Psalms 15

Psa 15:1

SUPERSCRIPTION: “A PSALM OF DAVID”.

HISTORICAL SETTING: V 1 suggests David bringing the ark to Zion: 2Sa 6. Vv 2-5a strongly suggest his firm resolution and vow not to be a king after the pattern of Saul. Every detail in these verses (except perhaps v 5a) points to a CT with the worst features of Saul’s character and reign.

ECHOES OF PSALM 15: All the 9 psalms which follow Psa 15 seem to echo it; but esp Psa 24:3-6, which, like this psalm, is about the bringing of the ark to Zion. Another allusion in Isa 33:14,15, because Hezekiah’s reign, like the early days of David, saw a contest between unprincipled men of the world and God’s man of faith, who was unable to assert himself.

The ancient rabbi Samlai stated that Moses gave 613 commandments, and that David reduced these to 11 commandments (ie Psa 15). Further, he stated that Isaiah reduced the 11 to 6 (Isa 33:15). What he could not mention, of course, was that Jesus was to summarize all the law in only two commandments (Mat 22:40).

THE MESSIAH: Jesus’ “Sermon on Mount” (Mat 5-7) is his extended commentary on Psa 15. “As though white light passes through a prism to be split up into the many colors of the spectrum, so [Psa 15] passed through the inspired mind of Jesus to come out in all this colorful teaching” (CT).

A comparison of Psa 15 and the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5-7):

Psalms 16

Psa 16:1

SUPERSCRIPTION: “A MICHTAM OF DAVID”. “Michtam” sig “to cut, engrave (Jer 2:22), or write (Exo 17:14)”, and hence to remember. The 6 “michtam” psalms are thus “memorial” psalms, of a very personal nature, having the hope of resurrection as a common theme (Psa 16:10,11; 56:13; 57:3; 58:10,11; 59:16; 60:5,12).

HISTORICAL SETTING: Poss David establishing worship on mount Zion (2Sa 6).

IN YOU I TAKE REFUGE: Justification by faith for Messiah as well as for those in him.

Psa 16:2

“Thou hast no need of my goodness” (WK), ie of the sacrifices he has brought: 2Sa 6:13,17,22.

It is difficult to believe that the “I have said” refers to Jesus. If vv 2c,3 are the Father’s reply to v 2ab, the emphasis is on Christ as a sacrifice for sins, for the benefit of “the saints… in whom is all my delight”. Thus, “my goodness is not to thee (only), but (also) to the saints.”

Psa 16:3

THE SAINTS… THE GLORIOUS ONES IN WHOM IS ALL MY DELIGHT: The people of Israel who shared David’s religious enthusiasm that day: 2Sa 6:18,19. And David’s delight was God’s delight also: v 14. The phrase is almost identical with Isa 62:4, where God’s “delight” in Zion and her people is mirrored in good king Hezekiah’s delight in his bride Hephzibah.

SAINTS: “Saints”, or “holy ones”: applied to angels (Dan 8:13), to God (Psa 71:22; Isa 43:3; 2Ki 19:22), and to men (Psa 34:9; 106:16).

IN THE LAND: Or “earth” (AV), indicates that these saints are men.

IN WHOM IS ALL MY DELIGHT: Cp Isa. 53:10,11.

Psa 16:4

The lure of false worship scarcely crops up at all in the life of David. The greatness and guidance of God filled his entire horizon. Then why these insistent contrasts? (Is the “other god” Mammon, perhaps? Mat 6:24. Consider Paul’s allusion to this verse in 1Ti 6:10.)

THE SORROWS OF THOSE WILL INCREASE: An echo of the original judgment upon the woman Eve: “I will greatly multiply thy sorrow” (Gen 3:16). The “other god” which she sought was herself, elevated to the status of the Elohim!

OTHER GODS: “Another god” (AV) is italicized. Instead, “another salvation”? — thus this v perfectly describes the Judaistic confidence in the Mosaic law and offerings. RV reads: “exchange the Lord for another”, as the Jews exchanged Jesus for Barabbas.

Psa 16:5

MY PORTION… CUP… LOT: Deu 32:9 has the same idea in reverse; 2Sa 6:19 has the same word: “portion”. Also, the special Levitical allotments in midst of Israel: Num 18:20; Deu 10:8,9; 18:1. LXX: “Thou art the restorer of my inheritance.” After Christ’s resurrection the disciples put v 10 alongside these words and inferred that their Master would now “restore again the kingdom to Israel” (Acts 1:8)?

Psa 16:6

BOUNDARY LINES: In the sense of demarcation lines: Jos 17:5,14; 19:9. Apt to the firm establishment of a wider empire, as indicated in 2Sa 8:2 (sw). Lines is used here as boundary lines of an inheritance. In Joh 2:15, sw = cords of a whip, as though with ref to v 4 here. In driving the moneychangers out of his Father’s house, Christ was asserting his own right of inheritance: he was the messenger of the Lord and of the covenant, come suddenly to his temple (Mal 3:1)!

Psa 16:7

CT Psa 13:2; cp Psa 32:8.

WHO COUNSELS ME: Christ’s constant counsel with the Father (Mar 1:35; Joh 6:15). The personal fellowship with the Father, constantly emphasized in John’s gospel (Joh 5:19,20; 8:28; 12:49; 14:10). All this, of course, uniquely qualifies Jesus to be the Wonderful Counselor of his people (Isa 9:6,7; Mic 4:9).

MY HEART: “My reins” (AV). An indirect allusion to the girdle of the high priest — worn about the reins — and the counsel of Urim and Thummim contained therein (Lev 8:7; cp 2Sa 6:14)?

Psa 16:8

ALWAYS: A word used often for the daily sacrifice. (NT) Not strictly true regarding David, but always true of Jesus; hence Peter’s inclusion of this verse in his quotation in Act 2:25-28: it serves to reinforce his v 24: “because it was not possible that he should be held” by the grave.

HE IS AT MY RIGHT HAND: Ct Psa 110:1, also quoted (about the Ascension) in Act 2:34. The apparent contradiction is readily resolved by reading v 8 here (God at Christ’s right hand) with ref to Jesus on trial; and Psa 110:1 (Christ at God’s right hand) with ref to Jesus ascended to heavenly glory.

I WILL NOT BE SHAKEN: The early days of David’s reign had not been without crisis: foes on every side: 2Sa 8.

Psa 16:9

TONGUE: “Kabod” = glory, as in AV. A metonym for tongue or voice; ie that which gives glory to God (Psa 30:12; 108:1). It is so used by Peter in Act 2:26, when quoting this v.

MY BODY ALSO WILL REST SECURE: “My flesh shall rest (ie tabernacle) in hope.” ‘In hope of resurrection’, seems to be the obvious idea. But “hope” is a word strongly associated with hope of children (Rth 1:12,13; Rom 4:18; 1Pe 1:3), so there may be here a hint of Jesus as the Firstborn from the dead, the first of a new generation. Isa 53:8,10: “Who shall declare his generation?… He shall see his seed…”

Psa 16:10

With ref to David these phrases need to be qualified with a “not now, not yet”. Read thus, the words are very appropriate to the sickness which laid David low at this time: Psa 30, notes.

ME: “My soul” (AV). Simply a more emphatic way of saying “me”, as in 59:3; 35:1,3; Jer. 18:20.

GRAVE: “Sheol”. Clearly used by Peter in Act 2:27,31; and by Paul in Act 13:35 as meaning ‘my body in the grave, in death’. Cp Num 9:6, where ‘dead body’ is nephesh. The // in this v supports this meaning.

YOUR HOLY ONE: So speaks David the “priest”: Deu 33:8; 2Sa 6:14. (2) A title suggesting divinity: cp Isa 1:4; 10:17; Hos 11:9; Hab 1:12; etc. According to RV, RSV, NEB, and NIV, it was conferred upon Jesus by Peter in Joh 6:69, in recognition of his Messiahship. (The only other time in the gospels that this title was given to Jesus was by the demoniac in the synagogue: Mar 1:24.)

NOR WILL YOU LET YOUR HOLY ONE SEE DECAY: This certainly implies resurrection before the physical corruption of the body could set in (Joh 11:39). But there is more. The superb accuracy of the prophetic phrase shows up here. Through centuries, burial custom in Palestine was to practice multiple burials in large tombs with many side-chambers; then, after long years, some of these chambers would be partially cleared to allow for yet more burials. But Jesus was buried in Joseph’s “own new sepulchre, wherein was never man yet laid” (Joh 19:41). So there was no suggestion of decay about that tomb whatsoever. In his resurrection Jesus did not so much as see corruption. So Christ was like the manna that came down from heaven (Joh 6:35,41, 48,50,51,58), preserved from corruption in God’s presence (Exo 16:32-24; Heb 9:4).

Psa 16:11

THE PATH OF LIFE: This is his resurrection. Also, “the way of the tree of life”, the only way, for those in him (Gen 3:24; cp Joh 14:6).

YOU WILL FIND ME WITH JOY IN YOUR PRESENCE: One of the few prophecies of the ascension: cp Rev 5:5-7. For “presence”, see Psa 17:15.

WITH ETERNAL PLEASURES AT YOUR RIGHT HAND: Christ’s intercessory work: Psa 110:1,4; and also his authority to open the Book of Life, hence… pleasures for evermore: Rev 5:9,10; Also, Isa 53:10. There are several allusions to Heb 12 in these last few verses.

ETERNAL PLEASURES: “Every minute of your life belongs to God. It is doubly His. It is His to begin with, and you have freely dedicated it to Him in solemn covenant. Do not rob Him: it is folly — He is a jealous God. His holiness and righteousness require that He punish folly in those who have taken on His holy Name before men. And do not rob yourself of the total joy of total service. There is no happiness of the consciousness of a day fully immersed in the divine atmosphere, and fully, energetically spent in the divine service. You have unmeasured treasures of pleasure within hand’s reach. Reach out! Why be satisfied with present passing worldly crumbs and ashes when eternal joy beckons?” (GVG).

“What will make you happy? Will that new car make you happy? Will that new home make you happy? How about a new job? What about a new spouse, will that make you happy? It seems that there is always “something else” that will make us happy. Then, after we have obtained that new object of our affection, we find that the happiness was temporary and we must find something else to sustain our happiness.

“Everlasting happiness is found only in the presence of God. God has promised us a joy that can never fade if we will only follow the path that He has made for us; following Him in our daily life will bring permanent joy and happiness.

“Today, don’t strive too much for temporary happiness. Strive to obtain the eternal happiness that can only be found through Him” (MT).

AT YOUR RIGHT HAND: Sb “in thy right hand” (RV), ie in the hand that dispenses blessings and gifts (Gen 48:14-20; Pro 3:16).

RIGHT HAND: Strength (Exo 15:6; Psa 20:6; 63:8; 118:15,16); righteousness (Psa 48:10); authority (Isa 62:8); honor (Gen 48:13-18; 1Ki 2:19); salvation (Psa 17:7; 60:5); and fellowship (Psa 16:11).

Psalms 17

Psa 17:1

SUPERSCRIPTION: “A PRAYER OF DAVID”.

Psa 86 and Psa 142 are psalms of pleading remarkably like the first paragraph here in tone and language, and with the same title: “Prayer” = Heb “tephillah”. See also Psa 90 (by Moses) and Psa 102 (by Hezekiah). There are quite a few verbal links with Psa 16, which might account for their being placed side by side: Psa 16:7/17:3; 16:8/17:5; 16:11/17:5; 16:8/17:7; 16:5/16:14; 16:11/17:15.

HISTORICAL SETTING: In the middle of a group of psalms re Saul’s persecution of David the “outlaw”. He and his men are the hunters, David and his men the prey (vv 9-13).

DECEITFUL LIPS: Again, as in Psa 10,12,15, etc, ct David’s honesty with Saul’s deceitfulness. (NT) ct the Lord’s openness and honesty of speech with the scheming of his adversaries (as in Mat 22:16,17). Cp Isa 53:9; 1Pe 2:21-24.

Psa 17:3

AT NIGHT: Gethsemane (Luk 22:43). Cp Psa 16:7.

TEST: Put to test, so as to purge away impurities, as gold or silver are tested by fire: Psa 12:6; Job 23:10; 1Pe 1:7.

THOUGH YOU TEST ME, YOU WILL FIND NOTHING: Nothing amiss, as Gethsemane demonstrated (see also Joh 14:30).

I HAVE RESOLVED: Strong resolution, more necessary in Jesus than in any other man.

MY MOUTH WILL NOT SIN: True of David, relatively, when cpd with others. But absolutely true of Jesus: Joh 8:46; 14:30; 2Co 5:21; Heb 4:15.

Psa 17:4

BY THE WORD OF YOUR LIPS: The promise given through Samuel at the time he anointed David (1Sa 16)? Or, by God’s word through the ephod (1Sa 23:2,4,6, etc)?

(NT) How often did Jesus make Scripture his anchor when in temptation or debate.

THE VIOLENT: The “destroyer” (AV), ie the destroying angel of Passover (Exo 12:23). Yet others gladly made Jesus their “Passover lamb”.

Psa 17:5

MY STEPS HAVE HELD TO YOUR PATHS: “Put all your eggs in one basket: direct moment to moment help from God. Cast out everything else, and stake all on this. Relying on God’s continuous help does not mean just sitting and waiting for it. It does not mean just kneeling and praying for it. It means two things: studying His Word, and obeying His commands: constant thought, constant activity — doing our own very best, but always realizing that if God isn’t constantly directing, then it’s all a sham and a charade. What guarantee do we have that He will? And how do we know when He does? Don’t worry about that. Just do. You have nothing to lose by trying, and nothing to gain by questioning. We are promised He will, if we are doing our part. And let us not get the foolish and conceited idea that we are ‘inspired’ or ‘have the Spirit’ just because it seems to work. That’s the quickest way to bring everything to a grinding halt. God can turn His help and guidance off as quickly as He can turn it on, and He is quick to deflate presumption. This life is merely for education and training. We can never actually accomplish anything. Anything we do for God He could do infinitely better and more quickly Himself. He is patiently teaching us, and preparing us to be useful in the future (if we are at last approved), and presumption will be corrected by allowing humiliating mistakes to teach us wisdom” (GVG).

Psa 17:6

GIVE EAR TO ME: “Incline thine ear” (AV). As one might bow down to hear the low and feeble words of the ill or dying (cp Psa 71:2; 116:2).

Psa 17:7

SAVE BY YOUR RIGHT HAND: By Gabriel who stands in God’s presence (Luk 1:19; cp Mat 18:10), and who is the angel of answered prayer (cp Psa 34:7; 91:11).

RIGHT HAND: Strength (Exo 15:6; Psa 20:6; 63:8; 118:15,16); righteousness (Psa 48:10); authority (Isa 62:8); honor (Gen 48:13-18; 1Ki 2:19); salvation (Psa 17:7; 60:5); and fellowship (Psa 16:11).

THEIR FOES: Saul, the hunter (1Sa 24).

Psa 17:8

THE APPLE OF YOUR EYE: Apparently, the pupil; Zec 2:8 is very expressive. Naturally speaking, the pupil is one of the most treasured parts of the body, being protected by skull, cheekbones, eyebrows, eyelids, lashes, tears, and even hands. Here (cp Deu 32:10) (but not in the other places) lit: the dark one, the daughter of the eye. So perhaps the idea is that of a man with a dark-haired, dark-eyed daughter, a beauty, whom he treasures as the “idol” of his eye. This is so because a picture in miniature of one’s self is seen, as in a mirror, when looking into another person’s eye. The ref is then to the pupil, and the surrounding iris.

IN THE SHADOW OF YOUR WINGS: The wings of the cherubim, as in Psa 57:1; 63:7 — both psalms of this outlaw period. A poss allusion to Samuel’s altar at Ramah (1Sa 7:17), where David once fled from Saul (1Sa 19:18).

(NT) Cp Psa 91:1,4, also about Messiah. Cp Psa 18:10.

Psa 17:9

MY MORTAL ENEMIES WHO SURROUND ME: Joh 10:24.

Psa 17:10

THEY CLOSE UP THEIR CALLOUS HEARTS: “They are inclosed in their own fat” (AV). See Deu 32:15; cp Eglon in Jdg 3:17. The fat of the sacrifices was God’s own portion. The men of the temple, so hostile to Jesus, had shut up their bowels of compassion (1Jo 3:17; Psa 119:70), and they ran the temple for their own materialistic benefit. The holy court was called “The Bazaar of the Sons of Annas”.

THEIR MOUTHS SPEAK WITH ARROGANCE: As in Joh 11:47-50.

Psa 17:11

THEY NOW SURROUND ME: AV has “us” (David and his men in the wilderness), surrounded by Saul and his men (1Sa 19:11; 23:19-27).

WITH EYES ALERT, TO THROW ME TO THE GROUND: “They have set their eyes bowing down to the earth” (AV), as trackers following the trail of the hunted men. Cp Psa 10:8-10 (also about Saul).

Psa 17:12

LIKE A LION: As a lion, with Jesus as the prey — waylaid, hunted. This same ugly scene, of patient stalking and sudden, vicious attack, is amplified in Psa 22:12-18, the preeminent psalm of Golgotha!

Psa 17:13

Vv 13,14: “The wicked, which is thy sword”, and… “Men which are thy hand, O Lord.” As the Assyrians were the rod of God’s anger (Isa 10:5,15), and Saul the hard but necessary test of the faith of David, so also “it pleased the Lord to bruise” Jesus (Isa 53:10) through the hostility of evil men (Act 2:23).

Psa 17:14

WHOSE REWARD IS IN THIS LIFE: “They have their reward” (Mat 6:2,5, etc), ie, here and now. And for them, that is all. Cp Luk 16:25 and Psa 49:19; ct Psa 16:5 and also v 15 here.

THEIR SONS HAVE PLENTY: AV: “Whose belly (Heb womb) thou fillest with thy hid treasure: they are full of children, and leave the rest of their substance to their babes.”

(NT) Annas had 5 sons and a son-in-law (Caiaphas), all of whom followed him in the high priest’s office. In general, see Psa 73:2,3.

Psa 17:15

A continuation of the resurrection theme in Psa 16:8-11. For “satisfied”, see Isa 53:11.

Notice the commas; David does not say, “when I awake with thy likeness”, as though rising from the dead and receiving immortality (ie “immortal emergence”) were one and the same event. But, rather, he says, “when I awake, with thy likeness”. ‘When I arise, I shall be satisfied to receive thy likeness.’ Other translations bear out this small, but important, distinction.

YOUR FACE: In Psalms, always ref God’s presence in ark/tabernacle/temple: see VL, Psalms, God’s face.

SUBSCRIPTION: “FOR THE DIRECTOR OF MUSIC.”

Psalms 18

Psa 18:1

SUPERSCRIPTION: “OF DAVID THE SERVANT OF THE LORD. HE SANG TO THE LORD THE WORDS OF THIS SONG WHEN THE LORD DELIVERED HIM FROM THE HAND OF ALL HIS ENEMIES AND FROM THE HAND OF SAUL. HE SAID…”: Places the psalm somewhere between 2Sa 6 and 2Sa 11 — for it is inconceivable that vv 22-24 were written after the time of David’s great lapse, and the allusions in the second half of the psalm to the northern tribes and Gentile enemies require that David be king in Jerusalem when writing these words.

Consider allusions to Deu 32; 1Sa 2 (song of Hannah); and Gen 49.

V 1: Omitted in 2Sa 22.

I LOVE YOU: This Heb verb links with the word for “womb”. The virgin birth? Cp Psa 22:10.

MY STRENGTH: Echoes the name Hezekiah. The concluding vv of the psalm may be his.

Psa 18:2

ROCK (first): “Sela” = strength or refuge. Hence no further need for “Selah” in Psa 18!

FORTRESS: Heb “metsudah” is a mighty fortress from which military campaigns might be launched. It is applied to Zion in 2Sa 5:7,9,17 and 1Ch 11:5,7,16. Translated “bulwark” (Ecc 9:14; Deu 20:20), “munition” (Isa 29:7; 33:16; Nah 2:1), “stronghold” (2Sa 5:7), and “castle” (1Ch 11:5,7). Thus God is both the place of defense (Sela), and the place from which a victorious attack may be launched. In Psalms, “metsudah” occurs in Psa 31:3; 66:11; 71:3; 91:2; 144:2.

ROCK (second): Heb “tsur”, ref to altar rock on threshing floor of Ornan: 2Sa 24:18-25. The title “Tsur” is used of God in vv 31,46; Psa 28:1; 62:2,7; 78:35; etc.

IN WHOM I TAKE REFUGE: Quoted conc Messiah in Heb 2:13. This particular Heb word comes 24 times in Psalms, an indication of Christ’s need to lean on God.

THE HORN OF MY SALVATION: Psa 132:17. Those in danger of death at the hand of an avenger fled for mercy to the horns of the altar: 1Ki 1:50; 2:28; Exo 21:14.

Psa 18:3

Christ’s prayer on the Mount.

Psa 18:4

Vv 4-6: Not easy to connect to David’s reign, but easy regarding the Lord Jesus. God is the “rock” (vv 1,2,46) upon which man builds his “house” of faith, so as to survive the “floods” (v 15 also). The source of Christ’s parable in Mat 7:24-27.

CORDS OF DEATH: Explained in Psa 118:27 as a figure for sacrifice: esp the sacrifice of Christ (cp LXX and Act 2:24: “the pains of death”).

THE CORDS OF DEATH ENTANGLED ME: Prob another hunting metaphor: a circle of nets (cp Psa 17:9-13).

THE TORRENTS OF DESTRUCTION: A different figure of speech, as in the “many waters” of v 16. Another Messianic psalm applies it very powerfully to the death of Christ: Psa 69:1,2,14,15.

DESTRUCTION: “Belial”, one meaning of which may be “the Lord of night” (cp 2Sa 23:6).

Psa 18:6

IN MY DISTRESS I CALLED TO THE LORD: True of both Gethsemane (Heb 5:7) and Golgotha, but the context here requires the second of these.

I CRIED TO MY GOD: “Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani” (Psa 22:1).

FROM HIS TEMPLE HE HEARD MY VOICE: Hence the rending of the veil of the temple — from top to bottom, that is, by divine and not human or “natural” agency (Mat 27:51; Mar 15:38; Luk 23:45).

HIS TEMPLE: Some time after 2Sa 6, when tabernacle was set up in Zion. Heaven is the temple, or dwelling place, of Jehovah; but He dwells also in the most holy place, to which David is turning his attention: Psa 11:4. In the sanctuary, God is surrounded by the thick darkness (v 11). In Psa 20:2,6; 2Ch 7:1; and Lev 9:24, “heaven” is parallel to God’s “sanctuary”. The “door in heaven” (Rev 4:1) is // to the “heavenly places” (Eph 1:3) — ie an insight into the fortunes of God’s saints, whom He protects and tries (Psa 11:4,5).

Psa 18:7

Vv 7-15: In answer to the desperate prayer God manifested Himself in a marvelous “theophany”: vivid brightness, intense darkness, and a mighty voice, as at Sinai.

(NT) VV 7-15: An impressive manifestation of God; belongs to the time of the Crucifixion. Esp important is the paradox of contrasting phrases: there is both (a) darkness, and (b) vivid brightness. This is reminiscent of Sinai but esp of Israel’s deliverance from Egypt (Exo 14:20), and also of God’s covenant with Abraham (Gen 15:7). The Shekinah Glory of God was darkness to the Egyptians, but brightness and light to the Hebrews. Now, similarly, at the crucifixion: darkness over all the land from the sixth to the ninth hour (Mat 27:45), expressing God’s anger with His enemies. But there was brightness and light for Jesus. JT (Phan 57) applies this paragraph to the Second Coming. It is true, of course, that then Jesus will come “in the glory of his Father” (Mat 16:27). But the context here (esp vv 4-6) calls for a different ref.

A great earthquake is also coupled with the cherubim and the salvation of God in Psa 68:7,8; 77:14-20; 114:6,7. This section bears a great resemblance to Hab 3, in which the Holy One is pictured as coming in clouds. The Psalmist (as Habakkuk also) sees a re-creation of God’s glory in the march of the avenging cherubim. Many other LD prophecies mention the cloud, poss the dark cloud to obscure the Shekinah Glory of Jehovah: Joe 2:2; Zep 1:15; Eze 30:3; Isa 19:1; 25:5; Rev 1:7. The revelation of God in His glory is shown against the background of an awesome storm.

THE EARTH TREMBLED AND QUAKED… BECAUSE HE WAS ANGRY: “Trembled”/”quaked” = Heb “wayyigash/wayyirash”. Earthquake is an expression of the wrath of God: Job 9:5,6; Isa 2:19,21; Eze 38:18-20; Hag 2:6,21; Heb 12:26; Act 16:25,26. There was no greater wrath than at the crucifixion of God’s Son: Mat 27:51.

Psa 18:8

SMOKE: Shekinah cloud in Gen 15:17; Isa 6:4; Joe 2:30.

CONSUMING FIRE CAME FROM HIS MOUTH: A further expression of divine anger: Deu 32:22; cp also Rev 19:15. But not so for Jesus, for whom it was the comforting presence of his Father.

BURNING COALS: Kindled a rededication in the crucified malefactor, as with Isaiah the prophet: Isa 6:6,7 (and perhaps Rom 12:20).

Psa 18:9

HE PARTED THE HEAVENS AND CAME DOWN: The thick rolling clouds of the approaching storm would seem literally to bring heaven down to the earth. So this is poss equivalent to “a door opened in heaven” (Rev 4:1). Certainly it is the language of “theophany”: a divine manifestation, as in Gen 11:5; 18:21; Exo 3:7,8; 19:11,18,20; Isa 64:1.

Psa 18:10

HE MOUNTED THE CHERUBIM: “He rode” (AV): cp 1Ch 28:18: “the chariot of the cherubim”. See Lesson, Cherubim.

HE SOARED: On eagles’ wings: Eze 1:6-9.

THE WINGS OF THE WIND: But in Heb “wind” is also “Spirit”. Cp Deu 33:26; Psa 68:33; 104:3; Nah 1:3.

Psa 18:11

COVERING… CANOPY: Protection for Joshua/Jesus: Psa 91:1,4.

CANOPY: Heb succoth, tabernacle, booth, “canopy” (RSV, NEB, NIV) — from the Feast of Tabernacles: Lev 23:34,42,43; Deu 16:13,16; Psa 31:20,21; Isa 4:6; Amo 9:11; Zec 14:16.

DARK RAIN CLOUDS: To obscure the Shekinah Glory of the Most Holy: cp Dan 7:13; Rev 1:7; 1Th 4:17; esp Deu 4:11; Job 22:14; Psa 27:5; 1Ki 8:8,12.

Psa 18:12

THE BRIGHTNESS OF HIS PRESENCE: Heb “nogah” always ref the Shekinah Glory (Isa 4:5; 60:3,19; Eze 1:4,13, 27,28; 10:4; Hab 3:4,11). LXX has a word for “far-shining, conspicuous from a distance”. The only NT occurrence is in Mar 8:25. But here the special force of the word is of sacrifice accepted (Psa 80:1). What better assurance could Jesus have as he hung on the cross? At the crucifixion Jesus was not really deserted by his Father. Even the words which seem to point this way (Psa 22:1) are immediately set in true perspective in Psa 22:24. Under the Law the evidence of the sacrifice was always to be brought before the Lord — blood poured out at the base of the altar of burnt-offering, blood on the horns of the altar of incense, blood before the veil, blood on the mercy-seat itself. In the death of Jesus, this supreme sacrifice could not be brought into the temple, so instead the veil was rent and the Glory of the Lord came to Jesus!

Psa 18:13

THE LORD THUNDERED: As in Joh 12:29, the Father spoke reassuringly to His Son on the cross.

Psa 18:14

Note the parallelism: arrows with lightnings (cp Psa 77:17). Jehovah is the God of war and the God of storm. The same word for lightning occurs in other visions of the Shekinah Glory: Exo 19:16; Deu 32:41 (“glittering”); Hab 3:4.

Psa 18:15

VALLEYS: Heb “aphikim”, watercourses, constrained by rocky channels. Similar to the Heb wadis, dry creek beds, which flow only spasmodically, after great rains: Psa 42:1; Job 6:15; Isa 8:7. The rage of the great storm spends itself in the flood torrents.

THE FOUNDATIONS OF THE EARTH (WERE) LAID BARE: This is the earthquake of Mat 27:51,52. And by the resurrection of these saints on the third day it was demonstrated that the merits of the Lord’s sacrifice and the power of his resurrection are not only prospective in their force (to apply even to believers today), but also are retrospective, right back to Adam the “foundation” of mankind (Rom 3:25; Heb 9:15; consider the sym of Jos 3:14-17).

THE BLAST OF BREATH FROM YOUR NOSTRILS: Cp Exo 15:8, the song of Moses, where God with the blast of His nostrils parted the Red Sea. Remarkably, this LXX word comes only in Act 9:1. What a ct! But Saul of Tarsus certainly thought himself to be the righteous anger of God at work.

Psa 18:16

Vv 16-19 speak very clearly of an extraordinary deliverance. But it is difficult to identify which. Perhaps the singular and plural in v 17 ref Saul and the later Gentile adversaries described in 2Sa 8.

NT: These vv, as describing the deliverance of Christ, require no commentary. In v 17 the singular and plural are the power of Sin (Heb 2:14; Rom 7:17,20) and of Sin’s disciples, the Jewish rulers (Joh 15:25).

HE REACHED… TOOK HOLD… DREW OUT: Key words same as in Exo 2:5,10: “Drew out” is “mashah”/Moses: deliverance of the Deliverer, so that he might then deliver others!

Psa 18:19

A SPACIOUS PLACE: David is commemorating his deliverance from the dens and caves of the rocks (Psa 18:36; Psa 31:8).

HE RESCUED ME BECAUSE HE DELIGHTED IN ME: This is the Divine answer to the derisive statement of Mat 27:43: “Let [God] deliver him, now, if he will have him.” He did! Cp also Psa 22:8.

Psa 18:20

Vv 20-24 (NT): Re Jesus, the refs to righteousness are strictly and lit true: Joh 4:34; 6:38; 8:46; 1Pe 2:22; Heb 4:15; 7:26; 2Co 5:21; 1Jo 3:5; Isa 53:9,11. But so also are the words: “I kept myself from mine iniquity” (AV), for there was in him the legacy of a propensity to sin which is the lot of all who are in Adam. For the strange paradox of righteousness and “sin” in the suffering Messiah, see Psa 25:11,15; 38:1,3,5,20; 40:8,10,12; 41:4,12; 86:2,5,11.

OT: Apt commentary on such passages as 1Sa 24:19. These vv (20-24) describe the righteousness of David relative to his adversaries. But there is that sinister phrase in v 23: I kept myself from mine iniquity — it was only through the effort of Abigail, in a desperate attempt to avert David’s hostility from her husband Nabal (1Sa 25:23), that even the righteous David was spared from such guilt.

Psa 18:25

A principle developed in the Lord’s prayer: “For if ye forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you: but if ye forgive not men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses” (Mat 6:14,15; cp also Mat 18:33-35; Jam 2:13). And, conversely, God’s ways do not appear right to those who themselves are not upright: cp Mat 25:24; 27:5.

Psa 18:26

In this section of the psalm there are several indirect allusions to certain of the tribes of Israel. These refs are appropriate to the gathering of all 12 tribes in loyalty to David: 2Sa 5:1-3.

TO THE CROOKED: Lev 26:23,24,27,28. Also, Pro 3:34.

YOU SHOW YOURSELF SHREWD: “Will wrestle” — an allusion to Gen 32:24, the only other OT occurrence, to which Eph 6:12 also refers. Consider Jesus’ rebukes of Peter.

Psa 18:27

Vv 27-31: Vindication! David’s own personal experiences are traceable somewhat more readily.

NT: The vindication of God’s Messiah leads on to a sustained picture of triumph over his enemies.

Psa 18:28

Light/darkness symbolize prosperity/affliction or death. See the usage in Job 21:17; 29:3; Pro 13:9; 20:20. The judgment of the wicked is pictured as being cast into “outer darkness” (Mat 8:12; 22:13).

LAMP: David is called the “light (or candle: AV) of Israel” in 2Sa 21:17 (cp 1Ki 11:36; 15:4). Psa 132:17 speaks of “a lamp for mine anointed”, in a psalm which repeats David’s resolve to see a worthy sanctuary of the Lord in Zion. Cp Mic 7:8; Rev 21:23 (ct Rev 18:23).

Psa 18:29

Vv 29-40: Numerous comparisons in this section with the prophecy of Jacob: troop (Psa 18:29; Gen 49:19); wall (Psa 18:29; Gen 49:22); deer (Psa 18:33; Gen 49:21); bow (Psa 18:34; Gen 49:24); neck of enemies (Psa 18:40; Gen 49:8).

V 29: A vivid description of the shock-tactics, the sudden assaults, used by General David against the Philistines. Cp also the exploits of David’s “mighty men” in 2Sa 23.

I CAN ADVANCE AGAINST A TROOP: Links with David’s victory over the marauding Amalekites in 1Sa 30:15,17. (As in v 33, David and his men are seen to be fighting on foot, while from the time of Solomon onward the kings of Israel resorted most often to chariots for war: 1Ki 22:34; 2Ki 9:21.)

NT: The angel of God striking down the soldiers assigned to guard the tomb of Jesus, so that he might escape the “prison” of death (Mat 28:2,4).

WITH MY GOD I CAN SCALE A WALL: Is this the taking of the Jebusite stronghold (2Sa 5)? NT: Firstly, the “wall” of armed guards at the tomb. Then, Eph 2:14 and context impart a splendid meaning to this enigmatic phrase: the wall of legalistic separation between Jews and Gentiles, and of course the wall of division between God and man.

Psa 18:31

ROCK… GOD: The altar of burnt-offering: 2Sa 24:18-25.

Psa 18:32

Vv 32-45: The historical background to this section is, on the whole, 2Sa 8: when David’s new kingdom was in danger of being overwhelmed by a host of enemies (see Psa 60 and comments). But here and there David seems to look back to the evil days of Saul’s hostility.

Vv 32-35, along with Isaiah’s words (Isa 59:16,17), appear to be the OT origin of Paul’s exposition of the “armor of righteousness” (Eph 6:13-17).

Psa 18:33

HE MAKES MY FEET LIKE THE FEET OF A DEER: To tread down the wicked: Rev 1:15; Psa 58:10,11; Mic 4:1-3,11-13; Eze 1:7; Song 2:8; Eur 1:175,176.

DEER: A beautiful wild creature. Its sureness of foot and speed form the basis of this oft-used Scriptural figure. Moses, in Deu 32:13, speaks of God as “He (that) made him (Israel) to ride on the high places of the earth.” “Naphtali is a hind let loose” (Gen 49:21), or sent forth, to preach the gospel (Rom 10:15; Isa 52:7). “How beautiful are his feet!”

Psa 18:34

MY ARMS CAN BEND A BOW OF BRONZE: Actual metal bows (most likely, wooden bows strengthened with strips of metal) were often used in Bible times (as in Job 20:24). // Gen 49:24, where it is said of ‘Joseph’ that God makes his arms strong. More specifically, this is a description of Christ, like Joseph the son favored over all his brethren, the son of man whom God made strong for Himself (Psa 80:1,15,17).

Psa 18:35

YOUR RIGHT HAND SUSTAINS ME: Christ is the Son of the right hand of God (Psa 80 again). After his redemptive work, he is now seated on the right hand of his Father (Psa 110:1; Act 2:33). The right hand is the hand of strength (Psa 20:6), righteousness (Psa 48:10), authority (Isa 62:8), and fellowship (Psa 16:11; Gal 2:9).

YOU STOOP DOWN TO MAKE ME GREAT: “Thy gentleness hath made me strong” (AV). Jacob, made lame by the angel, then made spiritually strong again through prayer, lifted up to go forth with “enlarged” steps to meet Esau: Gen 32.

Psa 18 is majestic and warlike throughout; its theme is vengeance and victory. All the destructive elements of nature are marshaled on the side of Omnipotence, but right in the midst of it we read of the “gentleness”, the “meekness”, the “condescension” of the Almighty. What better way to remind us that the awesome destructive power is but the outer fringe of the garments of the Lord. The Lord is not really in the wind, the earthquake, nor the fire (1Ki 19:11,12). They are but the passing manifestations of His fury — they endure only for the moment, but the still small voice of gentle strength remains forever. Whirlwind and earthquake and flame — those great evidences of His might — can pull down and purify and consume, but His gentleness alone can build up and make great (see also Psa 113:4-9).

Psa 18:37

Note the progression of the battle (or better, the rout!): pursue… overtake… destroy… crush (v 38)… But in the antitype again, David’s 30 mighty men of war (2Sa 23) are destined to give way to Christ’s “double portion” of 60 mighty men (Song 3:7,8), the symbolic Cherubim.

Psa 18:38

FELL BENEATH MY FEET: Psa 8:6; Mat 28:18; 1Co 15:27; Gen 3:15!

Psa 18:39

YOU ARMED ME WITH STRENGTH: Rev 1:13; 15:6. First we must be girded with righteousness, as was Christ (Isa 11:5; Psa 132:9; Job 29:14; 1Pe 5:5; Eph 6 — the whole armor of God). Then we may expect to be girded with the strength of eternal life and Spirit.

Psa 18:41

This can only refer to David’s enemies among his own people — Saul, for example: 1Sa 28:6. Cp “the strivings of the people”: LXX: contentions, railings; and here the word for people is the word which normally describes Israel.

NT: How bitterly this was fulfilled in AD 70, and many times since. Ct v 6.

Psa 18:44

FOREIGNERS CRINGE BEFORE ME: Lit “shall yield feigned obedience”, or “come cringing” (NEB) — which is precisely the situation in Psa 2:2,3 when Messiah is already king on mount Zion. Cp the figure of speech in Psa 81:15; 66:3; Deu 33:29 mg.

Psa 18:47

God as the Avenger of David: “May the LORD judge between you and me. And may the LORD avenge the wrongs you have done to me, but my hand will not touch you” (1Sa 24:12).

NT: Here is an anticipation of the Son’s ultimate subjection to the Father: 1Co 15:28.

Psa 18:48

Jerusalem the holy city, under both David and Christ, is lifted up above all surrounding nations and cities (Isa 2:2,3; Zec 14:4,5,10,16). The holy city is exalted above the man of violence, or the “man of sin” (2Th 2).

Psa 18:49

Paul quotes this v in Rom 15:9 (along with Deu 30:43; Psa 117:1; Isa 11:10) as proof that Gentiles are to have a share in the gospel. The implicit argument is this: If Gentiles are to take part willingly and gladly in the great Messianic thanksgiving in the Kingdom, must not their thanksgiving look back joyfully to their earlier redemption from ignorance and sin? The theme is continued in Psa 19:4,6.

I WILL SING PRAISES TO YOUR NAME: Lit “To thy name will I sweep the strings.”

Psa 18:50

GREAT VICTORIES: “Salvations”. An intensive plural anticipating the name of Jesus, just as “Anointed” (here also) is the same as Christ! Same combination in Psa 28:8.

HE SHOWS UNFAILING KINDNESS TO HIS ANOINTED, TO DAVID, AND TO HIS DESCENDANTS FOREVER: An allusion to the great promise made to David in 2Sa 7:13. There can be but one true “Seed” of David (cp Gal 3:16).

SUBSCRIPTION: “FOR THE DIRECTOR OF MUSIC”.

Psalms 19

Psa 19:1

SUPERSCRIPTION: “A PSALM OF DAVID”.

OUTLINE: The modernists say that here are two completely different psalms (vv 1-6,7-14) stuck together by a compiler. If so, that compiler was a genius. However, Bullinger shows how to discern unity here: A. 1-4b. The heavens. The word written there. B. 4c-6. “In them” the sun. A. 7-10. The Scriptures. B. 11-14. “In them” (Heb) Thy Servant.

The psalm may be seen as a combination of Psa 8 and Psa 119. For other psalms about the glory of God in Nature, consider Psa 29, 65, 93, 104, 107, and 148. The names of God are specially appropriate here: El (the Mighty God) in v 1, and then Jehovah/Yahweh (the Covenant God) 7 times in vv 7-14. Cp the switch from Elohim in Gen 1 to Jehovah in Gen 2; 3. Whereas Psa 8 paints the glory of the heavens as seen by night, this psalm does the same as seen by day. The sky above man and the moral law within man (put there, of course, by God) both testify to the existence of Omnipotence. (See LGS: “Out of Whom are All Things”, Xd 1923 May.)

DECLARE: LXX sw Luk 1:1, intimating that the best declaration of the glory of God is in the story about Christ: cp. also Joh 1:14,18.

SKIES: “Firmament” (AV), LXX has sw Col 2:5: “steadfastness” or “firmness” (RSV), referring to the faith of Christ’s ecclesia.

PROCLAIM: LXX has sw Luk 9:60: to publish the gospel.

Psa 19:2

POUR FORTH: Heb naba: a spring gushing out water. The word for prophet (nabi) is probably derived from this — the spokesman who “pours forth” the word of God. See Psa 78:2; 145:7; Pro 15:2.

NIGHT AFTER NIGHT THEY DISPLAY KNOWLEDGE: The knowledge of God’s existence and power but not of His character or purpose. Rom 1:20 is not to be interpreted by this verse, but by Eph 2:10.

Psa 19:3

“Where” (AV) is in italics, and should be omitted. There is no voice. It is a silent witness, like that of the Scriptures themselves. (“They have no speech, there are no words; no sound is heard from them — yet their line goes out into all the earth”: NIV mg; cp RV); ct the voice of the Lord in the storm (Psa 29). Every word of Addison’s paraphrase, in Hymn 79, (“The spacious firmament on high…”) deserves to be carefully pondered. Yet how often it is sung vigorously but without thought!

Psa 19:4

THEIR VOICE GOES OUT INTO ALL THE EARTH: In Rom 10:18 Paul appears to be misusing his Scripture when applying “their sound (LXX) is gone out into all the earth” (apparently about the silent witness of the heavens) to the vocal message of the gospel taken everywhere by the Lord’s preachers. This use of Psa 19:1-6 is Paul’s way of declaring that this emphasis on the celestial witness to the glory of God is to be read as a parable of the preaching of the gospel, a greater witness to that same glory. JT goes yet further: “This was not all that the prophecy [of v 2] intended. How much more fully will it be accomplished when Christ and all the apostles, prophets, and saints, accepted and approved of him, shall have brought all nations into the blessedness of Abraham and his Seed” (Eur 3:679).

“Their line is gone out through all the earth” (AV) uses a word which means “boundary line” (Jer 31:39; 1Ki 7:23). Apparently Paul alludes to this phrase with ref to his preaching: 2Co 10:13,14; cp Mar 16:15. The preaching of the gospel (and its hearty reception) was the means of marking out a boundary between the heritage of the Lord and the rest of the world (cp the idea of Psa 16:6). And, as that preaching proceeds, it breaks down all other existing boundaries — ethnic and national and political.

THE SUN: The sun in the heavens is an easy figure of the message concerning Messiah in the Scriptures. In fact, two and one-half verses out of six emphasize this. All else that is mentioned in the world of Nature is Night-and-Day. Christ the Sun (2Sa 23:4; Mal 4:1,2; Mat 17:2; Act 26:13; Rev 1:16) gives Light to all his New Creation, but also comforting warmth to those who appreciate him, and the fierce heat of judgment to those who do not (see also Psa 72:17; Isa 60:1-3; 2Th 1:7,8).

VOICE: “Line” (AV) is sw in Isa 28:10,13; this suggests the idea of simple teaching. LXX, RSV, and other versions repeat the word voice. This involves the addition of one letter to the text, but preserves the parallelism with their words. (The word for “line” may also mean a harp string — so suggesting itself an audible sound, and thus maintaining the same parallelism.)

Psa 19:5

A BRIDEGROOM COMING FORTH FROM HIS PAVILION: Sym anticipation of the resurrection of Mar 16:2? Or of 2nd Coming of Mal 4:2 (or both)? The new Day is preceded by a Morning Star (2Pe 1:19) and by a brightening dawn as prophecies are fulfilled. “Chamber” is the bridal canopy of protection, referred to in Isa 4:5 (“defence” = covering) and Joel 2:16.

LIKE A CHAMPION REJOICING TO RUN HIS COURSE: “The outset of his military career” (Eur 3:431; cp Rev 19 — where Christ is first the Bridegroom and then the military leader). Cp the allusion in Jdg 5:31.

CHAMPION: “Strong man” (AV) is gibbor in Heb: a mighty man, a hero — esp in war. See 2Sa 23:8,9,16,17,22: David’s “mighty men”.

REJOICING: This Heb verb always means joy in the Lord. Some examples: Deu 28:63; 30:9; Psa 35:9; 40:16; 68:3; 70:4; 119:14; Isa 35:1; 61:10; etc.

Psa 19:6

RISES: “Going forth” (AV) is the sw Mic 5:2, ref to the divine parentage of the Messiah.

NOTHING IS HIDDEN FROM ITS HEAT: Cp Heb 4:12,13, about the (personal) Word of God. Man may seek to hide from him as the Light (Joh 3:19; 9:41; 12:46,48), but he cannot escape the heat of his judgment.

Psa 19:7

Vv 7-9:

Psalms 9

Psa 9:1

SUPERSCRIPTION: “A PSALM OF DAVID”.

See Lesson, Acrostics.

PSALMS 9,10: Really one psalm (NEB heading): similar theme, coincidences of phrasing, one psalm in LXX, partial acrostics, Psa 10 has no title.

From this point up to Psa 149 the versions differ in the numbering of the Psalms, since LXX and Vulgate — followed by Roman church — count 9 and 10 as a single psalm, while the Protestant churches follow the Heb reckoning.

HISTORICAL SETTING: (a) A psalm of David; (b) Zion is the center of the psalmist’s devotion (vv 11,14); (c) V 13 implies a grievous illness, such as afflicted David at the time of the ark being brought to Zion, and about the time of Absalom’s rebellion (cp Psa 30; 41); (d) Emphasis on Gentile enemies. Thus prob related to 2Sa 6-10: David’s great campaigns against the nations or Gentiles.

I WILL PRAISE YOU, O LORD: “Praise should always follow answered prayer; as the mist of earth’s gratitude rises when the sun of heaven’s love warms the ground. Hath the Lord been gracious to thee, and inclined His ear to the voice of thy supplication? Then praise Him as long as thou livest. Let the ripe fruit drop upon the fertile soil from which it drew its life. Deny not a song to Him who hath answered thy prayer and given thee the desire of thy heart. To be silent over God’s mercies is to incur the guilt of ingratitude; it is to act as basely as the nine lepers, who after they had been cured of their leprosy, returned not to give thanks unto the healing Lord. To forget to praise God is to refuse to benefit ourselves; for praise, like prayer, is one great means of promoting the growth of the spiritual life. It helps to remove our burdens, to excite our hope, to increase our faith. It is a healthful and invigorating exercise which quickens the pulse of the believer, and nerves him for fresh enterprises in his Master’s service” (CHS).

WONDERS: Used esp of the great redemptive miracles (ie Psa 106:7,22) but also of their less lofty counterparts in daily experience (Psa 71:17), and of the hidden wonders of Scripture (Psa 119:18). It is a word reserved for God, and never used of man’s feeble and temporary efforts.

Psa 9:2

YOUR NAME: God at work, whether in past, present, or future: Rev 1:8.

Psa 9:3

The authority of God in the Last Days. Alluded to in Joh 18:6, where those who attempt to arrest Christ are temporarily befuddled and driven back. Thus there is suggested — even at his “weakest moment” — the truth about the Man they were attempting to arrest.

Psa 9:4

ON YOUR THRONE: In Zion (v 11).

Psa 9:5

AND DESTROYED THE WICKED: Cp v 6: the destructions the enemy has wrought are ended for ever.

YOU HAVE BLOTTED OUT THEIR NAME: Like Absalom, the godless rebel: 2Sa 18:18; Deu 29:20.

Psa 9:6

EVEN THE MEMORY OF THEM HAS PERISHED: See Deu 25:19. God’s memorial is His covenant name Jehovah or Yahweh (v 7). The memorial of every rival god perishes for all time.

Psa 9:9

“The name of the LORD is a strong tower; the righteous run to it and are safe” (Pro 18:10).

Psa 9:12

Add “saying” at the end of this verse, thus introducing the prayer of v 13. See also Psa 22:7; 30:8; 39:3; 41:5; 52:6; 132:2,11.

Psa 9:13

THE GATES OF DEATH: A deliberate ct with the “gates of Zion” (v 14). See Psa 6:5; 107:18; Gen 22:12,17; Rev 1:18; Mat 16:18.

Psa 9:14

THE DAUGHTER OF ZION: A favorite phrase of Isa for Jerusalem (Isa 1:18; 52:2).

Psa 9:16

HIGGAION: One of the mystery words of the Psalms, translated “meditation” (Psa 19:14), “a solemn sound” (Psa 92:3), and “device” (Lam 3:62). The Heb rt means “to talk”, which is the best way to meditate.

See Lesson, Selah.

Psa 9:17

THE WICKED RETURN TO THE GRAVE: Either in the sense of Gen 3:19 or as the fate of those raised and rejected (Mat 25:26,32,41). For such, Death is their “native element”. Cp Psa 104:29; 146:4.

Psa 9:18

BUT THE NEEDY WILL NOT ALWAYS BE FORGOTTEN: Of course not! Even the sparrows are not forgotten by God (Luk 12:6).

NOR THE HOPE OF THE AFFLICTED EVER PERISH: See Lesson, Double negative, Hebrew.

HOPE: “Expectation” (AV); Heb “tiqvah”: “hope”, sw Jos 2:18 (line). How well the experience of Rahab illustrates this verse! 1Th 1:3 (“patience of hope”) refers to both Heb and LXX readings of this v.

Psa 9:19

The Heb text has a superb paradox which is quite obscured here: “Let not frail mortal man (v 20, sw) show himself strong!” Cp Joel 3:10: weak say they are strong!

Psa 9:20

STRIKE THEM WITH TERROR: The LXX has “Place a lawgiver over them.”

See Lesson, Selah.

Psalms 10

Psa 10:1

See Lesson, Acrostics.

PSALM 10: “These vv are a picture gallery of the troublers of David… from the swaggering Goliaths, through the jealous, treacherous Sauls, the false, betraying Ahithophels, the foul-mouthed Shimeis, down to the churlish Nabals and the base and murderous Doegs” (NPH).

HISTORICAL SETTING: Saul’s pursuit of David. The incident of Doeg and the slaying of the priests at Nob (1Sa 21-23).

MESSIANIC FULFILLMENT: Attested by: (a) Paul’s quotation of v 7 in Rom 3:14 — not with ref to human wickedness generally, but to the supreme wickedness of combined Jewish and Gentile rejection (cp Saul and Doeg) of the Lord’s Anointed (cp Act 4:24-28). (b) The echo of v 16a in at least two Messianic prophecies: Oba 1:21; Rev 11:15.

V 1: A very hurt reproach against God, such as would inevitably spring to the mind of David when he heard about the slaughter of the priests of Nob (1Sa 22:18), or when the relentless pursuit by Saul inclined David to despair. Cp Psa 13:1 and, of course, Psa 22:1,2. Antitype: Were there occasions during the Lord’s ministry when his Father seemed to hide Himself in times of trouble?

WHY DO YOU HIDE YOURSELF?: So as not to see the need of Your servant (Isa 1:15; Job 23:9).

Psa 10:2

IN HIS ARROGANCE THE WICKED MAN HUNTS DOWN THE WEAK: The poor (singular) is David himself. RV: In the pride of the wicked the poor is hotly pursued (lit: set on fire). Could this be an allusion to Saul’s men systematically burning the scrub on the hillside, so as to flush out their prey?

WHO ARE CAUGHT IN THE SCHEMES HE DEVISES: “Let them be taken in the devices that they have imagined” (AV). Cp Joh 11:48-50: They did not “let him alone”. Instead, “one man died for the people”, and the Romans did come and take away their place (ie temple) and their nation!

Psa 10:3

HE BOASTS OF THE CRAVINGS OF HIS HEART: This verb is as in Hallelujah. His song of praise is about himself! He is a “self-made” man and he is worshipping his “creator”!

HE BLESSES THE GREEDY AND REVILES THE LORD: The wicked man loves those in whom he sees his own reflection. The wicked man honors others according to the amount of their possessions (Psa 49:6,18). He not only commits sin, but takes pleasure in others who do the same (Rom 1:32). In 1Sa 22 every detail about Doeg describes a man fawning over the king for personal advantage.

THE GREEDY: Judas?

Psa 10:4

IN HIS PRIDE: “The pride of his countenance”: Lit, “height of nostril”, sig a turned-up nose, or haughtiness.

THE WICKED DOES NOT SEEK HIM: See Psa 9:10; 14:2.

IN ALL HIS THOUGHTS THERE IS NO ROOM FOR GOD: He “believes” in God, but in practice he is atheist. He can manage without God, and he believes he can evade God’s scrutiny of his life. For the same idea, see vv 5b,6,11,13; Psa 14:2; 53:1a; 2Pe 3:4; Isa 26:11a; and ct vv 14,15; Psa 11:4; 33:13-19; 34:15,16. God was not in his thinking at all! This was the root of all the trouble in Saul’s life. He believed in God, but not as a Being who was in control of his life: vv 6,11,13, and the emphatic corrective in v 15. // Psa 14/53 and Psa 52 and notes there.

NT: How true of those “holy men” of the temple!

Psa 10:5

YOUR LAWS ARE FAR FROM HIM: “Thy judgments are far about out of his sight” (AV). A vast chasm between God’s thoughts and man’s (Isa 55:8,9). Natural man is so short-sighted that he cannot see the marvelous workings of God in nature or in grace (2Co 4:4). Neither can he see the Divine storm clouds hanging over him, because his eyes are directed downward toward his grubbing in the earth. Since God does not immediately visit every sin with punishment, natural men do not understand that such punishment — even though long in coming — is inevitable (Ecc 8:11; 2Pe 3:3-5,8,10).

Psa 10:6

HE SAYS TO HIMSELF: “He hath said in his heart” (AV). This “atheism” is his innermost thinking. A blithe assumption that he will not be called to account for his evil purposes and ways.

NOTHING WILL SHAKE ME: The “noble” art of self-deception: cp Psa 30:6; 1Sa 15:13. The real “peace and safety” cry (1Th 5:3).

AND NEVER HAVE TROUBLE: RV: to all generations. Saul was set on founding a great dynasty. This was the root of his incurable hostility to David: 1Sa 20:30,31.

Psa 10:7

CURSES… LIES… THREATS… TROUBLE…EVIL: What a catalogue of evil. All these were true either of Saul or of Doeg.

UNDER HIS TONGUE: That is, at times hypocritically hidden: eg, 1Sa 24:16-22. “Poison” emanating from the mouth is indisputably “serpent” symbolism.

Consider the hypocrisy in Luk 20:20.

Psa 10:8

Vv 8-10: Surely this describes the massacre of the priests (1Sa 22:18; also 23:9,21-23). “He doth murder the innocent.”

“And a thousand rascals, the living originals of this picture, are this day crouching and lying in wait all over the country to catch poor helpless travellers” (LB).

Psa 10:9

“He lieth in wait secretly as a lion in his den: he lieth in wait to catch the poor: he doth catch the poor, when he draweth him into his net” (AV). The Pharisees’ plots against Jesus (Joh 5:16,18; Mar 3:6; Luk 11:54; Joh 7:19-21,25; 8:59; Luk 13:31; Joh 10:31,39; 11:8,16, 44-54; Luk 20:14-26; Mat 26:3-5,16). Esp is this a picture of the atmosphere of intrigue and hostility in the last week of the Lord’s ministry, when it was necessary for him to leave the holy city each day as the sun set (Luk 21:37).

Psa 10:10

“He croucheth and humbleth himself” (AV): 1Sa 24:22; 26:25 both suggest that David had strong misgivings about the lasting sincerity of Saul’s change of heart.

NT: A deceitful, ingratiating humility — such as intended to trick Jesus into wrong answers to their crafty questions. This is the false “humility” of a crouching lion ready to pounce on its prey (v 9).

Psa 10:11

FACE (of God): In Psalms, always ref God’s presence in ark/tabernacle/temple: see VL, Psalms, God’s face.

Psa 10:12

What a ct between David’s unquenchable consciousness of the power and presence of God and the “atheism” of his enemy. Note the alternation regarding this in vv 11,13 and 12,14.

ARISE, LORD!: The old “wilderness” cry, the call to battle of the Lord of hosts (Psa 9:19; 82:8; 132:8; Num 10:35).

Psa 10:14

YOU CONSIDER IT TO TAKE IT IN HAND: Retribution for the rejection of Christ came inevitably in AD 70. As God used the Philistines against Saul, so also He used the legions of Rome against His rebellion people (Mat 22:7).

THE FATHERLESS: David, deprived of his father-in-law (1Sa 22:14)? Or David, deprived of help and counsel from Samuel (1Sa 25:1)?

Psa 10:15

BREAK THE ARM OF THE WICKED AND EVIL MAN: Twice (1Sa 24;26) David has it in his power to be rid of Saul once and for all. But how admirable is the emphasis in 1Sa 24:6; 26:9-11: “The Lord forbid that I should do this….”

Psa 10:16

Vv 16-18: Added in later days when Saul was dead and David was established as the Lord’s anointed. The Lord is king; and the Gentiles (such as Doeg) are perished… to judge the fatherless and the oppressed (David’s correction of the extremes of Saul’s reign), that the man of the earth may no more oppress. (There is also the possibility that as in some other instances, these vv were added in the Hezekiah period. There is considerable fitness about all the details.)

On any reading, there is a chronological gap in the psalm here. When the Messiah receives his kingdom, “Jehovah is King for ever and ever.” And the Gentiles, who up to the very last have sought to assert their authority over it, are perished out of it (Zec 14:21). Then the “humble” (v 17) will find their heart’s “desire”; v 18 provides a lovely cameo of the blessedness of the kingdom.

Psa 10:18

MAN, WHO IS OF THE EARTH: “The man of the earth” (AV) uses the word for frail mortal man (“enosh”) and alludes back to Gen 2:7. Play on words: “earth” (eretz), “oppress” (aratz). Cp “the god of the earth” (Rev 11:4). He is “from beneath” (Joh 8:23), and “earthly, sensual, and demonic” (Joh 3:31; Jam 3:15).

SUBSCRIPTION: “FOR THE DIRECTOR OF MUSIC.”

Psalms 11

Psa 11:1

SUPERSCRIPTION: “OF DAVID”.

HISTORICAL SETTING: V 1: David’s flight. V 4: A “temple” of the Lord appears to be in existence; ref the reign of David after 2Sa 6. The best possibility: ref to Absalom’s rebellion, when flight from Jerusalem seemed to be the only option (2Sa 15:13,14). (If heykal, ie temple, means simply dwelling — a poss but not very likely meaning — then the reference could more simply be to heaven itself. In that case, the early wilderness years of David could just as well fit the historical context.) The “foundations” (v 3) of the nation — Kingship and Priesthood, Jachin and Boaz — were tottering. David attempted to maintain the influence of the latter by sending ark and high priests back into Jerusalem (Psa 11:4; 2Sa 15:25-29). But the salvaging of the situation is really in God’s hands (vv 4-7). Alternatively, v 3 may mean: ‘You, David, are the foundation of our nation. If anything happens to you, what will happen to our righteous cause?’ For this, cp 2Sa 18:3.

MESSIANIC FULFILLMENT: The rejection of Jesus by his people corresponds to the rebellion against the authority of David (WGos 730-732). As Lot and his family were saved from Sodom, so also the believers were saved from doomed Jerusalem: Luk 21:20,21. And as Sodom was desolated by fire, so also was Jerusalem. But that judgment and that escape will be repeated on a vaster scale in the Last Days: Luk 17:26-33; 2Pe 2:6-9; Isa 26:19-21; Eze 38:22.

IN THE LORD I TAKE REFUGE: Trust in the Lord, not in the mountains. Cp the antithesis in Psa 121:1; see also Luk 13:31,32, where Jesus rejected similar “well-meaning” advice. The advice here (vv 1b-3) seems well-meaning, but it is ill-founded, like Peter’s to Jesus in Mat 16:22 and the brethren’s to Paul in Act 21:12.

FLEE LIKE A BIRD TO YOUR MOUNTAIN: Sodom (Gen 19:14,16-22).

Psa 11:2

THE WICKED BEND THEIR BOWS: The same figure appears in Psa 64:3,4, related to character assassination.

Psa 11:3

THE FOUNDATIONS: The foundations of God’s world are used as a figure of His solid and sure purpose with Israel (Isa 51:13; cp also Heb 11:10). LXX reads: “What thou didst establish (as perfect), they have thrown down.” According to Paul, God’s purpose with the saints also rests on a sure foundation, having the guarantee that “the Lord knoweth them that are his” (2Ti 2:19). So, no matter what men might do for the moment, God is ultimately in control, and His judgment will at the last right all wrongs. In this profound sense, the true “foundations” can never really be undermined or destroyed (BF 79,80).

Psa 11:4

THE LORD IS IN HIS HOLY TEMPLE: The context seems to equate God’s temple with heaven itself. But some vv read, the other way round, as though the Holy of Holies was spoken of as “heaven”, being God’s dwelling place in the midst of His people (1Ki 8:30,33; 2Ch 30:27; Psa 20:2,6; Heb 7:26; cp 2Ch 7:1 with Lev 9:24). Also, “katapetasma”, the veil, is a word which means ‘a thing spread out’: the exact equivalent of “firmament”: cp also Jer 17:12. Hab 2:20 quotes v 4a in this sense.

HE OBSERVES: “His eyes behold” (AV): Eze 1:18,20. What a ct with Psa 10:4,11,13! In a like figure, Christ “the Word of God” can search the inner man, because “all things are naked and open [dissected, like a sacrifice on the altar] unto his eyes” (Heb 4:12,13; cp Rev 1:14).

HIS EYES EXAMINE THEM: The squinting, or contracting, of the eyes suggest close scrutiny.

Psa 11:5

THE LORD EXAMINES THE RIGHTEOUS: Or “trieth the righteous” (AV). “All events are under the control of Providence; consequently all the trials of our outward life are traceable at once to the great First Cause. Out of the golden gate of God’s ordinance the armies of trial march forth in array, clad in their iron armour, and armed with weapons of war. All providences are doors to trial. Even our mercies, like roses, have their thorns. Men may be drowned in seas of prosperity as well as in rivers of affliction. Our mountains are not too high, and our valleys are not too low for temptations: trials lurk on all roads. Everywhere, above and beneath, we are beset and surrounded with dangers. Yet no shower falls unpermitted from the threatening cloud; every drop has its order ere it hastens to the earth. The trials which come from God are sent to prove and strengthen our graces, and so at once to illustrate the power of divine grace, to test the genuineness of our virtues, and to add to their energy. Our Lord in His infinite wisdom and superabundant love, sets so high a value upon His people’s faith that He will not screen them from those trials by which faith is strengthened. You would never have possessed the precious faith which now supports you if the trial of your faith had not been like unto fire. You are a tree that never would have rooted so well if the wind had not rocked you to and fro, and made you take firm hold upon the precious truths of the covenant grace. Worldly ease is a great foe to faith; it loosens the joints of holy valour, and snaps the sinews of sacred courage. The balloon never rises until the cords are cut; affliction doth this sharp service for believing souls. While the wheat sleeps comfortably in the husk it is useless to man, it must be threshed out of its resting place before its value can be known. Thus it is well that Jehovah trieth the righteous, for it causeth them to grow rich towards God” (CHS).

Psa 11:6

HE WILL RAIN FIERY COALS: “Rain snares” (AV) does not sound right. The smallest possible correction turns the noun into hot coals (NEB; AV mg; cp Gen 19:24,28). Thus Sodom serves as a vivid example of sudden and irremediable divine judgment (Luk 17:28-32; 2Pe 2:6-9; Jud 1:7). (Also a poss allusion to Rom 12:20?)

Psa 11:7

UPRIGHT MEN WILL SEE HIS FACE: Consider the sequence: Exo 33:20; 1Co 13:12; Rev 22:4. See also Psa 4:6; 16:8,11; 17:15; 23:6; 140:13; Mat 5:8; 1Jo 3:2. Parallel in the related NT passage: “The Lord knoweth them that are his” (2Ti 2:19).

HIS FACE: The AV “shewbread” (Exo 25:30; 1Sa 21:6) is actually “the bread of the face”. Suggests the seriousness of breaking of bread: “Here, O my Lord, I see thee face to face.” In Psalms, God’s face always ref God’s presence in ark/tabernacle/temple: see VL, Psalms, God’s face.

SUBSCRIPTION: “FOR THE DIRECTOR OF MUSIC. ACCORDING TO SHEMINITH”: “Sheminith”: Eight, or the eighth: a poss ref to circumcision, performed the 8th day (Gen 17:12; Lev 12:3; Luk 1:59; 2:21; Ac 7:8; Phi 3:5). May indicate a male choir in the temple (cp also Psa 5; 1Ch 15:21). The “8th”: certain especially solemn seasons of worship, on the 8th day (Lev 23:36; Num 29:35; Neh 8:18).

Psalms 12

Psa 12:1

SUPERSCRIPTION: ‘A PSALM OF DAVID’.

HISTORICAL BACKGROUND: Absalom’s rebellion (2Sa 15,16), accompanied by a campaign of false rumor and character assassination. Or poss the hostility of Doeg the Edomite, based on Psa 52:2-4.

HELP, LORD, FOR THE GODLY ARE NO MORE: Many supporters, whom David thought he could count on, evidently fell away. Otherwise, would he have abandoned Jerusalem?

HELP, LORD: “He evidently felt his own weakness, or he would not have cried for help; but at the same time he intended honestly to exert himself for the cause of truth, for the word ‘help’ is inapplicable where we ourselves do nothing. There is much of directness, clearness of perception, and distinctness of utterance in this petition of two words; much more, indeed, than in the long rambling outpourings of certain professors. The Psalmist runs straight-forward to his God, with a well-considered prayer; he knows what he is seeking, and where to seek it” (CHS).

HELP: Nearly the word “Messiah”. This verse implies a serious falling away of disciples from close loyalty to Jesus, in the last days of the ministry: Joh 6:60,66; Mat 26:56.

Psa 12:2

Absalom’s organized denigration of the king, which could do so much in weaning supporters away from him: 2Sa 15:1-6. (NT) A systematic propaganda campaign against Jesus. Or Judas’ kiss of betrayal: Mat 26:49.

EVERYONE LIES TO HIS NEIGHBOR: Paul quotes these words in Eph 4:25, making a powerful ct by the drastic change of one word: i.e. “vanity” to “truth”! Cp the flattery of Tertullus with the sincerity of Paul in Act 24:1-10.

THEIR FLATTERING LIPS SPEAK WITH DECEPTION: Their deceitful talk in temple discussions: Mat 22:16.

DECEPTION: “A double heart” (AV). Lit, “with a heart and a heart” (AV mg; cp 1Ch 12:33). This context suggests that Jam 1:8 refers not to the well-meaning doubter but to the willful traitor. “A man without a heart is a wonder; but a man with two hearts is a monster” (Thomas Adams).

Psa 12:3

ALL FLATTERING LIPS: Heb “lips of smoothness” (cp Psa 55:21; Isa 30:10).

EVERY BOASTFUL TONGUE: The confidence of the rebels that they will succeed.

Psa 12:4

A comparable confidence in the power of their propaganda.

WE OWN OUR LIPS: Meaning either: (a) they are our chief resource, or (b) we have a right to say what we like. Lit: “our lips are with us”; ct “Immanuel” (God is with us). “Speaking great swelling words” (Jud 1:16) of boastful arrogance (2Pe 2:10-12). Ct 1Co 6:20, where Paul tells us that our bodies, and every member thereof, belong to God.

WHO IS OUR MASTER?: The rulers who rejected Jesus were essentially atheists. Note Joh 11:48: our place (ie temple) and our nation!

Psa 12:5

All will yet turn out well.

OPPRESSION… GROANING: The willful opposition and malicious criticism of his adversaries were to Jesus worse than physical persecution. But at last he was set in safety.

OPPRESSION: Means plundering: the rebels at work. LXX: sw Jam 5:1; 4:9.

GROANING: Sw Psa 79:11; 102:20; Rom 8:26.

I WILL NOW ARISE: That God will do so is a constant prayer: Psa 3:7; 7:6; 9:19; 10:12. Cp Exo 2:23-25; 3:7-9.

SAYS THE LORD: The interesting phenomenon of a revelation embodied in a later inspired Scripture. So also in Psa 60:6-8; 81:5-14; 95:8-11; 132:11-18.

I WILL PROTECT THEM: “Set him in safety” (AV) refs to Mahanaim (2Sa 17:27), where David knew he could count on the protection, not only of loyal followers, but also of a host of angels (Psa 34:7; Gen 32:1,2).

Psa 12:6

These words of the Lord (v 5) are compared to refined silver because they imply redemption: Exo 30:12,13; 38:26,27. David would be delivered, or redeemed, out of his trials.

WORDS… FLAWLESS: Pro 30:5. This word is used many times of a man pronounced clean under the Law of Moses (Lev 13:13,17,37,39-41; etc), eg the healed leper.

REFINED IN A FURNACE: For the purifying effect of fiery trials, see 1Pe 1:7; Pro 17:3; 27:21; Job 23:10; Mal 3:3.

Psa 12:8

WHAT IS VILE IS HONORED AMONG MEN: Ahithophel? See Pro 28:12,18; 29:2. “The vilest of the sons of Adam”; ie Cain, who slew his brother: Gen 4:8; 1Jo 3:12.

THE WICKED FREELY STRUT ABOUT: Ziba? Shimei?

SUBSCRIPTION: “FOR THE DIRECTOR OF MUSIC”.

Psalms 13

Psa 13:1

SUPERSCRIPTION: “A PSALM OF DAVID”.

HISTORICAL SETTING: Psa 12 ended with ref to the “vilest of the sons of Adam”, ie Cain, who slew his brother. Psa 13 begins with allusion to the same incident: “The voice of thy brother’s blood crieth unto me from the ground” (Gen 4:8,10; cp “souls under the altar” in Rev 6:9,10). In David’s life, prob Saul’s sustained hatred and persecution, which nearly broke his spirit, as the 4-fold “How long?” emphasized. Note the desperation written into such chapters as 1Sa 21, 23, and 27: “I shall now perish one day by the hand of Saul.” Alternatively, there is the suggestion of serious illness in v 3, which may be related to Psa 32, 38, 39, 41, and 51.

HOW LONG?: A question repeated in Psa 74:10; 79:5; 89:46. Notice similar questions in Hab 1:2; Dan 12:6; 8:13. The general answer to such questions is in Isa 54:17: “For a small moment have I forsaken thee” (cp 2Co 4:17). Job, in the midst of intense sufferings, asked the same question (Job 13:24). Cp also Psa 10:1.

HOW LONG WILL YOU HIDE YOUR FACE FROM ME?: David’s sorest trial was the occasional feeling that God had turned His back on him. His constant and intense longing was to behold God’s face: Psa 11:7; 17:15; 27:4,8; 34:5. In Psalms, always ref God’s presence in ark/tabernacle/temple: see VL, Psalms, God’s face. (NT) This plaintive repetition tells of Christ’s human spirit sorely tried: “How am I straitened till it be accomplished!” (Luk 12:50). Yet even when at the lowest ebb, these words of faith imply confidence that there will be an end to the evil time. In spite of Psa 22:1, it is not possible to believe that the Father ever truly hid His face from His Son. But there were times when human weakness was tempted to believe that He did: Psa 11:7.

Psa 13:2

HOW LONG WILL MY ENEMY TRIUMPH OVER ME?: Samuel’s anointing of David carried with it an implicit divine promise that one day the exaltation would be his, and not Saul’s.

SORROW IN MY HEART… MY ENEMY TRIUMPH OVER ME: Even though the gospels tell but little of this side of the psychology of Jesus, there must have been times when these words were poignantly true.

Psa 13:3

GIVE LIGHT TO MY EYES: ‘Save me from this present physical exhaustion’; this was the experience of Jonathan on eating the honey: 1Sa 14:27,29. On a spiritual level, God’s “light” is sweeter than honey (Psa 19:8,10).

OR I WILL SLEEP IN DEATH: The “sleep” of death: Job 7:21; Psa 6:5; 146:3,4; Joh 11:11; 1Co 15:18; 1Th 4:13-16. Intended as a deliberate contrast with Saul’s experience when he slept the sleep of “safety” with a spear poised over his heart (1Sa 26:8)?

(NT) A sense of possible failure of Christ’s life work and of his death: cp Isa 49.

Psa 13:4

MY ENEMY: Many psalms speak of conflict with an enemy! But in none of them is the enemy the “orthodox” Devil, but always a man, or men — or self!

I HAVE OVERCOME HIM: See Mat 27:43.

AND MY FOES WILL REJOICE WHEN I FALL: The vaunting spirit of evil did rejoice against Christ, but only for a short while. It did not endure even as far as the 3rd day.

Psa 13:5

YOUR UNFAILING LOVE: Heb “hesed” refers to God’s covenants of promise. Through all this harassment David knew that the throne was to be his. The way through all these horrific situations is by trust (faith) in God’s “mercy”.

(NT) Gethsemane illustrates how, many a time, a despondent spirit in Jesus gave way at last before the positive steadfastness of his faith. (“Mercy” does not necessarily imply forgiveness of sins; rather, it could be translated “lovingkindness”.) As stated above, it is connected with God’s covenants of promise, having to do with eternal life, and confirmed by the blood of Christ the “covenant-victim” (Heb 9:13-17).

Psa 13:6

HE HAS BEEN GOOD TO ME: “He hath dealt bountifully” (AV). This v may be read either as a later addition, when faith had won through, or as a typical Hebraism — expressing, even in the midst of depression, that the reinforcements of heaven are at hand and all-sufficient.

SUBSCRIPTION: “FOR THE DIRECTOR OF MUSIC”.