| Back to Home Page | Back to Book Index
|
Psalm Fifty-four
Psalm 54
Chapter Contents
David complains of the malice of his enemies. (1-3)
Assurance of the Divine favour and protection. (4-7)
Commentary on Psalm 54:1-3
(Read Psalm 54:1-3)
God is faithful, though men are not to be trusted, and it
is well for us it is so. David has no other plea to depend upon than God's
name, no other power to depend upon than God's strength, and these he makes his
refuge and confidence. This would be the effectual answer to his prayers.
Looking unto David, betrayed by the men of Judah, and to Jesus, betrayed by one
of his apostles, what can we expect from any who have not set God before them,
save ingratitude, treachery, malice, and cruelty? What bonds of nature, or
friendship, or gratitude, or covenant, will hold those that have broken through
the fear of God? Selah; Mark this. Let us set God before us at all times; for
if we do not, we are in danger of despair.
Commentary on Psalm 54:4-7
(Read Psalm 54:4-7)
Behold, God is mine Helper. If we are for him, he is for
us; and if he is for us, we need not fear. Every creature is that to us, and no
more, which God makes it to be. The Lord will in due time save his people, and
in the mean time he sustains them, and bears them up, so that the spirit he has
made shall not fail. There is truth in God's threatenings, as well as in his
promises; sinners that repent not, will find it so to their cost. David's
present deliverance was an earnest of further deliverance. He speaks of the
completion of his deliverance as a thing done, though he had as yet many
troubles before him; because, having God's promise for it, he was as sure of it
as if it was done already. The Lord would deliver him out of all his troubles.
May he help us to bear our cross without repining, and at length bring us to
share his victories and glory. Christians never should suffer the voice of
praise and thanksgiving to cease in the church of the redeemed.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Psalms》
Psalm 54
Verse 1
[1] Save me, O God, by thy name, and judge me by thy
strength.
Name — By thy own strength.
Judge — Plead my cause.
Verse 3
[3] For strangers are risen up against me, and oppressors
seek after my soul: they have not set God before them. /*Selah*/.
Strangers — The Zephites, whom, though
Israelites, he calls strangers in regard of their barbarous and perfidious
carriage.
Verse 5
[5] He shall reward evil unto mine enemies: cut them off in
thy truth.
Thy truth — Whereby thou art engaged to
fulfil thy promises and threatenings.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Psalms》
Exposition
Explanatory Notes and Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village Preacher
Other Works
TITLE. To the
Chief Musician on Neginoth. The music was to be that of stringed instruments.
Variety is to be studied in our tunes, and in all other matters relating to
sacred song. Monotony is often the death of congregational praise. Providence
is varied, and so should our recording songs be. Maschil. We are to
learn and to teach by what we sing. Edification must not be divorced from
psalmody. A Psalm of David. David's productions were as plentiful as
they are profitable. His varied life was for our benefit, for from it we derive
these hymns, which at this hour are as fresh and as precious as when he wrote
them. When the Ziphims came and said to Saul, Doth not David hide himself
with us? To curry favour with Saul they were guilty of gross inhospitality.
What cared they what innocent blood was shed so that they earned the graceless
monarch's smile! David came quietly among them, hoping for a little rest in his
many flights, but they deserted him in his solitary abode, and betrayed him. He
turns to God in prayer, and so strong was his faith that he soon sang himself
into delightful serenity.
DIVISION. From Ps
54:1-3, where the Selah makes a pause for us, the psalmist pleads with God, and
then in the rest of the song, laying aside all doubt, he chants a hymn of
joyful triumph. The vigour of faith is the death of anxiety, and the birth of
security.
EXPOSITION
Verse
1. Save me, O God. Thou art my Saviour; all around me are my
foes and their eager helpers. No shelter is permitted me. Every land rejects me
and denies me rest. But thou, O God, wilt give me refuge, and deliver me from
all my enemies. By thy name, by thy great and glorious nature. Employ all thine
attributes for me. Let every one of the perfections which are blended in thy
divine name work for me. Is not thine honour pledged for my defence? And judge
me by thy strength. Render justice to me, for none else will or can. Thou canst
give me efficient justice, and right my wrongs by thine omnipotence. We dare
not appeal to God in a bad cause, but when we know that we can fearlessly carry
our cause before his justice we may well commit it to his power.
Verse
2. Hear my prayer, O God. This has ever been the defence of
saints. As long as God hath an open ear we cannot be shut up in trouble. All
other weapons may be useless, but all prayer is evermore available. No enemy
can spike this gun. Give ear to the words of my mouth. Vocal prayer helps the
supplicant, and we keep our minds more fully awake when we can use our tongues
as well as our hearts. But what is prayer if God hear not? It is all one
whether we babble nonsense or plead arguments if our God grant us not a
hearing. When his case had become dangerous, David could not afford to pray out
of mere custom, he must succeed in his pleadings, or become the prey of his
adversary.
Verse
3. For strangers are risen up against me. Those who had no
cause for ill will had gone against him; persons to whom he could have given no
offence, for they were strangers to him. They were aliens to his God also, and
should these be allowed to worry and destroy him. A child may well complain to
his father when strangers come in to molest him. What right have they to
interfere? Let them leave off meddling and mind their own concerns. And
oppressors seek after my soul. Saul, that persecuting tyrant, had stamped his
own image on many more. Kings generally coin their own likeness. He led the
way, and others followed seeking David's soul, his blood, his life, his very
existence. Cruel and intense were they in their malice, they would utterly
crush the good man; no half measure would content them. They have not set God
before them. They had no more regard for right and justice than if they knew no
God, or cared for none. Had they regarded God they would not have betrayed the
innocent to be hunted down like a poor harmless stag. David felt that atheism
lay at the bottom of the enmity which pursued him. Good men are hated for God's
sake, and this is a good plea for them to urge in prayer. Selah. As if he said,
"Enough of this, let us pause." He is out of breath with indignation.
A sense of wrong bids him suspend the music awhile. It may also be observed,
that more pauses would, as a rule, improve our devotions: we are usually too
much in a hurry: a little more holy meditation would make our words more
suitable and our emotions more fervent.
Verse
4. Behold, God is mine helper. He saw enemies everywhere, and
now to his joy as he looks upon the band of his defenders he sees one whose aid
is better than all the help of men; he is overwhelmed with joy at recognizing
his divine champion, and cries, Behold. And is not this a theme for pious
exultation in all time, that the great God protects us, his own people: what
matters the number or violence of our foes when HE uplifts the shield of his
omnipotence to guard us, and the sword of his power to aid us? Little care we
for the defiance of the foe while we have the defence of God. The Lord is with
them that uphold my soul. The reigning Lord, the great Adonai is in the camp of
my defenders. Here was a greater champion than any of the three mighties, or
than all the valiant men who chose David for their captain. The psalmist was
very confident, he felt so thoroughly that his heart was on the Lord's side
that he was sure God was on his side. He asked in the first verse for
deliverance, and here he returns thanks for upholding: while we are seeking one
mercy which we have not, we must not be unmindful of another which we have. It
is a great mercy to have some friends left us, but a greater mercy still to see
the Lord among them, for like so many cyphers our friends stand for nothing
till the Lord sets himself as a great unit in the front of them.
Verse
5. He shall reward evil unto mine enemies. They worked for
evil, and they shall have their wages. It cannot be that malice should go
unavenged. It were cruelty to the good to be lenient to their persecutors. It
is appointed, and so it must ever be, that those who shoot upward the arrows of
malice shall find them fall upon themselves. The recoil of their own gun has
often killed oppressors. Cut them off in thy truth. Not in ferocious revenge is
this spoken, but as an Amen to the sure sentence of the just Judge. Let the
veracity of thy threatenings be placed beyond dispute, the decree is right and
just, let it be fulfilled. It is not a private desire, but the solemn utterance
of a military man, a grossly injured man, a public leader destined to be a
monarch, and a man well trained in the school of Moses, whose law ordains eye
for eye, and tooth for tooth.
Verse
6. I will freely sacrifice unto thee. Spontaneously will I
bring my freewill offerings. So certain is he of deliverance that he offers a
vow by anticipation. His overflowing gratitude would load the altars of God
with victims cheerfully presented. The more we receive, the more we ought to
render. The spontaneousness of our gifts is a great element in their
acceptance; the Lord loveth a cheerful giver. I will praise thy name, O Lord.
As if no amount of sacrifice could express his joyful feelings, he resolves to
be much in vocal thanksgiving. The name which he invoked in prayer (Ps 54:1),
he will now magnify in praise. Note how roundly he brings it out: O Jehovah.
This is ever the grand name of the revealed God of Israel, a name which awakens
the most sublime sentiments, and so nourishes the most acceptable praise. None
can praise the Lord so well as those who have tried and proved the preciousness
of his name in seasons of adversity. The psalmist adds, for it is good, and
surely we may read this with a double nominative, God's name is good, and so is
his praise. It is of great use to our souls to be much in praise; we are never
so holy or so happy as when our adoration of God abounds. Praise is good in
itself, good to us, and good to all around us. If David's enemies are described
in Ps 54:3 as not setting God before them, he here declares that he is of a
different mind from them, for he resolves to have the Lord in perpetual
remembrance in his sacrifices and praises.
Verse
7. For he hath delivered me out of all trouble. Up to that
time deliverance had come, and for that danger also he felt that rescue was
near. David lived a life of dangers and hair breadth escapes, yet he was always
safe. In the retrospect of his very many deliverances he feels that he must
praise God, and looking upon the mercy which he sought as though it were
already received, he sang this song over it—
"And
a new song is in my mouth,
To long loved music set,
Glory to thee for all the grace
I have not tasted yet."
Out
of all trouble our covenant God is pledged to bring us, and therefore even now
let us uplift the note of triumph unto Jehovah, the faithful preserver of them
that put their trust in him. Thus far have we proved his promise good; he
changes not, and therefore in all the unknown future he will be equally our
guardian and defence, "showing himself strong in the behalf of them whose
heart is perfect toward him."
And
mine eye hath seen his desire upon mine enemies. He knew that yet he should
look on his haughty foes, gazing down on them in triumph as now they looked on
him in contempt. He desired this as a matter of justice, and not of personal
pique. His righteous soul exulted because he knew that unprovoked and
gratuitous malice would meet with a righteous punishment. Could we keep out of
our hearts all personal enmity as fully as the psalmist did in this Psalm, we might
yet equally feel with him a sacred acquiescence and delight in that divine
justice which will save the righteous and overthrow the malicious. In closing,
let us trust that if we are as friendless as this man of God, we may resort in
prayer as he did, exercise the like faith, and find ourselves ere long singing
the same joyous hymn of praise.
EXPLANATORY
NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS
TITLE. From the
inscription, learn,
1.
Particular straits and particular deliveries should be particularly remarked:
as David here remembereth the danger he was in by the treachery of the Ziphims.
2.
Mighty men will find readily more friends in an evil cause, than the godly do
find in a good cause: as Saul has the Ziphims to offer their service to his
cruelly, when David was in straits.
3.
The wicked are very hearty to do an ill turn, and glad to find occasion of it. "Doth
not David, "saith they, "hide himself with us?" as if
this had been good and blessed news. David Dickson (1583-1662), in "A
Brief Explication upon the Psalms."
Whole
Psalm. The church has taken a clear view in appointing this as one of
the Psalms in commemoration of the passion of Jesus. It is seen with greatest
effect as a simple prophecy of Christ. Read thus, it is very plain and
intelligible; requiring little more than the first idea to exhibit a perfect
correspondence with the life and feelings of the Messiah. William Hill
Tucker, in "The Psalms... with Notes, "1840.
Whole
Psalm. In the first three verses, David being sought for by his enemies,
prays against them. That was his course, he always began his conflict with God,
contending and wrestling with him for a blessing and assistance. He durst not
lift up his hands even against the enemies of God (yet what durst not David
do?) till he had first lifted them up in humble supplication to the Lord his
strength. "Who taught his hands to war, and his fingers to fight." Ps
144:1. This being done, his courage breaks out like lightning, he doubts not of
slaying his thousands and ten thousands. So in the fourth and fifth verses, he
becomes his own prophet, promising himself victory. For who can resist him who
hath Omnipotence for his second? Or how can any enemy maintain a fight against
that captain who hath beforehand defeated and broken their forces by his prayers?
assured his conquest before he puts on his armour? Then in the last verses,
David concludes where he began, thankfully acknowledgeth God's goodness in his
deliverance, and the dissipation of his enemies, obliging himself to a return
of dutiful affectionate service, in consideration of so great mercies received.
J. Dolben, in a Thanksgiving Sermon, 1665.
Whole
Psalm. Blessed Redeemer! give me grace to eye thee, and to call to my
recollection thine exercises amidst the false friends and open foes, which in
the days of thy flesh surrounded thee. Lord! help me so to consider thee, who
didst endure such a contradiction of sinners against thyself, that I may not be
weary and faint in mind. And while the Ziphims of the present hour harass and
distress me, and would deliver my soul up into the hand of the enemy: oh! for
grace to be looking unto thee, and deriving strength from thee, that I may
discover thy gracious hand delivering me out of all my troubles, and making me
more than conqueror in thy strength, and in the power of thy might. Robert
Hawker, D.D., 1753-1827.
Verse
1. Save me, O God. As David was at this time placed beyond
the reach of human assistance, he must be understood as praying to be saved by
the name and the power of God, in an emphatic sense, or by these in
contradistinction to the usual means of deliverance. Though all help must
ultimately come from God, there are ordinary methods by which he generally
extends it. When these fail, and every earthly stay is removed, he must then
take the work into his own hands. It was such a situation that David here fled
to the saints' last asylum, and sought to be saved by a miracle of divine
power. John Calvin.
Verse
1. Judge me by thy strength, or power, i.e.,
determine, decide my cause by thy mighty power. Saul, in the cause between him
and David, was resolved to end it by force only, and to arbitrate in no other
way than by a javelin, a sword, or his forces. The psalmist well knew that
Saul, in this respect, would be too hard for him; and therefore applies for
protection and justice to one whose power he knew was infinitely superior to
his adversaries, and who, he was assured, could and would defend him. Samuel
Chandler (1693-1766), in "A Critical History of the Life of David."
Verse
2. (second clause). Let the words of my mouth with
which I have defended my cause, be pleasing and acceptable to thee. For in this
way can prayers and words of the mouth be correctly
distinguished, unless any one should wish simply to understand by them prayers
uttered by the mouth; but, as I have said, the phrase is more emphatic. Hermann
Venema, 1697-1787.
Verse
3. Strangers: aliens to his truth, men who from unbelief have
estranged themselves from all lot and portion in his covenants—oppress and
persecute. William Hill Tucker.
Verse
3. (first clause). The Chaldee interpreter reads, proud
men, instead of strangers, a reading which also is found in eight of
Kennicott's Codices. So also Ps 86:14. William Walford, in "The Book of
Psalms. A New Translation, " etc., 1837.
Verse
3. (first clause). There is a great mistake made by rendering
the word oyrz (zarim) strangers. The Ziphites surely were
Israelites, and not strangers. The fact is this, that word is taken from hrz (zarah)
the primary meaning of which is "to scatter, "to "disperse,
"also "to sift, "as grain. Hence it signifies, likewise
figuratively, to sift a matter, to investigate, to search out, to trace out. So
here, David complains of the new and dangerous enemies he had got in the
Ziphites, who became Saul's spies. When he pleads, therefore, for deliverance,
saying, "Save me, O God, " etc., he describes the danger he was in: For
spies have risen against me. Benjamin Weiss, in "New Translation,
Exposition, and Chronological Arrangement of the Psalms," 1858.
Verse
3. Oppressors seek after my soul; i.e., my life at least; my
soul also they would destroy, if it lay in their power, as the Papists
delivered up John Huss to the devil. John Trapp, 1611-1662.
Verse
4. Behold, says he, I produce a certain fact, well known,
demonstrated by a new proof, and worthy of all attention; for the particle behold,
contains this breadth of meaning. Hermann Venema.
Verse
4. Christ sees with the utmost clearness, that God will be his own
helper, and of them—the disciples and believers—that uphold his soul.
In the same moment, does he foresee the destruction of his enemies. He views,
in thought, the armies of Titus, the fall of the Jewish nation, and the
dispersion of the remnant. He beholds the avenging hand of God, stretched in
fury over the destroyers. William Hill Tucker.
Verse
4. (second clause). Such as take part with the persecuted
saints, God will take part with them! The Lord is with them that uphold my
soul. David Dickson.
Verses
4-5. He is assured of help to himself and to his friends, and of
vengeance to his enemies. Whence learn,
1.
Fervent prayer hath readily a swift answer, and sometimes wonderfully swift,
even before a man have ended speech, as here David findeth in experience. Behold,
saith he, God is my helper.
2.
The sight of faith is very clear and piercing through all clouds when God holds
forth the light of his Spirit unto it, it can demonstrate God present in an
instant; ready to help in greatest straits: Behold, God is my helper.
3.
There is more joy in God's felt presence than grief in felt trouble; for, Behold,
God is mine helper, was more comfortable to David than his friends'
unkindness, and strangers' malice was grievous. David Dickson.
Verse
5. Cut them off. He desires that God would destroy them with
a death dealing blow, which is the force the word tmu contains; its
primitive sense is to be silent, to keep silence, whence it is
transferred to a stroke penetrating deeply and striking fatally, such as is
called a silent blow, opposed to a sounding one, which is wont to
rebound and not pierce deeply. Hermann Venema.
Verse
6. I will freely sacrifice unto thee. He would sacrifice
freely: by which he does not allude to the circumstance, that sacrifices of
thanksgiving were at the option of worshippers, but to the alacrity and
cheerfulness with which he would pay his vow when he had escaped his present
dangers. John Calvin.
Verse
7. Mine eye hath seen his desire upon mine enemies. Or, mine
eye hath looked upon mine enemies; that is, he was able to meet them
without terror. Samuel Davidson, D.D., 1852.
Verse
7. The reader will note that the words his desire are
supplied by our translators, and are not in the original text. C. H. S.
HINTS TO THE
VILLAGE PREACHER
Verse
1. In the deliverance of the saints the honour and power of God are
concerned.
1.
Their failure would dishonour both.
2.
Their salvation glorifies both.
3.
Both are immutable, therefore we have a sure plea at all times.
Verse
2. Our main concern in prayer.
1.
What is meant by God's hearing prayer.
2. How we may know that he has done so.
3. What is to be done when this is doubtful.
4. What is due to him when the hearing is given.
Verse
3. Strange trials.
1.
They are not altogether strange.
(a)
Not so to God.
(b) Not so in the history of the church.
(c) Not so to the provisions of grace wherein they are anticipated.
2.
Wherein they are strange.
(a)
They reveal God anew.
(b) Endear forgotten promises.
(c) Train unused graces.
(d) Being new praises, etc.
Verse
3. (last clause). The root of sin: if they remembered his
authority they dared not, if they tasted his love they would not, if they were
conformed to his nature they could not.
Verse
4. A theme for wonder.
1.
At his unmerited grace, that he should side with me.
2. At his gracious power, for who can resist him?
3. At his practical help, for he has upheld my soul.
Verse
6. We should sacrifice voluntarily, liberally, joyfully,
continuously, with pure motive.
Verse
6. The goodness of praising the good name.
Verse
7. (first clause). The exclamation of the newly pardoned
penitent, the cry of the delivered saint, the song of the ripe Christian, the
shout of the glorified believer.
WORK UPON THE
FIFTY-FOURTH PSALM
In
CHANDLER'S "Life of David, "pp. 152-4, there is an Exposition
of this Psalm.
── C.H. Spurgeon《The Treasury of David》