Psalms137
Sorrow and Silence in Babylonian Exile
An Oath of Undying Loyalty to Zion
A Prayer for Vengeance and Justice
Study Notes for Psalms 137
Verse 1
This psalm is a powerful lament written during or shortly after the Babylonian Exile (586–538 BCE), capturing the profound grief and displacement felt by the Judean captives far from their homeland.
Verse 3
The captors’ demand for 'songs of Zion' was a cruel act of psychological warfare, mocking the exiles by forcing them to perform sacred songs in a profane setting.
Verse 4
The exiles recognized that the sacred songs of the Temple ('the LORD’s song') were tied inextricably to the Holy Land and could not be sung appropriately in a foreign, pagan land.
Verse 5
This is a solemn self-curse, asserting that forgetting Jerusalem—the covenant city—is a spiritual catastrophe worse than losing one's physical skill or livelihood ('right hand forget her cunning').
Verse 7
Edom, a neighboring nation, is condemned here and throughout prophetic literature (e.g., Obadiah) for actively rejoicing in and participating in the destruction of Jerusalem by the Babylonians.
Verse 9
These imprecatory verses express the raw, violent desire for divine justice against the brutal empire of Babylon, which had committed horrific atrocities against the Judeans. Biblical scholars emphasize this is a prayer consigning judgment to God, reflecting the ancient desire to see justice fully repaid.