Psalm 76: The Stillness After Battle
There is a kind of silence that follows victory — not the hush of exhaustion, but the quiet of something settled beyond all dispute. Asaph gives us that silence here. God is known in Judah, he tells us, and what does that knowing look like? Broken arrows, shattered shields, stouthearted warriors who have "slept their sleep" and cannot find their hands. The image is almost eerie: mighty men reaching for weapons that are no longer there, undone not by a greater army but by a single rebuke. And then the line that turns the whole psalm into something far stranger than a war song: "Surely the wrath of man shall praise thee." Even human fury, that most chaotic and self-important of forces, is gathered up into the purposes of God like a river diverted to turn a mill. The earth feared, and was still. One suspects that stillness is not dread but recognition — the moment when all things, willing or not, fall quiet before the only power that was never in question.
00:00 God Known in Judah
01:00 Judgment from Heaven