peah 2:7): “A field that the ants have nibbled (קרסמוה),” an expression of plucking out. <b>from the forest</b> Heb. מיער. The “ayin” is suspended (as though it were written with an “aleph”). If Israel is worthy, the enemies are like the beasts of the river, which have no strength to climb out upon the dry land; but when retribution is decreed upon them, he (sic) grows strong as the beast of the forest, which destroys and kills. The boar of the forest is Esau, as is written (Dan. 7:7): “It devoured and broke in pieces and the rest it trampled with its feet.” And it (the swine) has some signs of purity. Esau, too, has the merit of his fathers. <b>and the creeping things of the field</b> Heb. זיז, all creeping things of the field. The expression זיז means anything that constantly moves from its place. <b>graze upon it</b> Graze upon it and its branches and eat them.</html>
Verse 16
<html><b>And of the foundation that Your right hand has planted</b> Which is founded and established, which Your right hand has planted, an expression of (Gen. 40:13): “and restore you to your office (כנך) .” <b>and over the son You have strengthened for Yourself</b> And over Esau, who was a beloved son to this father, who would call him, “my son.” You strengthened the vine of Jacob for Yourself, as it is said (Gen. 27:40): “and You will serve your brother.” Now it is…</html>
Verse 17
<html><b>Burned with fire [and] cut off</b> Heb. כסוחה, an expression of (Lev. 25:4): “You shall not prune (תזמר), which Onkelos renders: לא תכסח. <b>they perish</b> constantly; they continually perish from the rebuke of Your face and Your anger.</html>
Verse 18
<html><b>May Your hand be upon the man of Your right hand</b> Deliver Your blows upon the manviz. Esauwho is destined to receive retribution from Your right hand. <b>upon the son of man</b> whom You strengthened for Yourself that his habitation should be the fat places of the earth.</html>
Verse 19
<html><b>And let us not withdraw from You</b> Do not cause us to withdraw from You. <b>grant us life</b> from the exile, and we shall mention Your goodness and Your might, and then we shall call out in Your name.</html>
Verse 20
<html><b>O Lord God of Hosts</b> Here are mentioned three holy names, yet in the middle case two names and in the first case one name. All this is according to the intensity of the exile, the trouble, and the redemption (which shall surely come).</html>