Psalms 44:3

"You drove out the nations with your hand, but you planted them. You afflicted the peoples, but you spread them abroad."

Key Reflection

These verses highlight God's sovereign actions in history, where He used His power to drive out nations and plant Israel in the Promised Land, even as He afflicted other peoples to ensure their removal. This dual process underscores both divine judgment and providential care for His people.

From the Scholars: Barnes' Notes

For they got not the land in possession -The land of Canaan. The design of this verse is to illustrate the sentiment in the previous verse, that they owed their establishment in the promised land wholly to God. The fact that He had interposed in their behalf; that He had shown that he was able to discomfit their enemies, is appealed to as a reason why he should now interpose in a time of national danger and calamity. He who had driven out the nations in the days of their fathers; he who had established his people peaceably in the land from which the former inhabitants had been expelled, was able to interpose now and save them.

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