He has not / treated us in
proportion to our sins
nor has he dealt with us / as our iniquities deserve.
There is a single word here that I think unlocks for us something important at
the heart of this psalm: ‘proportion’. Here, Yhwh does not act ‘in proportion’
to our sins. He does less than what would otherwise be required. His failure is
one of a lessening. This is significant. The psalmist recognizes there to be a
certain standard (a certain ‘proportion’) when reacting to sins and iniquities.
And he recognizes that Yhwh has violated that standard, in mercy. He has not
acted ‘up to the standard.’ However, what we have already seen is that Yhwh
also violates the standard in abundance. His acts of loyal-love are ‘lavish’.
They are ‘total’ and without remainder. They are festive, they are abundant,
they are overflow. The psalmist will soon revert to images of his ‘towering’
loving-kindness and of spatial imagery that is impossibly large. The point, it
seems, is profound. Yhwh’s anger is always less than it could be and his
blessings is always, profoundly, more than required.