Hermeneia Psalms 1 (2027)
Psalm 1 does not promise that the righteous will never suffer (other psalms will address that). Rather, it promises final, eschatological stability. The wicked may prosper temporarily, but their "way will perish." The commentary insists this is a long-view perspective—one that only faith can sustain.
Hermeneia is famous (and sometimes infamous) for its form criticism. On Psalm 1, Kraus asks: What is the Sitz im Leben (setting in life)? He concludes this is not a cultic psalm for the temple, but a from the post-exilic period, meant to teach the covenant community how to live in the absence of a king. hermeneia psalms 1
We often romanticize the "tree planted by streams of water." Hermeneia grounds this imagery in the arid climate of the Near East. The commentary emphasizes the contrast between stability and transience. The righteous are transplanted (passive voice—God did the planting) and are perpetually watered. The wicked? They are "chaff"—insubstantial, rootless, and driven by the wind. The visual is stark: You are either deeply rooted or you are blown away. Psalm 1 does not promise that the righteous
The psalm presents a binary worldview—two ways of life, two paths (righteous vs. wicked), and two destinies. Hermeneia is famous (and sometimes infamous) for its
After working through Hermeneia on Psalm 1, I walked away with one major insight:
This commentary is distinguished by its "Psalmen- und Psalterexegese" paradigm, which treats individual psalms not just as isolated poems but as intentional components of the larger canonical Book of Psalms. The Context of Psalm 1 in Hermeneia