Psalms 94 - Introduction - Ellicott's Commentary On The Whole Bible

Bible Comments

XCIV.

Psalms 94:5; Psalms 94:14, and, by implication, Psalms 94:10, show that this psalm was the expression, not of individual, but of national, sense of wrong and injustice. Yet the poet must, in his own person, have experienced the bitterness of the trouble, from the reference he makes, towards the close, to his own experiences. Apostate Jews may have been joined with the heathen oppressors. (See Note, Psalms 94:6.) There is no indication on which to found a conjecture as to date or authorship. The poetical form is regular.