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Psalm Thirty-five
Psalm 35
Chapter Contents
David prays for safety. (1-10) He complains of his
enemies. (11-16) And calls upon God to support him. (17-28)
Commentary on Psalm 35:1-10
(Read Psalm 35:1-10)
It is no new thing for the most righteous men, and the
most righteous cause, to meet with enemies. This is a fruit of the old enmity
in the seed of the serpent against the Seed of the woman. David in his
afflictions, Christ in his sufferings, the church under persecution, and the
Christian in the hour temptation, all beseech the Almighty to appear in their
behalf, and to vindicate their cause. We are apt to justify uneasiness at the
injuries men do us, by our never having given them cause to use us so ill; but
this should make us easy, for then we may the more expect that God will plead
our cause. David prayed to God to manifest himself in his trial. Let me have
inward comfort under all outward troubles, to support my soul. If God, by his
Spirit, witness to our spirits that he is our salvation, we need desire no more
to make us happy. If God is our Friend, no matter who is our enemy. By the
Spirit of prophecy, David foretells the just judgments of God that would come
upon his enemies for their great wickedness. These are predictions, they look
forward, and show the doom of the enemies of Christ and his kingdom. We must
not desire or pray for the ruin of any enemies, except our lusts and the evil
spirits that would compass our destruction. A traveller benighted in a bad
road, is an expressive emblem of a sinner walking in the slippery and dangerous
ways of temptation. But David having committed his cause to God, did not doubt
of his own deliverance. The bones are the strongest parts of the body. The
psalmist here proposes to serve and glorify God with all his strength. If such
language may be applied to outward salvation, how much more will it apply to
heavenly things in Christ Jesus!
Commentary on Psalm 35:11-16
(Read Psalm 35:11-16)
Call a man ungrateful, and you can call him no worse:
this was the character of David's enemies. Herein he was a type of Christ.
David shows how tenderly he had behaved towards them in afflictions. We ought
to mourn for the sins of those who do not mourn for themselves. We shall not
lose by the good offices we do to any, how ungrateful soever they may be. Let
us learn to possess our souls in patience and meekness like David, or rather
after Christ's example.
Commentary on Psalm 35:17-28
(Read Psalm 35:17-28)
Though the people of God are, and study to be, quiet, yet
it has been common for their enemies to devise deceitful matters against them.
David prays, My soul is in danger, Lord, rescue it; it belongs to thee the
Father of spirits, therefore claim thine own; it is thine, save it! Lord, be
not far from me, as if I were a stranger. He who exalted the once suffering
Redeemer, will appear for all his people: the roaring lion shall not destroy
their souls, any more than he could that of Christ, their Surety. They trust
their souls in his hands, they are one with him by faith, are precious in his
sight, and shall be rescued from destruction, that they may give thanks in
heaven.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Psalms》
Psalm 35
Verse 3
[3] Draw out also the spear, and stop the way against them
that persecute me: say unto my soul, I am thy salvation.
Say — By thy spirit assuring me of it: and by thy providence
effecting it.
Verse 6
[6] Let their way be dark and slippery: and let the angel of
the LORD persecute them.
Their way — By which they flee, being chased.
Verse 7
[7] For without cause have they hid for me their net in a
pit, which without cause they have digged for my soul.
For — Out of mere malice.
Verse 10
[10] All my bones shall say, LORD, who is like unto thee,
which deliverest the poor from him that is too strong for him, yea, the poor
and the needy from him that spoileth him?
My bones — My whole body, as well as my soul.
Verse 13
[13] But as for me, when they were sick, my clothing was
sackcloth: I humbled my soul with fasting; and my prayer returned into mine own
bosom.
Returned — Although my fastings and prayers did them no good.
Verse 15
[15] But in mine adversity they rejoiced, and gathered
themselves together: yea, the abjects gathered themselves together against me,
and I knew it not; they did tear me, and ceased not:
Gathered — They were so full of joy, that they could not contain
it in their own breasts, but sought to communicate it to others.
Abjects — Or, vile persons, either for the meanness of their
condition, or for their wickedness.
Knew not — While I had no suspicion of them.
Tear me — My good name with calumnies, and reproaches and
curses.
Verse 16
[16] With hypocritical mockers in feasts, they gnashed upon
me with their teeth.
Mockers — They made themselves buffoons and jesters, and
accustomed themselves to mock and deride David, that thereby they might gain
admittance to the tables of great men, which was all they sought for.
Verse 17
[17] Lord, how long wilt thou look on? rescue my soul from
their destructions, my darling from the lions.
Look on — Without affording me pity or help.
Darling — My soul, Heb. my only one; which is now left alone and
forsaken by my friends, and hath none to trust in but God.
Verse 18
[18] I will give thee thanks in the great congregation: I
will praise thee among much people.
I will — When I shall be restored to the liberty of the publick
assemblies.
Verse 20
[20] For they speak not peace: but they devise deceitful
matters against them that are quiet in the land.
For — They breathe out nothing but threatenings and war;
they use not open violence but subtile artifices, against me and my followers,
who desire nothing more than to live quietly and peaceably.
Verse 21
[21] Yea, they opened their mouth wide against me, and said,
Aha, aha, our eye hath seen it.
Wide — To pour forth whole floods of scoffs and slanders.
ha — An expression of joy and triumph.
Our eye — What we have long desired and hoped for.
Verse 22
[22] This thou hast seen, O LORD: keep not silence: O Lord,
be not far from me.
This — Thou also hast seen, all their plots and threats, and
all my distresses and calamities.
Keep not — Be not deaf, to my prayers. The same word signifies,
both to be silent, and to be deaf.
Verse 23
[23] Stir up thyself, and awake to my judgment, even unto my
cause, my God and my Lord.
Awake — To plead my cause against mine adversaries.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Psalms》
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and
Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village
Preacher
Other Works
TITLE. A Psalm of
David. Here is all we know concerning this Psalm, but internal evidence seems
to fix the date of its composition in those troublous times when Saul hunted
David over hill and dale, and when those who fawned upon the cruel king,
slandered the innocent object of his wrath, or it may be referred to the
unquiet days of frequent insurrections in David's old age. The whole Psalm is
the appeal to heaven of a bold heart and a clear conscience, irritated beyond
measure by oppression and malice. Beyond a doubt David's Lord may be seen here
by the spiritual eye.
DIVISION. The most natural
mode of dividing this Psalm is to note its triple character. Its complaint,
prayer, and promise of praise are repeated with remarkable parallelism three
times, even as our Lord in the Garden prayed three times, using the same words.
The first portion occupies from Ps 35:1-10, the second from Ps 35:11-18, and
the last from Ps 35:19-28; each section ending with a note of grateful song.
EXPOSITION
Verse
1. Plead my cause, O Lord, with them that strive with me. Plead
against those who plead against me; strive with my strivers; contend with my
contenders. If they urge their suit in the law court, Lord, meet them there,
and beat them at their own weapons. Every saint of God shall have this
privilege: the accuser of the brethren shall be met by the Advocate of the
saints. Fight against them that fight against me. If my advisers try
force as well as fraud, be a match for them; oppose thy strength to their
strength. Jesus does this for all his beloved—for them he is both intercessor
and champion; whatever aid they need they shall receive from him, and in
whatever manner they are assaulted they shall be effectually defended. Let us
not fail to leave our case into the Lord's hand. Vain is the help of man, but
ever effectual is the interposition of heaven. What is here asked for as a
boon, may be regarded as a promise to all the saints; in judgment they shall
have a divine advocate, in warfare a divine protection.
Verse
2. Take hold of shield and buckler, and stand up for mine help.
In vivid metaphor the Lord is pictured as coming forth armed for battle, and
interposing himself between his servant and his enemies. The greater and lesser
protections of providence may be here intended by the two defensive weapons,
and by the Lord's standing up is meant his active and zealous preservation of
his servant in the perilous hour. This poetic imagery shows how the psalmist
realised the existence and power of God; and thought of him as a real and
actual personage, truly working for his afflicted.
Verse
3. Draw out also the spear, and stop the way against them that persecute
me. Before the enemy comes to close quarters the Lord can push them off as
with a long spear. To stave off trouble is no mean act of lovingkindness. As
when some valiant warrior with his lance blocks up a defile, and keeps back a
host until his weaker brethren have made good their escape, so does the Lord
often hold the believer's foes at bay until the good man had taken breath, or
clean fled from his foes. He often gives the foes of Zion some other work to do,
and so gives rest to his church. What a glorious idea is this of Jehovah
blocking the way of persecutors, holding them at the pike's end, and giving
time for the hunted saint to elude the pursuit! Say unto my soul, I am thy
salvation. Besides holding off the enemy, the Lord can also calm the mind
of his servant by express assurance from his own mouth, that he is, and shall
be, safe under the Almighty wing. An inward persuasion of security in God is of
all things the most precious in the furnace of persecution. One word from the
Lord quiets all our fears.
Verse
4. Let them be confounded and put to shame that seek after my soul.
There is nothing malicious here, the slandered man simply craves for justice,
and the petition is natural and justifiable. Guided by God's good spirit the
psalmist foretells the everlasting confusion of all the haters of the
righteous. Shameful disappointment shall be the portion of the enemies of the
gospel, nor would the most tender hearted Christian have it otherwise: viewing
sinners as men, we love them and seek their good, but regarding them as enemies
of God, we cannot think of them with anything but detestation, and a loyal
desire for the confusion of their devices. No loyal subject can wish well to
rebels. Squeamish sentimentality may object to the strong language here used,
but in their hearts all good men wish confusion to mischief makers.
Verse
6. Let their way be dark and slippery. What terrors are gathered
Here! No light, no foothold, and a fierce avenger at their heels! What a doom
is appointed for the enemies of God! They may rage and rave today, but how
altered will be their plight ere long! And let the angel of the Lord
persecute them. He will follow them hot foot, as we say, never turning
aside, but like a trusty pursuivant serving the writ of vengeance upon them,
and arresting them in the name of unflinching justice. Woe, woe, woe, unto
those who touch the people of God; their destruction is both swift and sure.
Verse
7. In this verse the psalmist brings forward the gravamen of his
charge against the servants of the devil. For without cause—without my
having injured, assailed, or provoked them; out of their own spontaneous malice
have they hid for me their net in a pit, even as men hunt for their game
with cunning and deception. Innocent persons have often been ruined by traps
set for them, into which they have fallen as guilelessly as beasts which
stumble into concealed pits, and are taken as in a net. It is no little thing
to be able to feel that the enmity which assails us is undeserved—not caused by
any wilful offence on our part. Twice does David assert in one verse that his
adversaries plotted against him without cause. Net making and pit
digging require time and labour, and both of these the wicked will expend cheerfully
if they may but overthrow the people of God. Fair warfare belongs to honourable
men, but the assailants of God's church prefer mean, ungenerous schemes, and so
prove their nature and their origin. We must all of us be on our guard, for
gins and pitfalls are still the favourite weapons of the powers of evil.
Verse
8. Let destruction come upon him at unawares. This tremendous
imprecation is frequently fulfilled. God's judgments are often sudden and
signal. Death enters the persecutor's house without pausing to knock at the
door. The thunderbolt of judgment leaps from its hiding place, and in one crash
the wicked are broken for ever. And let his net that he hath hid catch
himself: into that very destruction let him fall. There is a lex
talionis with God which often works most wonderfully. Men set traps and
catch their own fingers. They throw up stones, and they fall upon their own
heads. How often Satan outwits himself, and burns his fingers with his own
coals! This will doubtless be one of the aggravations of hell, that men will
torment themselves with what was once the fond devices of their rebellious
minds. They curse and are cursed; they kick the pricks and tear themselves;
they pour forth floods of fire, and it burns within and without.
Verse
9. And my soul shall be joyful in the Lord. Thus rescued, David
ascribes all the honour to the Judge of the right; to his own valorous arm he
offers no sacrifice of boasting. He turns away from his adversaries to his God,
and finds a deep unbroken joy in Jehovah, and in that joy his spirit revels. It
shall rejoice in his salvation. We do not triumph in the destruction of
others, but in the salvation given to us of God. Prayer heard should always
suggest praise. It were well if we were more demonstrative in our holy
rejoicing. We rob God by suppressing grateful emotions.
Verse
10. As the tongue were not enough to bless God with, David makes
every limb vocal—All my bones shall say, Lord, who is like unto thee?
His whole anatomy he would make resonant with gratitude. Those bones which were
to have been broken by my enemies shall now praise God; every one of them shall
bring its tribute, ascribing unrivalled excellence to Jehovah the Saviour of
his people. Even if worn to skin and bone, yet my very skeleton shall magnify
the Lord, which deliverest the poor from him that is too strong for him,
yea, the poor and the needy from him that spoileth him. God is the
champion, the true knight errant of all oppressed ones. Where there is so much
condescension, justice, kindness, power, and compassion, the loftiest songs
should be rendered. Come, dear reader, have you not been delivered from sin,
Satan, and death, and will not you bless the Redeemer? You were poor and weak,
but in due time Christ sought you, and set you free. O magnify the Lord today,
and speak well of his name.
Verse
11. False witnesses did rise up. This is the old device of the
ungodly, and we must not wonder if it be used against us as against our Master.
To please Saul, there were always men to be found mean enough to impeach David.
They laid to my charge things that I knew not. He had not even a though
of sedition; he was loyal even to excess; yet they accused him of conspiring
against the Lord's anointed. He was not only innocent, but ignorant of the
fault alleged. It is well when our hands are so clean that no trace of dirt is
upon them.
Verse
12. They rewarded me evil for good. This is devilish; but men have
learned the lesson well of the old Destroyer, and practise it most perfectly. To
the spoiling of my soul. They robbed him of comfort, and even would have
taken his life had it not been for special rescues from the hand of God. The
wicked would strip the righteous naked to their very soul: they know no pity.
There are only such limits to human malice as God himself may see fit to place.
Verse
13. But as for me, when they were sick, my clothing was sackcloth.
David had been a man of sympathy; he had mourned when Saul was in ill health,
putting on the weeds of sorrow for him as though he were a near and dear
friend. His heart went into mourning for his sick master. Humbled my soul
with fasting. He prayed for his enemy, and made the sick man's case his
own, pleading and confessing as if his own personal sin had brought on the
evil. This showed a noble spirit in David, and greatly aggravated the baseness
of those who now so cruelly persecuted him. And my prayer returned into mine
own bosom. Prayer is never lost: if it bless not those for whom
intercession is made, it shall bless the intercessors. Clouds do not always
descend in showers upon the same spot from which the vapours ascended, but they
come down somewhere; and even so do supplications in some place or other yield
their showers of mercy. If our dove find no rest for the sole of her foot among
our enemies, it shall fly into our bosoms and bring an olive branch of peace in
its mouth. How sharp is the contrast all through this Psalm between the
righteous and his enemies! We must be earnest to keep the line of demarcation
broad and clear.
Verse
14. I behaved myself as though he has been my friend or brother:
I waited upon him assiduously, comforted him affectionately, and sympathised
with him deeply. This may refer to those days when David played on the harp,
and chased away the evil spirit from Saul. I bowed down heavily, as one that
mourneth for his mother. He bowed his head as mourners do. The strongest
natural grief was such as he felt when they were in trouble. The mother usually
wins the deepest love, and her loss is most keenly felt: such was David's
grief. How few professors in these days have such bowels of compassion; and yet
under the gospel there should be far more tender love than under the law. Had
we more hearty love to manhood, and care for its innumerable ills, we might be
far more useful; certainly we should be infinitely more Christ like. "He
prayeth best that lovest best."
Verse
15. But in mine adversity they rejoiced. In my halting they were
delighted. My lameness was sport to them. Danger was near, and they sang songs
over my expected defeat. How glad are the wicked to see a good man limp!
"Now, "say they, "he will meet with his downfall." And
gathered themselves together, like kites and vultures around a dying sheep.
They found a common joy in my ruin, and a recreation in my sorrow, and
therefore met together to keep the feast. They laid their heads together to
devise, and their tongues to deceive. Yea, the abjects gathered themselves
together against me. Those who deserved horsewhipping, fellows the soles of
whose feet were needing the bastinado, came together to plot, and held hole and
corner meetings. Like curs around a sick lion, the mean wretches taunted and
insulted one whose name had been their terror. The very cripples hobbled out to
join the malicious crew. How unanimous are the powers of evil; how heartily do
men serve the devil; and none decline his service because they are not endowed
with great abilities! I knew it not. It was all done behind my back.
What a fluster the world may be in, and the cause of it all may not even know
that he has given offence. They did tear me, and ceased not. It is such
dainty work to tear to pieces a good man's character, that when slanderers have
their hand in they are loath to leave off. A pack of dogs tearing their prey is
nothing compared with a set of malicious gossips mauling the reputation of a
worthy man. That lovers of the gospel are not at this time rent and torn as in
the old days of Mary, is to be attributed to the providence of God rather than
to the gentleness of men.
Verse
16. With hypocritical mockers in feasts, they gnashed upon me with
their teeth. Like professional buffoons who grin around the banquet to make
sport, so they made a business of jeering at the good man; not, however, out of
mirth, but from violent, insatiable hatred. Like cake scoffers, or men who will
jeer for a bit of bread, these hireling miscreants persecuted David in order to
get a bellyful for themselves from Saul's table: having moreover an inward
grudge against the son of Jesse because he was a better man than themselves.
Very forcibly might our Lord have used the words of these verses! Let us not
forget to see the Despised and Rejected of men here painted to the life.
Calvary and the ribald crew around the cross seem brought before our eyes.
Verse
17. Lord, how long wilt thou look on? Why be a mere spectator? Why so
neglectful of thy servant? Art thou indifferent? Carest thou not that we
perish? We may thus reason with the Lord. He permits us this familiarity. There
is a time for our salvation, but to our impatience it often seems to be very
slow in coming; yet wisdom has ordained the hour, and nothing shall delay it. Rescue
my soul from their destructions. From their many devices; their multiplied
assaults, be pleased to set me free. ["My darling,"] my lovely, only,
precious soul, do thou rescue ["from the lions."] His enemies were
fierce, cunning, and strong as young lions; God only could deliver him from
their jaws, to God he therefore addresses himself. Reference: The Treasury of
David, by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Published by Guardian Press, 1976, Vol. II,
Page 159.
Verse
20. "For they speak not peace." They love it not;
how can they speak it? They are such troublers themselves that they cannot
judge others to be peaceable. Out of the mouth comes what is in the heart.
Riotous men charge others with sedition. "They devise deceitful matters
against them that are quiet in the land." David would fain have been
an orderly citizen, but they laboured to make him a rebel. He could do nothing
aright, all his dealings were misrepresented. This is an old trick of the enemy
to brand good men with S.S. on their cheeks, as sowers of sedition, though they
have ever been a harmless race, like sheep among wolves. When mischief is
meant, mischief is soon made. Unscrupulous partisans could even charge Jesus
with seeking to overturn Cæsar, much more will they thus accuse his household.
At this very hour, those who stand up for the crown rights of King Jesus are
called enemies of the church, favourers of Popery, friends of Atheists,
levellers, red republicans, and it were hard to say what besides. Billingsgate
and Babylon are in league. Reference: The Treasury of David, by Charles Haddon
Spurgeon. Published by Guardian Press, 1976, Vol. II, Page 160.
Verse
21. "Yea, they opened their mouth wide against me."
As if they would swallow him. Uttering great lies which needed wide mouths.
They set no bounds to their infamous charges, but poured out wholesale abuse,
trusting that if all did not stick, some of it would. "And said, Aha,
aha, our eye hath seen it." Glad to find out a fault or a misfortune,
or to swear they had seen evil where there was none. Malice has but one eye; it
is blind to all virtue in its enemy. Eyes can generally see what hearts wish. A
man with a mote in his eye sees a spot in the sun. How like a man is to an ass
when he brays over another's misfortunes! how like to a devil when he laughs a
hyæna-laugh over a good man's slip! Malice is folly, and when it holds a
festival its tones and gestures far exceed all the freaks and mummeries of the
lord of misrule. Reference: The Treasury of David, by Charles Haddon Spurgeon.
Published by Guardian Press, 1976, Vol. II, Pages 160, 161.
Verse
22. "This thou hast seen, O Lord." Here is comfort.
Our heavenly Father knows all our sorrow. Omniscience is the saint's candle
which never goes out. A father will not long endure to see his child abused.
Shall not God avenge his own elect? "Keep not silence." Rebuke
thine enemies and mine, O Lord. A word will do it. Clear my character, comfort
my heart. "O Lord, be not far from me." Walk the furnace with
me. Stand in the pillory at my side. The sweet presence of God is the divine
cordial of the persecuted; his painful absence would be their seepest misery.
Reference: The Treasury of David, by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Published by
Guardian Press, 1976, Vol. II, Page 161.
Verse
23. "Stir up thyself." Be upon thy mettle. Prove
that thou art no indifferent witness to all this infamy. "Awake to my
judgement." Take the sceptre and summon the great assize; vindicate
justice, avenge oppression. Do not tarry as men do who sleep. "Even
unto my cause, my God and my Lord." He claims a nearness to his God,
he holds him with both hands; he leaves his case with the righteous Judge. He
begs that the suit may be brought on, heard, tried, and verdict given. Well is
it for a man when his conscience is so clear that he dares to make such an
appeal. Reference: The Treasury of David, by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Published
by Guardian Press, 1976, Vol. II, Page 161.
Verse
24. The appeal is here repeated; the plaintiff feels that the joy of
his accusers will be shortlived as soon as impartial justice rules. The
oppressors' wrong, the proud man's contumely, the fool's grimace—all, all will
cease when the righteous Lord sits down upon the judgment seat. Reference: The
Treasury of David, by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Published by Guardian Press,
1976, Vol. II, Page 161.
Verse
25. "Let them not say in their hearts, Ah, so would we have
it: let them not say, We have swallowed him up." Disappoint them of
their prey when their mouths are ready to swallow it. Saints are too dear a
morsel for the powers of evil; God will not give his sheep over to the wolfish
jaws of persecutors. Just when they are tuning their pipes to celebrate their
victory, they shall be made to laugh on the other side of their mouths. They
are all too sure, and too boastful; they reckon without their host: little do
they dream of the end which will be put to their scheming. Their bird shall be
flown, and they themselves shall be in the trap. The prayer of this text is a
promise. Even before the lips of the wicked can frame a speech of exultation,
they shall be disappointed; their heart-speech shall be forestalled, their
wishes frustrated, their knavish tricks exposed. Reference: The Treasury of
David, by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Published by Guardian Press, 1976, Vol. II,
Page 161.
Verse
26. Here is the eternal result of all the laborious and crafty
devices of the Lord's enemies. God will make little of them, though they "magnified
themselves;" he will shame them for shaming his people, bring them to
confusion for making confusion, pull off their fine apparel and give them a
beggardly suit of dishonour, and turn all their rejoicing into weeping and
wailing, and gnashing of teeth. Truly, the saints can afford to wait.
Reference: The Treasury of David, by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Published by
Guardian Press, 1976, Vol. II, Page 161.
Verse
27. "Let them shout for joy, and be glad, that favour my
righteous cause." Even those who could not render him active aid, but
in their hearts favoured him, David would have the Lord reward most abundantly.
Men of tender heart set great store by the good wishes and prayers of the
Lord's people. Jesus also prizes those whose hearts are with his cause. The day
is coming when shouts of victory shall be raised by all who are on Christ's
side, for the battle will turn, and the foes of truth shall be routed. "Yea,
let them say continually, Let the Lord be magnified." He would have
their gladness contributory to the divine glory; they are not to shout to
David's praise, but for the honour of Jehovah. Such acclamations may fitly be
continued throughout time and eternity. "Which hath pleasure in the
prosperity of his servant." They recognised David as the Lord's
servant, and saw with pleasure the Lord's favour to him. We can have no nobler
title than "servant of God," and no greater reward than for our
Master to delight in our prosperity. What true prosperity may be we are not always
best able to judge. We must leave that in Jesus' hand; he will not fail to rule
all things for our highest good. "For by his saints it stands confessed,
That what he does is always best." Reference: The Treasury of David, by
Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Published by Guardian Press, 1976, Vol. II, Page 161.
Verse
28. Unceasing praise is here vowed to the just and gracious God. From
morning till evening the grateful tongue would talk and sing, and glorify the
Lord. O for such a resolve carried out by us all! Reference: The Treasury of
David, by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Published by Guardian Press, 1976, Vol. II,
Page 162.
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
Whole
Psalm. Bonar entitles this Psalm, "The awful utterance of the
Righteous One regarding those that hate him without cause, "and he
makes the following remarks thereupon:—"Throughout the endless day of
eternity the Lord Jesus shall himself speak the Father's `praise, 'and shall
put marked emphasis on his `righteousness'—that righteousness which
shall have been exhibited, both in the doom of those who hated the offered
Redeemer, and in the salvation of those who received him. There is nothing in
all this wherein his own may not fully join, especially on that day when their
views of justice shall be far clearer and fuller than now. On that day we shall
be able to understand how Samuel could hew Agag in pieces, and the godly hosts
of Israel slay utterly in Canaan man and woman and child, at God's command. We
shall be able, not only fully agree in the doom, `Let them be confounded,
'etc., but even to sing, `Amen, Hallelujah, ' over the smoke of torment. Re
19:1-2. We should in some measure now be able to see every verse of this Psalm
in the spirit in which the Judge speaks it, we feeling ourselves his
assessors in judging the world. 1Co 6:2. We shall, at all events, be able to
use it on that day when what is written here shall be all accomplished." Andrew
A. Bonar.
Verse
1. Plead my cause, O God, with them that strive with me. 1. Doth the
world condemn thee for thy zeal in the service of God? Reproachfully scorn thee
for thy care to maintain good works? not blush to traduce thee with imputations
of preciseness, conceited singularity, pharisaical hypocrisy? Oh, but if thy
conscience condemn thee not all this while, if that be rectified by the sacred
word of God, if thou aim at his glory in pursuing thine own salvation, and side
not with the disturbers of the church, go on, good Christian, in the practice
of piety, discourage not thyself in thy laudable endeavours, but recount with
comfort that the Lord is thy judge 1Co 4:4, with a scio cui crediderim,
"I know whom I have believed." 2Ti 1:12.
2.
Art thou wrongfully adjudged in the erroneous courts of men? are truth and
righteousness gone aside from their proper places? Is equity neglected, and
poverty overlaid? Well, have patience awhile, cheer up thy fainting spirits,
there is a God that beholdeth the innocency of thy cause, unto whom thou hast
liberty to make thy last appeal: Plead my cause, O Lord, with them that strive
with me: fight against them that fight against me. Or,
3.
Art thou otherwise injured by the hands of malicious men? and doth a penurious
estate disable thee to sue for amends? Doth a Nimrod oppress thee? A Laban
defraud thee? A covetous landlord gripe thee? Well, yet take not the matter
into thine own hands by attempting unlawful courses; presume not to be judge in
thine own cause, for default of a present redress; but often remember what the
apostle taught his Thessalonians: "It is a righteous thing with God to
recompense tribulation to them that trouble you." Isaac Craven's Sermon
at Paul's Cross, 1630.
Verse
1. Plead, etc. More literally, litigate, O Lord, with them
that litigate against me, contend against them that contend with me; i.e.,
avenge me of mine adversaries. Daniel Cresswell, D.D., F.R.S., in "The
Psalms of David according to the Book of Common Prayer: with Critical and
Explanatory Notes," 1843.
Verse
2. Shield and buckler. The word rendered shield is in the
Hebrew text (Ngm), magen, which was a short buckler intended merely for
defence. The word rendered buckler is (hnu) tsinnah; it was
double the weight of the magen, and was carried by the infantry; the magen,
being lighter and more manageable, was used by the calvary. The tsinnah
answered to the scutum, and the magen to the clypeus, among the
Romans. The word tsinnah, means that kind of shield from the middle of
which there arose a large boss, surmounted by a dagger, and which was highly
useful both as a defensive and an offensive weapon in ancient warfare. James
Anderson, note to Calvin in loc.
Verse
3. Draw out the spear, and stop the way. The spear in the days of
Saul and David was a favourite weapon. (See 1Ch 11:1-47). A valiant man bravely
defending a narrow pass might singly with his lance keep back a pursuing host,
and give time for his friends to escape. Very remarkable were the feats of
valour of this sort performed in Oriental warfare. David would have his God
become his heroic defender, making his enemies pause. C. H. S.
Verse
3. Draw out; or, as the Hebrew phrase is, empty, that is, unsheath;
the like is of the sword. Ex 15:9 Le 26:33. Henry Ainsworth.
Verse
3. Say unto my soul, I am thy salvation. Observe, 1. That salvation
may be made sure to a man. David would never pray for that which could not be.
Nor would Peter charge us with a duty which stood not in possibility to be
performed. 2Pe 1:10. "Make your election sure." And to stop the
bawling throats of all cavilling adversaries, Paul directly proves it: "Know
ye not your own selves, how that Jesus Christ is in you, except ye be
reprobates?" 2Co 13:5. We may then know that Christ is in us. If Christ be
in us, we are in Christ; if we be in Christ, we cannot be condemned, for Ro
8:1, "There is no damnation to them which are in Christ Jesus." But I
leave this point that it may be sure, as granted; and come to ourselves, that
we may make it sure. The Papists deny this, and teach the contrary, that
salvation cannot be made sure; much good do it them, with their sorry and heartless
doctrine! If they make that impossible to any which God hath made easy for
many, "into their secret let not my soul come." Ge 49:6. Observe, 2.
That the best saints have desired to make their salvation sure. David that knew
it, yet entreats to know it more. "I know thou favourest me" Ps
41:11; yet here, still, dic animae, "Say unto my soul, I am thy
salvation." A man can never be too sure of his going to heaven. Thomas
Adams.
Verse
3. Say unto my soul. God may speak with his own voice; and
thus he gave assurance to Abraham, "Fear not, I am thy shield, and thy
exceeding great reward." Ge 15:
1.
If God speak comfort, let hell roar horror.
2.
He may speak by his works: actual mercies to us demonstrate that we are
in his favour, and shall not be condemned. "By this I know that thou
favourest me, because mine enemy doth not triumph over me."
3.
He may speak by his Son. "Come unto me, all ye that labour and are
heavy laden, and I will give you rest." Mt 11:28.
4.
He may speak by his Scripture; this is God's epistle to us, and his
letters patent, wherein are granted to us all the privileges of salvation. A
universal si quis; "Whosoever believes, and is baptised, shall be
saved."
5.
He may speak by his ministers, to whom he hath given "the ministry
of reconciliation." 2Co 5:19.
6.
He doth speak this by his Spirit: he "sendeth forth the Spirit of
his Son into our hearts, crying, Abba, Father."
Ga
4:6. By all these voices God says to his elect, I am your salvation. ...My.
There is no vexation to the vexation of the soul; so no consolation to the
consolation of the soul. ...Let this teach us to make much of this My.
Luther says there is great divinity in pronouns. The assurance that God will
save some is a faith incident to devils. The very reprobates may believe that
there is a book of election; but God never told them that their names were
written there. The hungry beggar at the feast house gate smells good cheer, but
the master doth not say, "This is provided for thee." It is small
comfort to the harbourless wretch to pass through a goodly city, and see many
glorious buildings, when he cannot say, Haec mea domus, I have a place
here. The beauty of that excellent city Jerusalem, built with sapphires,
emeralds, chrysolites, and such precious stones, the foundation and walls
whereof are perfect gold Re 21:1-27, affords a soul no comfort, unless he can
say, Mea civitas, I have a mansion in it. The all sufficient merits of
Christ do thee no good, unless, tua pars et portio, he be thy Saviour.
Happy soul that can say with the psalmist, "O Lord, thou art my
portion!" Let us all have oil in our lamps, lest if be then to buy, beg,
or borrow, we be shut out of doors like the fools, not worthy of entrance.
Pray, Lord, say unto my soul, I am thy salvation. ...Who? What? To whom?
When? WHO? The Lord! To the Lord David prays. He hath made a good
choice, for there is salvation in none other. "Thou hast destroyed
thyself, but in me is thy help." Ho 13:9. The world fails, the flesh
fails, the devil kills. Only the Lord saves. WHAT? Salvation. A special good
thing; every man's desire. I will give thee a lordship, saith God to Esau. I
will give thee a kingdom, saith God to Saul. I will give thee an apostleship,
saith God to Judas. But, I will be thy salvation, he says to David, and to none
but saints. TO WHOM? My salvation. Not others only, but "thine."
A man and a Christian are two creatures. He may be a man that hath reason and
outward blessings; he is only a Christian that hath faith, and part in the
salvation of Christ. God is plentiful salvation, but it is not ordinary to find
a cui—to whom. Much of heaven is lost for lack of a hand to apprehend
it. WHEN? In the present, "I am." Sum, non sufficit quod ero.
It is comfort to Israel in captivity that God says, Ero tua redemptio, I
will redeem thee; but the assurance that quiets the conscience is this, I am
thy salvation. As God said to Abraham, "Fear not, I am with
thee." Deferred hope faints the heart. Whatsoever God forbears to assure
us of, oh, pray we him not to delay this, "Lord, say to our soul, I am
thy salvation." Condensed from Thomas Adams.
Verse
4. Let them be confounded and put to shame. Here David begins his
imprecations, which yet, saith Theodoret, he doth not utter as cursing, but as
prophesying rather. If we shall at any time take upon us thus to imprecate (as
we may in some cases), we must see to it, first, that our cause be good;
secondly, that we do it not out of private revenge, but merely for the glory of
God; thirdly, that we utter not a syllable this way, but by the guidance of
God's good Spirit. John Trapp. Verses 4-8, 26. How are we to
account for such prayers for vengeance? We find them chiefly in four Psalms,
the seventh, thirty-fifth, sixty-ninth, and one hundred and ninth, and the
imprecations in these form a terrible climax. In the last no less than thirty
anathemas have been counted. Are these the mere outbursts of passionate and
unsanctified feeling, or are they the legitimate expression of a righteous
indignation? Are they to be excused as being animated by the "spirit of
Elias"? a spirit not unholy indeed, but far removed from the meekness and
gentleness of Christ; or are they the stereotyped forms in which the spirit of
devotion may utter itself? Are they Jewish only, or may they be Christian also?
An uninstructed fastidiousness, as it is well known, has made many persons
recoil from reading these Psalms at all. Many have found their lips falter when
they have been called to join in using them in the congregation, and have
either uttered them with bated breath and doubting heart, or have interpreted
them in a sense widely at variance with the letter. Some have tried to
reconcile them with a more enlightened conscience, by regarding such words not
as the expression of a wish, but as the utterance of a prediction; but the
Hebrew optative which is distinct enough from the simple future, absolutely
forbids this expedient. Others again would see in them expressions which may
lawfully be used in the soul's wrestling against spiritual enemies. And
finally, some would defend them as utterances of righteous zeal for God's
honour, and remind us that if we do not sympathise with such zeal, it may be
not because our religion is more pure, but because our hearts are colder.
Now
the real source of the difficulty lies in our not observing and bearing in mind
the essential difference between the Old Testament and the New. The older
dispensation was in every sense a sterner one than the new. The spirit of
Elias, though not an evil spirit, was not the spirit of Christ. "The Son
of Man came not to destroy men's lives, but to save them." Lu 9:56. And
through him his disciples are made partakers of the same spirit. But this was
not the spirit of the older economy. The Jewish nation had been trained in a
sterner school. It had been steeled and hardened by the discipline which had
pledged it to a war of extermination with idolaters; and however necessary such
a discipline might be, it would not tend to foster the gentler virtues; it is
conceivable how even a righteous man, under it, feeling it to be his bounden
duty to root out evil wherever he saw it, and identifying, as he did, his own
enemies with the enemies of Jehovah, might use language which to us appears
unnecessarily vindictive. To men so trained and taught, what we call "religious
toleration, "was a thing not only wrong, but absolutely inconceivable. It
may be quite true that we find revenge forbidden as directly in the Old
Testament as in the New, as, for instance, in Le 19:18, "Thou shalt not
avenge, "etc., though even there is a limitation, "against the
children of thy people." And it may be no less true that we find instances
of imprecation in the New; as when St. Paul says 2Ti 4:14, "Alexander the
coppersmith did me much evil: the Lord reward him according to his works,
"or when he exclaims Ac 23:3, "God will smite thee, thou whited wall;
"or, "If any man love not the Lord Jesus Christ, let him be
anathema."
But
even these expressions are very different from the varied, deliberate,
carefully constructed, detailed anathemas of the Psalms. And our Lord's
denunciations, to which Hengstenberg refers, are in no way parallel. They are
not curses upon individuals, but in fact solemn utterances of the great truth,
"Except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish." But after all, whatever
may be said of particular passages, the general tone which runs through the two
covenants, is unquestionably different. To deny this is not to honour Moses,
but to dishonour Christ. Mt 5:43 19:8. On the other hand, we must not forget
that these imprecations are not the passionate longings for personal revenge.
The singer undoubtedly sees in his enemies the enemies of God and his church.
They that are not with him are against God. And because the zeal of God's house
even consumes him, he prays that all the doers of iniquity may be rooted out.
The indignation therefore is righteous, though it may appear to us wrongly
directed, or excessive in its utterance. Once more, the very fact that a dark
cloud hid God's judgment in the world to come from the view of the Old
Testament saints, may be alleged in excuse of this their desire to see him take
vengeance on his enemies here. How deeply this problem of God's righteousness
exercised their minds is abundantly evident from numerous places in the Psalms.
They longed to see that righteousness manifested. It could be manifested, they
thought, only in the evident exaltation of the righteous, and the evident
destruction of the wicked here. Hence, with their eye always fixed on temporal
recompense, they could even wish and pray for the destruction of the ungodly.
The awful things of the world to come were to a great extent hid from their
eyes. Could they have seen these, then surely their prayer would have been not,
"Let the angel of the Lord persecute them," "Blot them out of
thy book;" but rather with him who hung upon the cross; "Father,
forgive them, for they know not what they do." J. J. Stewart Perowne.
Verses
4, 8, 26. David was about as devoid of vindictiveness as any public
character who can well be named. His conduct in relation to Saul, from first to
last displayed a singularly noble spirit, far removed from anything like the
lust of vengeance; and the meekness with which he endured the bitter reproaches
of Shimei, bore witness to the same spirit after his accession to the throne.
...When David's whole career is intelligently and fairly reviewed, it leaves on
the mind the impression of a man possessed of as meek and placable a temper as
was ever associated with so great strength of will, and such strong passions.
Even in the heats of sudden resentment, he was not apt to be hurried into deeds
of revenge. Such being the case, it would certainly have been a strange and
unaccountable thing if he had shown himself less the master of his own spirit
in poems composed in seasons of retirement and communion with God, especially
since these very poems express a keen sense of the heinousness of the sin that
has been laid to his charge. He can affirm regarding his implacable enemies,
"As for me, when they were sick, my clothing was sackcloth: I humbled my
soul with fasting; and my prayer returned into mine own bosom. I behaved myself
as though he had been my friend or brother: I bowed down heavily, as one that
mourneth for his mother." Ps 35:13-14. "O Lord, my God, if I have
done this; if there be iniquity in my hands; if I have rewarded evil unto him
that was at peace with me (yea, I have delivered him that without cause is mine
enemy): let the enemy persecute my soul, and take it; yea, let him tread down
my life upon the earth." Ps 7:3-5. Surely one ought to think twice before
putting on the imprecations an interpretation which would make them utterly
incongruous with these appeals, uttered almost in the same breath. William
Binnie, D.D.
Verse
5. As chaff. Literally, "As the thistledown." John
Morison.
Verse
6. Let their way be dark and slippery. A horrible way! Darkness
alone who feareth not? A slippery way alone who avoids not? In a dark and
slippery way, how shalt thou go? where set foot? These two ills are the great
punishments of men: darkness, ignorance; a slippery way, luxury. Let their
way be darkness and slipping; and let the angel of the Lord persecute them,
that they be not able to stand. For anyone in a dark and slippery way, when he
seeth that if he move his foot he will fall, and there is no light before his
feet, haply resolves to wait until light come; but here is the angel of the
Lord persecuting them. Augustine.
Verse
6. Slippery. Margin, as in Hebrew, slipperiness. This is a
circumstance which adds increased terror to the image. It is not only a dark
road, but a road made slippery by rains; a road where they are in danger every
moment of sliding down a precipice where they will be destroyed. Albert
Barnes.
Verse
7. They hid for me their net in a pit. As if David had said that
they had dug a pit, and covered and hid its mouth with a net, that I might pass
upon it and fall into it. Kimchi.
Verse
8. Let destruction come upon him at unawares. Or a storm,
such as is caused in the Eastern countries by a south wind, very sudden,
violent, and destructive. John Gill.
Verse
8. Let his net that he hath hid catch himself: into that very destruction
let him fall. By giving Ahithophel rope enough, the Lord preserved David
from perishing. Who will not admire that Goliath should be slain with his own
sword, and that proud Haman should hold Mordecai's stirrup, and be the herald
of his honour? The wicked shall be undone by their own doings; all the arrows
that they shoot at the righteous shall fall upon their own pates. Maxentius
built a false bridge to drown Constantine, but was drowned himself. Henry the
Third of France was stabbed in the very same chamber where he had helped to
contrive the cruel massacre of the French Protestants. And his brother, Charles
the Ninth, who delighted in the blood of the saints, had blood given him to
drink, for he was worthy. It is usual with God to take persecutors in the
snares and pits that they have laid for his people, many thousands in this
nation have experienced; and though Rome and her confederates are this day
laying snares and traps and digging pits for the righteous, who will rather
burn than bow to their Baal, yet do but wait and weep, and weep and wait a
little, and you shall see that the Lord will take them in the very snares and
pits that they have laid and digged for his people. Condensed from Thomas
Brooks.
Verse
8. Let the net that he hath hid catch himself. Thou fool, who
opposest thy counsels to those of the Most High. He who devises evil for
another, falls at last into his own pit, and the most cunning finds himself
caught by what he had prepared for another. But virtue without guile, erect
like the lofty palm, rises with greater vigour when it is oppressed. Pietro
Metastasio, 1698-1782.
Verse
9. And my soul shall be joyful in the Lord, etc. While some ascribe
to fortune, and others to their own skill, the praise of their deliverance from
danger, and few, if any, yield the whole praise of it to God, David here,
declares that he will not forget the favour which God had bestowed upon him. My
soul, says he, shall rejoice, not in a deliverance of the author of which it is
ignorant, but in the salvation of God. To place the matter in a still stronger
light, he assigns to his very bones the office of declaring the divine glory. As
if not content that his tongue should be employed in this, he applies all the
members of his body to the work of setting forth the praises of God. The style
if speaking which he employs is hyperbolical, but in this way he shows
unfeignedly that his love to God was so strong that he desired to spend his
sinews and bones in declaring the reality and truth of his devotion. John
Calvin.
Verse
10. All my bones, etc. These words contain the most vivid description
of the highest delight which by the whole soul and body should be experienced
and openly manifested. He mentions his soul Ps 35:9 and all his bones as about
to take part in the joy, to indicate that he most heartily and with his whole
body was about to rejoice, and that the joy which he would manifest would not
be of an ordinary character, but of the highest order, so that each several
bone should sing forth the praises of God. Herman Venema, 1697-1787.
Verse
10. All my bones. In the Scriptures emotions are generally ascribed
to the viscera, the bones are usually regarded as passive; in this place and Ps
51:8, and in these two places only, exulting joy is attributed to the bones.
Ordinary experience shows us that the intestines have sympathy with our
passionate excitements, but we have no consciousness of the bones becoming
sympathetically sensitive. The expression therefore is highly poetical, and
indicates that they joy intended would be far beyond ordinary and common
delight; it would be so profound that even the most callous part of the human
frame would partake of it. Doubtless the poetry has a basis of truth in it, for
though we may not perceive it, there is most assuredly a true and real sympathy
with our mental states in every particle of bone and muscle, as well as in
those tender organs which are more apparently affected. C. H. S. Thoughts
suggested by a passage in "Biblical Psychology, " by Franz Delitzsch.
Verse
10. All my bones. That is, whatsoever strength and vigour is in me
shall be spent in celebrating thy praises. Or, although I have nothing left me
but skin and bones so poor am I grown, yet I will not be wanting to the work. John
Trapp.
Verse
10. My bones are riving through my skin, and yet all my bones are
praising him. "I said, I am cast out of thy sight, but I will look again
towards thy holy temple." Thomas Halyburton. 1674-1711.
Verse
11. They laid to my charge things that I knew not. You will say, Why
does God permit wicked people to lay to the charge of the godly such things as
they are clear of: God if he pleased could prevent it, and stop the mouths of
the wicked, that they should not be able to speak against his children?
Answer—As all things work for the best to them that love God, so this works for
the good of God's people. God doth permit it for the good of his people, and thus
he frustrates the hopes of the wicked: they intend evil against the godly, and
God disposes of it for good. As Joseph said to his brethren, "You intended
evil against me, and God disposed of it for good; "so we may say to such
as falsely slander God's people, You intended evil against the people of God,
but God disposes of it for good. There is fivefold good that God brings out of
it to his people. First, God doth by this means humble them, and brings
them to examine what is amiss: so that though they be clear of that crime laid
to their charge, yet they will then examine whether there be nothing else amiss
betwixt God and them; they will search their hearts, and walk more humbly, and
cleave more close to the Lord.
Secondly, God doth by
this means bring them oftener upon their knees, to seek unto him, to plead
their cause, and to clear their innocency. How oft did the prophet speak unto
God when the wicked did falsely accuse him; how did he make his moan at the
throne of grace unto God, beseeching him to plead his cause, and to keep him
close in his way, that the wicked might not rejoice at his downfall! So when
God's people see that it is that which the wicked would have, that which is
their joy, to see the godly fall into such and such a sin; then the godly will
pray more earnestly with David, Lord, lead me in a right path because of my
observers; then they will be earnest with God to keep them from falling into
that sin that the wicked desire they might fall into; and this is a second good
that comes of it.
Thirdly, God doth us
the reproach of the wicked as a preventing medicine against that crime which
the wicked lay to their charge. The godly have unrenewed nature as well as
renewed, and if God should leave them never so little to themselves, they are not
their own keepers, they might fall into that sin which the wicked lay to their
charge: and every godly man and woman may say when they are falsely accused, It
is God's mercy that I did not fall into that sin they lay to my charge. God
doth use wicked people's tongues as a warning against such a sin, that when
they see how the wicked joy at a brat of their own hatching, then they
consider, if the wicked thus joy without a cause, what would they do if they
had just cause? Well, by the help of God this shall be a warning to me for ever
to watch against that sin: for the time to come I will pray more against that
particular sin than I have done, and watch more against that sin than I have
done; through God's help they shall never have occasion to rejoice over me in
that kind. Truly, I verily believe many a child of God can say by experience, I
never should have prayed and watched against such a sin so much, had not God
used the tongues of the wicked as preventing physic: I know not my own heart,
but that I might have fallen into such and such a sin had not God by this means
hedged up my way with thorns; and this is the third good comes of it.
Fourthly, God doth by
this means exercise the graces of his people by letting them undergo bad report
as well as good report: he tries whether they will cleave close to him in all
conditions, as Ps 94:15-17.
Fifthly, God doth by
this means teach them how to judge of others when they are falsely accused. For
the time to come they will not receive a false report against their neighbour;
they will know the truth of a thing before they believe it, and they know how
to comfort others in the like condition; and thus God disposes of it for good,
and thus God makes the wicked the servant of his people in that very thing
which the wicked think to wrong them most in; for he uses the wicked as the rod
and wisp, to scour off the rust of their graces and to correct their security;
and when the rod hath done its office then it is thrown into the fire; and thus
you see how God disposes of the wicked's false accusations of his people for
good. Zephaniah Smyth's Sermon, "The Malignant's Plot," 1647.
Verse
12. They rewarded me evil for good. For the good David did in killing
Goliath, and slaying his ten thousands of Philistines, and thereby saving his
king and country, Saul and his courtiers envied him, and sought to slay him: so
our Lord Jesus Christ, for all the good he did to the Jews, by healing their
bodies of diseases, and preaching the gospel to them for the benefit of their
souls, was rewarded with reproaches and persecutions, and at last with the
shameful death of the cross; and in like manner are his people used, but this
is an evil that shall not go unpunished: see Pr 17:13. John Gill.
Verse
12. To the spoiling of my soul. They robbed not his body of goods but
his soul of consolation. They bereaved his soul (that is the word), like a
widow who loses her children in whom she delighted and found succour. They were
not content with injuring his estate, but they were for ruining the man himself
by their undeserved malice, they attacked him in name and reputation, which
were as dear to him as his sons and daughters, or even as his soul. It is
evermore an injury to the soul to be attacked with slander, it puts a man into
a warring attitude, endangers his peace of mind, imperils his enjoyment of
quiet contemplation, and tends to interrupt his communion with God. Thus the
spiritual nature is despoiled and suffers bereavement. C. H. S.
Verse
13. My prayer returned into, or was directed to, my bosom. Of the
many interpretations that are given of this passage, that appears to me the
most probable which derives it from the posture of the worshipper; who standing
with his head inclined downward toward his bosom, turned away his attention
from all external objects, and uttered his mournful and earnest requests, as if
they were directed to his own bosom. Such a posture of devotion is in use both
among Jews and Mohammedans. Koeler in Repertor. Lit. Orient.; and Reland de
Relig. Mohammedica, quoted by Walford in loc.
Verse
13. (last clause). We may read it thus: Let my prayer
return into my bosom; that is, I wished no worse to them than to myself:
let me receive of God such good as I prayed for them. See Ps 79:12. Henry
Ainsworth.
Verse
14. For his mother. On account of the plurality of wives in an
Eastern household, the sons are usually far more attached to their mother than
their father. Their father they share with a numerous band of half brothers,
who are envious of them, or of whom they are jealous, but their mother is all
their own, with her they are brought up in childhood; she takes their part in
youth, in the numerous battles of the harem; and on their part when they are
grown up, they love her intensely, and hence their mourning at her decease is
of the bitterest kind. C. H. S.
Verse
14. His mother. Mahomet was once asked what relation had the
strongest claim upon our affection and respect; when he instantly replied,
"The mother, the mother, the mother."
Verse
14. (last clause). Bewaileth his mother: mourneth at her
funeral. In this case the affections are most strong. Therefore the priests
were permitted to mourn for such. Le 21:1-3. Henry Ainsworth.
Verse
15. But in mine adversity they rejoiced. etc. Do not glory in your
neighbour's ruins. The firefly leaps and dances in the fire, and so do many
wicked men rejoice in the sufferings of others. Such as rejoice in the
sufferings of others are sick of the devil's disease; but from that disease the
Lord deliver all your souls. It is sad to insult over those whom God hath
humbled; it is high wickedness to triumph over those to whom God hath given a
cup of astonishment to drink. Such as make the desolations of their neighbours
to be the matter either of their secret repast, or open exultation, such may
fear that the very dregs of divine wrath are reserved for them. It is bad
playing upon the harp because others have been put to hang their harps upon the
willows. We must not pray with him in the tragedy, that it may rain calamities;
nor with Clemens' Gnostic, Give me calamities that I may glory in them. There
cannot be a greater evidence of a wicked heart, than for a man to be merry
because others are in misery. "He that is glad at calamities (that is, at
the calamities of others) shall not be unpunished" Pr 17:5. If God be God,
such as congratulate our miseries instead of condoling them, shall be sure to
be punished with the worst of punishments; for such do not only sin against the
law of grace, but also against the very law of nature; the law of nature
teaching men to sympathise with those that are in misery, and not to rejoice
over them because of their miseries. O sirs, do not make other's mourning your
music, do not make other's tears your wine; as you would not be made drunk at
last with the wine of astonishment. Thomas Brooks.
Verse
15. But in mine adversity they rejoiced, etc. Marvellous prophecy of
the cross! second only, if indeed second, to that in the twenty-second Psalm.
Still closer to the history if we take the Vulgate: the scourges were
gathered together upon me. Even so, O Lord Jesus, the ploughers ploughed
upon thy back, and made long furrows: precious furrows for us, where are sown
patience for the present life, and glory in the next; where are sown hope that
maketh not ashamed, and love that many waters cannot quench. "The very
abjects." Even those worst of abjects, who said, "God, I thank
thee that I am not as other men are; "who had set the poor sinner before
the Lord, with their "Moses in the law commanded that such should be stoned."
"Making mouths at me." And is it not wonderful that, well
knowing the prophecy, yet the chief priests and scribes should have so
fulfilled it, as that it should be written concerning them, "They that
passed by mocked him, wagging their heads." Lewis de Grenada,
1504-1588.
Verse
15. In mine adversity they rejoiced. Now, as men often relent at
seeing the misfortunes of their enemies, so that they cease to hate or
persecute those who are already miserably wretched, it was an evidence of the
very cruel and fierce spirit by which David's former friends were actuated
against him, when, upon seeing him cast down and afflicted, they were rather by
this incited furiously and insolently to assail him. John Calvin.
Verse
15. The abjects. The very abjects (Prayer Book Version). The
Hebrew word Nechim, thus translated, comes from a verb signifying to
be smitten. Hence, in the Septuagint it is rendered scourges. But it
may also be rendered, with Jerome, smiters, and may mean smiting with
the tongue. Compare Jer 18:18. Another of its meanings is, according to
Buxtorf, the wry legged, the lame; and so it is used in 2Sa 4:4 9:3
whence the epithet of Necho was given to one of the Pharaohs who halted
in his gait. Our translators seem to have understood the word in this last
sense, as a term of contempt. Daniel Cresswell.
Verse
15. David, having showed how compassionate he was to his enemies in
their affliction Ps 35:14, he presently shows Ps 35:15, how uncompassionate, or
barbarously cruel rather, his enemies were to him in his. Abjects are
vile persons, men smitten in their estates and credits; yea, often as slaves or
ill servants smitten with cudgels or whips. So a learned translator renders the
Psalm, The smitten gathered against me; that is, vile men who deserve to
be beaten and cudgelled. Joseph Caryl.
Verse
16. With hypocritical mockers in feasts. Some cannot be merry, but it
must be with Scripture; if they want a little diversion, the saints must be the
subject of their discourse! they can vent their profane jests upon the word of
God; this is their pastime over their cups upon the ale bench. How ready they
are with their contumelious reflections; they have learnt their father's
dialect, they are accusers of the brethren, their speech betrays them to be
Hellians. You know that in ordinary, we can tell what countryman a person is by
his speech, every country having almost a peculiar idiom; so it is here, these
scoffers at religion by speaking the language of hell, let us understand whence
they are. They have, it may be, a little wit, which they set off with a sort of
an air in rhetorical raillery, and oh, how quick and sharp when they are upon
this subject! These scoffing Ishmaelites are seated in the devil's chair,
somewhat above their brethren in iniquity, as most deserving the place; and
there is less ground to hope that such persons will be savingly wrought upon
who arrive to such a height is sin as to make a mock of it, and to sport with
holiness, than of others. Persons are got a great way towards hell when they mock
at what is serious, and that with delight. This the Lord will visit for in his
due time; for he knows who they are that so dishonour him by reproaching them
that are his. Oliver Heywood.
Verse
16. Hypocritical mockers in feasts. (gwam ygal ypnhb) Very difficult.
The word (gwum), in 1Ki 17:12, the only other passage where it occurs, means
"a cake." Hence (gwam ygal) is interpreted by Gesenius and others to
mean, hangers on at the table of the rich (literally "cake mockers"),
whose business it was, by witticisms and buffoonery to make entertainment for
the guests, and who got their dinner in return, like the qwisokolakez,
knisololakes, and the Medieval Lat. buccellarii. Then the words
would mean, "Amongst the most profane." J. J. Stewart Perowne.
(Would not our word loafers be somewhat analogous to these cake eaters
of antiquity!) C. H. S.
Verse
16. Hypocritical mockers. David aggravates the sin of those jeering
companions who made him their table talk, and could not taste their cheer
except seasoned with some salt jest quibbled out at him, with this, that they
were hypocritical mockers; they did it slily, and wrapped up their
scoffs, it is like in such language as might make some think, who did not well
observe them, that they applauded him. There is a way of commending which some
have learned to use when they mean to cast the greatest scorn upon those they
hate bitterly, and these hypocritical mockers deserve the chair to be given
them from all other scorners. William Gurnall.
Verse
16. Mockers in feasts. If it were known at a feast that there was any
one present or absent, whom the host disliked, it was customary for the guests
to "make fun of them, "and use sarcastic language respecting them.
These are the hypocritical mockers in feasts. John Gadsby. Verse 17.
Satan no sooner spies our wanderings, but he presently runs with a complaint to
God, filing bills against us in the star-chamber of heaven, where the matter
would go hard with us, but for the Great Lord Chancellor of peace, our Advocate
Jesus Christ. As God keeps all our tears in a bottle, and registereth the very
groans of our holy passion in a book, so Satan keeps a record of our sins, and
solicits justice against us. Were God like man, subject to passions, or
incensible by the suggestions of the common barrator, woe were us. But he will
hear one son of truth before ten thousand fathers of lying. No matter what the
plaintiff libelleth, when the judge acquitteth. We have forfeited our estates
by treason, and the busy devil begs us; but there is one that steps in, and
pleads a former grant, and that both by promise and purchase. ["Lord,
rescue my soul from their destructions, my darling from the lions."] Lord
Jesus, challenge thy own; let not Satan enter upon by force or fraud, what thou
hast bought with thine own blood. [Thomas Adams.]
Verse
17. "My darling." In Poole's Synopsis the critics
explain this name for the soul, as my only one, my solitary one, desolate,
deserted, and destitute of human hope. Such is the soul under sore affliction.
See Psalm 22:21. ["From the lions."] Daniel in the den was literally
where David was spiritually. Shut in amongst fierce, cruel, and angry
creatures, and himself defenceless, having no weapon but prayer, no helper but
the Lord. The people of God may be exposed to the lions of hell, and their
roarings may grievously affright them; but the soul which is their
"darling" is also God's dear one, and therefore they shall be
rescued. [C. H. S.] Reference: The Treasury of David, by Charles Haddon
Spurgeon. Published by Guardian Press, 1976, Vol. II, Page 171.
Verse
19. "Wink with the eye." Showing pleasure in their
eyes because of my evil. [Francis Vatablus,] 1545
Verse
19. "Wink the eye." This was a sign which malicious
persons made to each other when the object of their malice was gained,
scornfully twisting their eyes together. The Hebrew word here has no
sufficiently expressive substitute in English. [Benjamin Weiss.] Reference: The
Treasury of David, by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Published by Guardian Press,
1976, Vol. II, Page 171.
Verse
21. "Our eye hath seen." [Eye] for [eyes], unless we
would say that all the wicked are so conjoined, that they may seem to have but
one eye, heart, head. [John Trapp.]
Verse
21. Yet, O ye saints, divulge not these things to wicked men; whisper
them softly one to another, with fear and trembling, lest some profane wretch
or other overhear you, and take that for encouragement that was only meant for
caution. What is more common than for the vilest sinners to plead for their
excuse, or warrant rather, the foul miscarriages of God's dearest saints? Thus
the drunkard looks upon holy Noah as a pot-companion, whereby he discovers his
nakedness in a worse sense than ever Cham did; and thus the unclean sensualist
quotes David, and calls him in to be the patron of his debauchery. Certainly,
if their be any grief that can overcast the perfect joys of the saints in
heaven, it is that their names and examples should, to the great dishonour of
God, be produced by wicked and sinful men, to countenance their grossest sins
and wickednesses. But let such know, that God hath set up these in his church
to be monuments of his mercy, to declare to humble and penitent sinners how
great sins he can pardon; yet if any hereupon embolden themselves in sin,
instead of being set up as monuments of mercy, God will set them up as pillars
of salt. [Ezekiel Hopkins (Bishop).]
Verse
21. He who rejoices in another's fall rejoices in the devil's
victory. [Ambrose, quoted in Nichol's Proverbs.]
Verses
21, 22. They gape and drawe their mouthes in scornful wise. And crie,
fie, fie, wee sawe it with our eyes. But thou their deed, (O Lord!) dost also
see; Then bee not silent soe, nor farr from mee.[Sir John P Davies.] Reference:
The Treasury of David, by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Published by Guardian Press,
1976, Vol. II, Page 172.
Verse
23. "My God and my Lord." The cry of Thomas when he
saw the wounds of Jesus. If he did not count our Lord to be divine, neither
does David here ascribe Deity to Jehovah, for there is no difference except in
the order of the words and the tongue in which they were spoken, the meaning is
identical. What words they are, with their two eyes seeing Jehovah in two
aspects yet as one, grasping him with two hands in the double "my" to
one heart for the word is but one, bowing before him on both knees to worship
him in lowliest reverence. Well might Nouet, in his exposition of the words as
used by Thomas, exclaim, "Oh, sweet word, I will say it all my life long;
I will say it in the hour of death; I will say it in eternity." [C. H. S.]
Reference: The Treasury of David, by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Published by
Guardian Press, 1976, Vol. II, Page 172.
Verse
24. "O Lord my God." O Jehovah my God; here is
another precious word. He takes Jehovah to be his God, in opposition to those
who make idols, or riches, or their own lusts their God. He claims a full
possession of all that is in the great I AM. Even though he views him as a
judge he lays the hand of faith upon his God, and flinches not even before the
blaze of his righteousness. It is a noble word, a grand utterance of faith; he
who can pronounce that word "my" from his inmost soul in such a
connection may well laugh to scorn all his enemies. [C. H. S.] Reference: The
Treasury of David, by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Published by Guardian Press,
1976, Vol. II, Page 172.
Verse
25. "Let them not say we have swallowed him up." And
even if they could, like Jonah's whale;e, they would soon be sickened of their
feast. A living child of God were more easily swallowed than digested by the
malice of hell. [C. H. S.] Reference: The Treasury of David, by Charles Haddon
Spurgeon. Published by Guardian Press, 1976, Vol. II, Page 172.
Verses
4-8, 26. How are we to account for such prayers for vengeance? We find
them chiefly in four Psalms, the seventh, thirty-fifth, sixty-ninth, and
one-hundred and ninth, and the imprecations in these form a terrible climax. In
the last no less than thirty anathemas have been counted. Are these the mere
outbursts of passionate and unsanctified feeling, or are they the legitimate
expression of a righteous indignation? Are they to be excused as being animated
by the "spirit of Elias"? a spirit not unholy indeed, but far removed
from the meekness and gentleness of Christ; or are they the stereotyped forms
in which the spirit of devotion may utter itself? Are they Jewish only, or may
they be Christian also? An uninstructed fastidiousness, as it is well known,
has made many persons recoil from reading these Psalms at all. Many have found
their lips falter when they have been called to join in using them in the
congregation, and have either uttered them with bated breath and doubting
heart, or have interpreted them in a sense widely at variance with the letter.
Some have tried to reconcile them with a more enlightened conscience, by
regarding such words not as the expression of a wish, but as the utterance of a
prediction; but the Hebrew optative which is distinct enough from the simple
future, absolutely forbids this expedient. Others again would see in them
expressions which may lawfully be used in the soul's wrestling against
spiritual enemies. And finally, some would defend them as utterances of
righteous zeal for God's honour, and remind us that if we do not sympathise
with such zeal, it may be not because our religion is more pure, but because
our hearts are colder. Now the real source of the difficulty lies in our not
observing and bearing in mind the essential difference between the Old
Testament and the New. The older dispensation was in every sense a sterner one
than the new. The spirit of Elias, though not an evil spirit, was not the
spirit of Christ. "The Son of Man came not to destroy men's lives, but to
save them." Luke 9:56. And through him his disciples are made partakers of
the same spirit. But this was not the spirit of the older economy. The Jewish
nation had been trained in a sterner school. It had been steeled and hardened
by the discipline which had pledged it to a war of extermination with
idolaters; and however necessary such a discipline might be, it would not tend
to foster the gentler virtues; it is conceivable how even a righteous man,
under it, feeling it to be his bounden duty to root out evil wherever he saw
it, and identifying, as he did, his own enemies with the enemies of Jehovah,
might use language which to us appears unnecessarily vindictive. To men so
trained and taught, what we call "religious toleration," was a thing
not only wrong, but absolutely inconceivable. It may be quite true that we find
revenge forbidden as directly in the Old Testament as in the New, as, for
instance, in Leviticus 19:18, "Thou shalt not avenge," etc., though
even there is a limitation, "against the children of thy people." And
it may be no less true that we find instances of imprecation in the New; as
when St. Paul says (2 Timothy 4:14), "Alexander the coppersmith did me
much evil: the Lord reward him according to his works," or when he
exclaims (Acts 23:3), "God will smite thee, thou whited wall;" or,
"If any man love not the Lord Jesus Christ, let him be anathema." But
even these expressions are very different from the varied, deliberate,
carefully constructed, detailed anathemas of the Psalms. And our Lord's
denunciations, to which Hengstenberg refers, are in no way parallel. They are
not curses upon individuals, but in fact solemn utterances of the great truth,
"Except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish." But after all,
whatever may be said of particular passages, the general tone which runs
through the two covenants, is unquestionably different. To deny this is not to
honour Moses, but to dishonour Christ. Matthew 5:43; 19:8. On the other hand,
we must not forget that these imprecations are not the passionate longings for
personal revenge. The singer undoubtedly sees in his enemies the enemies of God
and his church. They that are not with him are against God. And because the
zeal of God's house even consumes him, he prays that all the doers of iniquity
may be rooted out. The indignation therefore is righteous, though it may appear
to us wrongly directed, or excessive in its utterance. Once more, the very fact
that a dark cloud hid God's judgment in the world to come from the view of the
Old Testament saints, may be alleged in excuse of this their desire to see him
take vengeance on his enemies here. How deeply this problem of God's
righteousness exercised their minds is abundantly evident from numerous places
in the Psalms. They longed to see that righteousness manifested. It could be
manifested, they thought, only in the evident exaltation of the righteous, and
the evident destruction of the wicked here. Hence, with their eye always fixed
on temporal recompense, they could even wish and pray for the destruction of
the ungodly. The awful things of the world to come were to a great extent hid from
their eyes. Could they have seen these, then surely their prayer would have
been not, "Let the angel of the Lord persecute them," "Blot them
out of thy book;" but rather with him who hung upon the cross;
"Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do." [J. J.
Stewart Perowne.]
Verses
4, 8, 26. David was about as devoid of vindictiveness as any public
character who can well be named. His conduct in relation to Saul, from first to
last displayed a singularly noble spirit, far removed from anything like the
lust of vengeance; and the meekness with which he endured the bitter reproaches
of Shimei, bore witness to the same spirit after his accession to the throne. .
. . . When David's whole career is intelligently and fairly reviewed, it leaves
on the mind the impression of a man possessed of as meek and placable a temper
as was ever associated with so great strength of will, and such strong
passions. Even in the heats of sudden resentment, he was not apt to be hurried
into deeds of revenge. Such being the case, it would certainly have been a
strange and unaccountable thing if he had shown himself less the master of his
own spirit in poems composed in seasons of retirement and communion with God,
especially since these very poems express a keen sense of the heinousness of
the sin that has been laid to his charge. He can affirm regarding his
implacable enemies, "As for me, when they were sick, my clothing was
sackcloth: I humbled my soul with fasting; and my prayer returned into mine own
bosom. I behaved myself as though he had been my friend or brother: I bowed
down heavily, as one that mourneth for his mother." Psalm 35:13, 14.
"O Lord, my God, if I have done this; if there be iniquity in my hands; if
I have rewarded evil unto him that was at peace with me (yea, I have delivered
him that without cause is mine enemy): let the enemy persecute my soul, and
take it; yea, let him tread down my life upon the earth." Psalm 7:3 - 5.
Surely one ought to think twice before putting on the imprecations an interpretation
which would make them utterly incongruous with these appeals, uttered almost in
the same breath. [William Binnie, D.D.] Reference: The Treasury of
David, by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Published by Guardian Press, 1976, Vol. II,
Pages 164 - 166.
Verse
27. See how the hearts of the saints have been drawn out against
their persecutors. Prayers are the arms that in times of persecution the saints
have still had recourse to. The Romans being in great distress were put so hard
to it, that they were fain to take the weapons out of the temple of their gods
to fight with their enemies, and so they overcame them: so when the people of
God have been hard put to it by reason of afflictions and persecutions, the
weapons that they have fled to have been prayers and tears, and with these they
have overcome their persecutors. [Thomas Brooks.] Reference: The
Treasury of David, by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Published by Guardian Press,
1976, Vol. II, Pages 172, 173.
Verse
28. "My tongue shall speak of thy righteousnesses and of thy
praise all the day long." See now I have made a discourse something
longer; ye are wearied. Who endureth to praise God all the day long? I will
suggest a remedy whereby thou mayest praise God all the day long if thou wilt.
Whatever thou dost, do well, and thou hast praised God. When thou singest a
hymn, thou praisest God, but what doth thy tongue, unless thy heart also praise
him? Hast thou ceased from singing hymns, and departed that thou mayest refresh
thyself? Be not drunken, and thou hast praised God. Dost thou go away to sleep?
Rise not to do evil, and thou hast praised God. Dost thou transact business? Do
no wrong, and thou hast praised God. Dost thou till thy field? Raise not
strife, and thou hast praised God. In the innocency of thy works prepare
thyself to praise God all the day long. [Augustine.] Reference: The
Treasury of David, by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Published by Guardian Press,
1976, Vol. II, Page 173.
HINTS TO THE
VILLAGE PREACHER
Verse
1. Jesus our Advocate and Champion; our friend in the courts of
heaven and the battles of earth.
Verse
2. Jesus armed as the defender of the faithful.
Verse
3. Enemies kept at arm's length. How the Lord does this, and the
blessedness of it to us.
Verse
3. (last clause). Full assurance. An assurance positive,
personal, spiritual, present, divine, complete, coming by a word from God.
Verse
3. (last clause). Heaven made sure. Thomas Adams' Sermon.
Verse
4. The everlasting confusion of the devil.
Verse
5. Let them be as chaff before the wind. They were swift enough to
attack, let them be as swift to flee. Let their own fears and the alarms of
their consciences unman them so that the least breeze of trouble shall carry
them hither and thither. Ungodly men are worthless in character, and light in
their behaviour, being destitute of solidity and fixedness; it is but just that
those that make themselves chaff should be treated as such. When this
imprecation is fulfilled in graceless men, they will find it an awful thing to
be for ever without rest, without peace of mind, or stay of soul, hurried from
fear to fear, and from misery to misery. And let the angel of the Lord chase
them. Fallen angels shall haunt them, good angels shall afflict them. To be
pursued by avenging spirits will be the lot of those who delight in
persecution. Observe the whole scene as the psalmist sketches it: the furious
foe is first held at bay, then turned back, then driven to headlong flight, and
chased by fiery messengers from whom there is no escape, while his pathway
becomes dark and dangerous, and his destruction overwhelming.
Verse
6. The horrible pilgrimage of the ungodly.
Verse
6. The trinity of dangers in the pathway of the wicked, their way
dark with ignorance, and slippery with temptation, while behind them is the
avenger.
Verse
8. Destruction at unawares, an awful topic.
Verse
9. Joy in God and in his salvation.
Verse
10. A matchless God, and his matchless grace—these are the themes. An
experienced heart, thoroughly quickened—this is the songster; and from this
cometh matchless music. The music of a shattered harp.
Verse
11. The meanness, cruelty, sinfulness, and commonness of slander.
Verse
12. How a soul may be robbed.
Verse
13. Christian sympathy even for the froward.
Verse
13. (last clause). Personal benefit of intercessory prayer.
Verses
13-14. Compassion to the sick. C. Simeon.
Verse
15. The shameful conspiracy of men against our Lord Jesus at his
passion.
Verse
17. The limit of divine endurance. Reference: The Treasury of
David, by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Published by Guardian Press, 1976, Vol. II,
Page 173.
Verse
18. "I will give thee thanks in the great congregation."
Notable deliverances must be recorded, and their fame emblazoned. All the
saints should be informed of the Lord's goodness. The theme is worthy of the
largest assembly, the experience of a believer is a subject fit for an
assembled universe to hear of. Most men publish their griefs, good men should
proclaim their mercies. ["I will praise thee among much people."]
Among friends and foes will I glorify the God of my salvation. Praise—personal
praise, public praise, perpetual praise—should be the daily revenue of the King
of heaven. Thus, for the second time, David's prayer ends in praise, as indeed
all prayers should. Reference: The Treasury of David, by Charles Haddon
Spurgeon. Published by Guardian Press, 1976, Vol. II, Page 159.
Verse
18. The duty, blessedness, and seasonableness of public praise.
Reference: The Treasury of David, by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Published by
Guardian Press, 1976, Vol. II, Page 173.
Verse
19. He earnestly prays that as they have no cause for their enmity,
they may have no cause for triumph either in his folly, sin, or overthrow.
["Neither let them wink with the eye that hate me without a cause."]
The winking of the eye was the low-bred sign of congratulation at the ruin of
their victim, and it may also have been one of their scornful gestures as they
gazed upon him whom they despised. To cause hatred is the mark of the wicked,
to suffer it causelessly is the lot of the righteous. God is the natural
Protector of all who are wronged, and he is the enemy of all oppressors.
Reference: The Treasury of David, by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Published by
Guardian Press, 1976, Vol. II, Page 160.
Verse
22. Omniscience pleaded, a word sought for, presence requested,
action entreated, affiance urged as a claim. Reference: The Treasury of David,
by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Published by Guardian Press, 1976, Vol. II, Page
173.
Verse
25. The ungodly man's delight, and the righteous, man's refuge.
Reference: The Treasury of David, by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Published by
Guardian Press, 1976, Vol. II, Page 173.
Verse
26. The convict dress of the wicked - ["clothed with
shame,"] etc. Reference: The Treasury of David, by Charles Haddon
Spurgeon. Published by Guardian Press, 1976, Vol. II, Page 173.
Verse
27 (last clause). What is that prosperity in which the Lord hath
pleasure? Reference: The Treasury of David, by Charles Haddon Spurgeon.
Published by Guardian Press, 1976, Vol. II, Page 173.
Verse
28. A blessed theme, a fitting tongue, an endless speech.
── C.H. Spurgeon《The Treasury of David》