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  "commentary": {
    "book": "Psalms",
    "book_abbrev": "PSA",
    "testament": "OT",
    "passage_reference": "Psalm 118",
    "literary_unit_title": "Psalm 118",
    "genre": "Poetry",
    "subgenre": "Psalm",
    "passage_text": "118:1 Give thanks to the Lord, for he is good and his loyal love endures!\n118:2 Let Israel say, “Yes, his loyal love endures!”\n118:3 Let the family of Aaron say, “Yes, his loyal love endures!”\n118:4 Let the loyal followers of the Lord say, “Yes, his loyal love endures!”\n118:5 In my distress I cried out to the Lord. The Lord answered me and put me in a wide open place.\n118:6 The Lord is on my side, I am not afraid! What can people do to me?\n118:7 The Lord is on my side as my helper. I look in triumph on those who hate me.\n118:8 It is better to take shelter in the Lord than to trust in people.\n118:9 It is better to take shelter in the Lord than to trust in princes.\n118:10 All the nations surrounded me. Indeed, in the name of the Lord I pushed them away.\n118:11 They surrounded me, yes, they surrounded me. Indeed, in the name of the Lord I pushed them away.\n118:12 They surrounded me like bees. But they disappeared as quickly as a fire among thorns. Indeed, in the name of the Lord I pushed them away.\n118:13 “You aggressively attacked me and tried to knock me down, but the Lord helped me.\n118:14 The Lord gives me strength and protects me; he has become my deliverer.”\n118:15 They celebrate deliverance in the tents of the godly. The Lord’s right hand conquers,\n118:16 the Lord’s right hand gives victory, the Lord’s right hand conquers.\n118:17 I will not die, but live, and I will proclaim what the Lord has done.\n118:18 The Lord severely punished me, but he did not hand me over to death.\n118:19 Open for me the gates of the just king’s temple! I will enter through them and give thanks to the Lord.\n118:20 This is the Lord’s gate – the godly enter through it.\n118:21 I will give you thanks, for you answered me, and have become my deliverer.\n118:22 The stone which the builders discarded has become the cornerstone.\n118:23 This is the Lord’s work. We consider it amazing!\n118:24 This is the day the Lord has brought about. We will be happy and rejoice in it.\n118:25 Please Lord, deliver! Please Lord, grant us success!\n118:26 May the one who comes in the name of the Lord be blessed! We will pronounce blessings on you in the Lord’s temple.\n118:27 The Lord is God and he has delivered us. Tie the offering with ropes to the horns of the altar!\n118:28 You are my God and I will give you thanks! You are my God and I will praise you!\n118:29 Give thanks to the Lord, for he is good and his loyal love endures! Psalm 119 א (Alef)",
    "context_notes": "Final psalm of the Egyptian Hallel (Psalms 113–118), moving from individual deliverance to public temple thanksgiving.",
    "historical_setting_and_dynamics": "This psalm fits Israel's covenant worship life, likely in a festival or temple procession where a worshiper or representative voice moves from distress to deliverance and then into public thanksgiving at the sanctuary. The repeated calls to Israel, Aaron's house, and the loyal followers of the Lord show a communal liturgical setting that includes both people and priests. The mention of the temple gate, altar, and sacrificial offering locates the psalm in Israel's worship system rather than in private devotion alone. The psalm's political contrasts are also important: human allies, princes, and hostile nations cannot provide the security that only the Lord gives.",
    "central_idea": "Psalm 118 celebrates the Lord's enduring covenant loyalty by recounting deliverance from severe distress and by turning that deliverance into public praise at the temple. The psalm insists that trust in the Lord is better than trust in people or princes, because the Lord alone gives victory, reverses rejection, and receives the thanks of his people.",
    "context_and_flow": "Psalm 118 closes the Hallel collection and stands just before Psalm 119, forming a strong transition from corporate thanksgiving to sustained meditation on God's word. It begins with a summons to praise, moves through a first-person testimony of rescue, shifts to temple-entry language, and culminates in communal acclaim and sacrificial worship. The repeated refrain and the movement from distress to procession give the psalm a clear liturgical shape.",
    "key_hebrew_terms": [
      {
        "term_original": "חֶסֶד",
        "term_english": "loyal love",
        "transliteration": "chesed",
        "strongs": "H2617",
        "gloss": "steadfast covenant love",
        "significance": "The refrain frames the whole psalm: the Lord's goodness is expressed in covenant loyalty that endures beyond present distress."
      },
      {
        "term_original": "יָמִין",
        "term_english": "right hand",
        "transliteration": "yamin",
        "strongs": "H3225",
        "gloss": "right hand, power",
        "significance": "The repeated 'right hand of the Lord' is a concrete image of divine power and effective help, not a claim about physical anatomy."
      },
      {
        "term_original": "הוֹשִׁיעָה נָּא",
        "term_english": "save, please",
        "transliteration": "hoshia na",
        "strongs": "H3467",
        "gloss": "please save",
        "significance": "This plea in verse 25 is a liturgical cry for deliverance and lies behind the later acclamation 'Hosanna' in the New Testament."
      },
      {
        "term_original": "אֶבֶן",
        "term_english": "stone",
        "transliteration": "even",
        "strongs": "H68",
        "gloss": "stone",
        "significance": "In the 'rejected stone' saying, the image of a disapproved stone becoming the cornerstone captures God's surprising reversal and vindication."
      },
      {
        "term_original": "מִזְבֵּחַ",
        "term_english": "altar",
        "transliteration": "mizbeach",
        "strongs": "H4196",
        "gloss": "altar",
        "significance": "The altar marks the sacrificial center of thanksgiving and shows that deliverance leads to worship, not merely relief."
      }
    ],
    "exegetical_analysis": "The psalm opens and closes with the same summons to give thanks, framing the whole unit with the confession that the Lord's loyal love endures forever. The opening strophes are antiphonal: Israel, the house of Aaron, and those who fear the Lord are all invited into the same covenant praise, which broadens the psalm from an individual's experience to the voice of the whole worshiping community.\n\nThe central testimony begins in distress and moves to deliverance. The speaker cried out, and the Lord answered by bringing him into a \"wide open place\"—an image of relief, freedom, and safety after confinement. The repeated confession that the Lord is on the speaker's side grounds courage not in personal strength but in divine support. Verses 8-9 draw the practical conclusion: refuge in the Lord is better than trust in people or princes. This is not a rejection of human relationships as such; it is a refusal to treat human power as ultimate security.\n\nVerses 10-14 intensify the deliverance with military and political imagery. The nations surround the speaker like hostile swarms, yet each attack is overcome \"in the name of the Lord.\" The repetition is rhetorical and emphatic: the victory belongs to the Lord, not to the speaker's own prowess. The confession in verses 13-14 makes the point explicit: the enemy struck hard, but the Lord helped, strengthened, and delivered.\n\nVerses 15-18 widen the perspective to communal celebration. The \"tents of the righteous\" likely refers to the dwellings or settlements of the godly; wherever God's people live, they celebrate the same victory. The \"right hand\" of the Lord functions as a forceful image for his saving power. The speaker's claim, \"I will not die, but live,\" is best read as bold confidence after a severe crisis, not as a blanket denial of mortality. The point is that the Lord disciplined but did not hand him over to death.\n\nThe movement then turns to the temple. The request, \"Open for me the gates of righteousness\" signals entrance into the sanctuary for thanksgiving. The speaker enters not merely to enjoy private relief but to give public thanks before God. Verse 20 identifies the gate as the Lord's gate and declares that the righteous enter there, reinforcing the holiness of access to God.\n\nVerse 22 is the psalm's interpretive center: \"The stone which the builders discarded has become the cornerstone.\" In the psalm's own setting, the line celebrates divine reversal, where what human evaluators rejected becomes indispensable by God's action. The exact referent may be the speaker, the king, or the covenant community represented in the speaker; the text itself emphasizes the reversal more than the precise historical figure. \"The builders\" most naturally represents those who evaluate and reject what God chooses, while \"cornerstone\" signals the stone that becomes foundational by divine appointment. The following verses interpret the event: this is the Lord's doing, astonishing in the eyes of his people, and the day of deliverance becomes a day of rejoicing.\n\nThe final section is a liturgical procession. Verse 25 is a plea for salvation and success, likely from the gathered worshipers. Verse 26 blesses \"the one who comes in the name of the Lord,\" probably the returning worshiper or king entering the temple in the Lord's authority. The offering bound to the altar in verse 27 indicates sacrificial thanksgiving. The psalm ends as it began, with confession, praise, and the declaration that the Lord's loyal love endures forever.",
    "covenantal_redemptive_location": "Psalm 118 belongs within Israel's life under the Mosaic covenant, where deliverance from enemies and safe access to the sanctuary are interpreted as acts of the covenant Lord. Its temple and altar language assumes the worship structure of Israel in the land, and its public thanksgiving fits a people whose national and personal survival depend on Yahweh's faithfulness. At the same time, the psalm's rejected-stone theme provides a canonical pattern of divine vindication that later Scripture applies to the Davidic Messiah and, in the New Testament, to Christ.",
    "theological_significance": "The psalm teaches that the Lord's enduring covenant love is the basis of Israel's praise and confidence. It reveals the folly of placing ultimate trust in human power, the reality of divine discipline that does not end in abandonment, and the grace of God who hears, answers, and delivers. It also shows that salvation should terminate in worship: deliverance leads to thanksgiving, sacrifice, and renewed confession of God's kingship over his people.",
    "prophecy_typology_symbols": "Psalm 118 is not a predictive oracle, but it contains two motifs later used canonically in messianic ways: the rejected stone vindicated by God, and the blessing of the one who comes in the name of the Lord. In the psalm, both arise from an Israelite thanksgiving and temple-procession setting. Later Scripture applies them to the Messiah because he embodies the same pattern of rejection, vindication, and public acclaim. The typology is therefore grounded in the psalm's own reversal theme and covenantal worship context, not in hidden symbolism or uncontrolled allegory.",
    "eastern_thought_cultural_figures": "The psalm uses honor-shame reversal, a common ancient pattern: the rejected one is vindicated, the surrounded one triumphs, and the powerful are exposed as insufficient. The temple-gate scene assumes public procession, priestly blessing, and sacrificial response. 'Tents' in verse 15 is a concrete way of speaking about the dwellings of God's people, and the repeated mention of the Lord's 'right hand' is a vivid physical metaphor for active power. The contrast between the Lord and princes reflects a world where political protection was real but never ultimate.",
    "canonical_christological_trajectory": "In its original setting, Psalm 118 celebrates a deliverance that leads to temple thanksgiving and public acclaim. Canonically, the rejected-stone saying becomes one of the Bible's most important vindication images and is applied in the New Testament to Jesus Christ, who is rejected by human leaders, vindicated by resurrection, and established as the foundation stone of God's people. The blessing on \"the one who comes in the name of the Lord\" also receives messianic use in the triumphal entry. These later applications are legitimate because they follow the psalm's own theme of divine reversal and royal-temple vindication, but they should not erase the psalm's first meaning as an Israelite thanksgiving liturgy.",
    "practical_doctrinal_implications": "Believers should learn to interpret deliverance as the fruit of God's covenant faithfulness and to answer rescue with public gratitude. The psalm corrects misplaced confidence in human rulers, reminding God's people that political power is not a final refuge. It also encourages prayer in distress, courage under opposition, and worship that gives God credit for salvation. At the same time, verse 17 should not be turned into a universal promise that God's people will never face death; it is a confession of rescue from a particular crisis and of God's faithfulness in that crisis.",
    "textual_critical_note": "No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.",
    "interpretive_cruxes": "The primary crux is the identity of the singular speaker in verses 5-18: the psalm allows for an individual worshiper, the king, or a representative voice, but the liturgical procession points to a public, representative setting. The other major crux is verse 22: the precise identity of \"the builders\" is uncertain, but the theological point is clear—those who reject what God chooses are overruled by God's vindication. Verse 26 is first a liturgical blessing in the temple procession and only later receives explicit messianic application in the New Testament.",
    "application_boundary_note": "Do not flatten this psalm into a generic promise that every believer will receive immediate rescue from all danger. Its language is covenantal, liturgical, and often corporate, and its temple setting matters. Also, do not isolate the 'stone' saying from the whole psalm or treat later messianic use as if it replaced the psalm's original thanksgiving meaning.",
    "second_pass_needed": "false",
    "second_pass_reasons": [
      "major_messianic_significance",
      "dense_poetry_wisdom"
    ],
    "second_pass_reason_detail": "Second-pass review completed. No further specialist review is currently needed.",
    "confidence_note": "High confidence. The psalm's main movement, liturgical shape, and theological center are clear, while the remaining uncertainty is limited to the exact historical referent of the speaker and the precise social identification of the rejected stone.",
    "editorial_risk_flags": [
      "debated_fulfillment_structure",
      "symbolism_requires_restraint",
      "application_misuse_risk",
      "israel_church_confusion_risk",
      "poetic_literalism_risk"
    ],
    "unit_id": "PSA_118",
    "second_pass_review_summary": "The second pass mainly sharpened Psalm 118’s canonical handling of the rejected-stone motif and the procession/blessing language. The original thanksgiving setting has been preserved while the messianic trajectory is stated more carefully and the remaining interpretive cruxes are kept within disciplined bounds.",
    "confirmed_second_pass_reasons": [
      "major_messianic_significance",
      "dense_poetry_wisdom",
      "interpretive_crux"
    ],
    "passage_now_ready": true,
    "remaining_caution": "Verse 22 and verse 26 retain canonical depth, so later messianic use should be read as an extension of the psalm's own themes rather than a replacement of its original liturgical sense.",
    "qa_summary": "Overall, the entry is text-governed, genre-sensitive, and covenantally careful. The only needed adjustment was a small tightening of the messianic language in the covenantal-redemptive location field so later application remains clearly secondary to the psalm's original liturgical sense.",
    "qa_lint_flags": [],
    "qa_priority_actions": "[]",
    "qa_final_note": "The commentary is publishable after this minor restraint edit. Original meaning and later canonical use are now more cleanly distinguished.",
    "qa_status": "pass",
    "publish_recommendation": "publish",
    "book_slug": "psalms",
    "unit_slug": "psa_118",
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