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Psalm Three

 

Psalm 3

Chapter Contents

David complains to God of his enemies and confides in God. (1-3) He triumphs over his fears and gives God the glory and takes to himself the comfort. (4-8)

Commentary on Psalm 3:1-3

(Read Psalm 3:1-3)

An active believer the more he is beaten off from God either by the rebukes of providence or the reproaches of enemies the faster hold he will take and the closer will he cleave to him. A child of God startles at the very thought of despairing of help in God. See what God is to his people what he will be what they have found him what David found in him. 1. Safety; a shield for me; which denotes the advantage of that protection. 2. Honour; those whom God owns for his have true honour put upon them. 3. Joy and deliverance. If in the worst of times God's people can lift up their heads with joy knowing that all shall work for good to them they will own God as giving them both cause and hearts to rejoice.

Commentary on Psalm 3:4-8

(Read Psalm 3:4-8)

Care and grief do us good when they engage us to pray to God as in earnest. David had always found God ready to answer his prayers. Nothing can fix a gulf between the communications of God's grace towards us and the working of his grace in us; between his favour and our faith. He had always been very safe under the Divine protection. This is applicable to the common mercies of every night for which we ought to give thanks every morning. Many lie down and cannot sleep through pain of body or anguish of mind or the continual alarms of fear in the night. But it seems here rather to be meant of the calmness of David's spirit in the midst of his dangers. The Lord by his grace and the consolations of his Spirit made him easy. It is a great mercy when we are in trouble to have our minds stayed upon God. Behold the Son of David composing himself to his rest upon the cross that bed of sorrows; commending his Spirit into the Father's hands in full confidence of a joyful resurrection. Behold this O Christian: let faith teach thee how to sleep and how to die; while it assures thee that as sleep is a short death so death is only a longer sleep; the same God watches over thee in thy bed and in thy grave. David's faith became triumphant. He began the psalm with complaints of the strength and malice of his enemies; but concludes with rejoicing in the power and grace of his God and now sees more with him than against him. Salvation belongeth unto the Lord; he has power to save be the danger ever so great. All that have the Lord for their God are sure of salvation; for he who is their God is the God of Salvation.

── Matthew HenryConcise Commentary on Psalms

 

Psalm 3

Verse 2

[2] Many there be which say of my soul There is no help for him in God. /*Selah*/.

My soul — Of me: the soul being commonly put for the person.

In God — God hath utterly forsaken him.

Selah — This word is no where used but in this poetical book and in the song of Habakkuk. Probably it was a musical note directing the singer either to lift up his voice to make a pause or to lengthen the tune. But withal it is generally placed at some remarkable passage; which gives occasion to think that it served also to quicken the attention of the singer and hearer.

Verse 3

[3] But thou O LORD art a shield for me; my glory and the lifter up of mine head.

A shield — My defence.

My glory — Thou hast formerly given and wilt farther give occasion of glorying in thy power and favour.

Lifter up — Thou wilt restore me to my former power and dignity.

Verse 4

[4] I cried unto the LORD with my voice and he heard me out of his holy hill. /*Selah*/.

His hill — Out of heaven so called Psalms 15:1.

Verse 5

[5] I laid me down and slept; I awaked; for the LORD sustained me.

Slept — Securely casting all my cares upon God.

Awaked — After a sweet and undisturbed sleep.

Verse 7

[7] Arise O LORD; save me O my God: for thou hast smitten all mine enemies upon the cheek bone; thou hast broken the teeth of the ungodly.

Cheek bone — Which implies contempt and reproach.

Teeth — Their strength and the instruments of their cruelty. He compares them to wild beasts.

── John WesleyExplanatory Notes on Psalms

                             
Psalm 3 - A Morning Prayer For God's Protection
 
OBJECTIVES IN STUDYING THIS PSALM
 
1) To note how historical events often served as the impetus for the 
   writing of particular psalms
 
2) To observe the use and possible meaning of the word "Selah"
 
3) To consider how David trusted in the Lord to deliver him from his 
   enemies
 
SUMMARY
 
The heading attributes this psalm to David
composed as he was fleeing
from his son Absalom (cf. 2 Sam 15-18).  It is commonly called "a
morning hymn" (cf. v. 5) in which the psalmist prays for God's
protection.
 
David addresses his complaint to the Lord
how there be many who
trouble him.  They even taunt him by saying there is no help from God
for him (cf. the curses of Shimei
2 Sam 16:5-8). In this psalm (and in
many others) we find the word "Selah".   The exact meaning  is unknown
but it may have served the purpose of providing some musical notation. 
It seems to be inserted where a pause is desirable for the singer or
reader of the psalm to reflect upon the thought or statement just made
(1-2).
 
Following his complaint is an expression of comfort received from the
Lord in the past.  Such consolation prompts him to view the Lord as a
shield and his glory
the One who is able to lift up his head.  Indeed
the Lord has heard his earlier cry and enabled him to sleep and awake. 
This gives him renewed courage to face his many enemies (cf. 2 Sam
18:7)
even though they numbered in the thousands (3-6).
 
As he starts the new day
he yet again calls upon the Lord to save him
even as He has done in the past.  His "morning hymn" ends with the
acknowledgment of God as the source of salvation and blessing for His
people (7-8).
 
OUTLINE
 
I. DAVID'S COMPLAINT (3:1-2)
 
   A. MANY TROUBLE HIM (1)
 
   B. MANY RISE UP AGAINST HIM (2)
 
   C. MANY SAY THERE IS NO HELP FROM GOD FOR HIM (2)
   
II. DAVID'S COMFORT (3:3-6)
 
   A. WHAT GOD IS TO HIM (3)
      1. His shield and glory
      2. The One who lifts his head
 
   B. WHAT GOD HAS DONE FOR HIM (4-6)
      1. Heard his cry from His holy hill
      2. Sustained him during sleep
      3. Given him courage against ten thousands of men
 
III. DAVID'S CRY (3:7-8)
 
   A. FOR DELIVERANCE BY GOD (7)
      1. To arise and save him
      2. As God has done in the past
         a. Having struck his enemies on the cheekbone
         b. Having broken the teeth of the ungodly
 
   B. OF PRAISE TO GOD (8)
      1. Salvation belongs to God
      2. His blessing is upon His people
 
REVIEW QUESTIONS FOR THE PSALM
 
1) What are the main points of this psalm?
   - David's complaint (1-2)
   - David's comfort (3-6)
   - David's cry (7-8)
 
2) Who is the author of this psalm
and what occasion led to its
   composition?
   - David
   - When he was fleeing from Absalom
 
3) What was David's complaint? (1)
   - Many have risen against him
to trouble him
 
4) What were people saying about David?  Who in particular said such
   things? (2)
   - There is no help for him from God
   - Shimei
son of Gera
of the house of Saul (cf. 2 Sam 16:5-8)
 
5) What is the meaning of the word "Selah"? (2)
   - It is likely a musical notation
   - Perhaps inserted where a pause is desirable for the singer or
     reader of the psalm to reflect upon the thought or statement just 
     made (Leupold)
 
6) How did David view God? (3)
   - As a shield
his glory
the One who lifts up his head
 
7) What did David do
and what was God's response? (4)
   - David cried to the Lord with his voice
   - God heard him from His holy hill
 
8) What was David able to do because of God's sustaining him? (5)
   - To lay down and sleep
and then to awake
 
9) What else did God make possible for David? (6)
   - Not to be afraid
even when ten thousands of people surrounded
     against him
 
10) For what does David pray? (7)
   - To arise and save him
 
11) What had God done for David in the past? (7)
   - Struck his enemies on the cheekbone
   - Broken the teeth of the ungodly
 
13) What does David attribute to the Lord? (8)
   - Salvation and blessing to His people

 

--《Executable Outlines

 

Psalm 3

Exposition
Explanatory Notes and Quaint Sayings
Hints to the Village Preacher


TITLE. "A Psalm of David when he fled from Absalom his Son." You will remember the sad story of David's flight from his own palace when in the dead of the night he forded the brook Kedron and went with a few faithful followers to hide himself for awhile from the fury of his rebellious son. Remember that David in this was a type of the Lord Jesus Christ. He too fled; he too passed over the brook Kedron when his own people were in rebellion against him and with a feeble band of followers he went to the garden of Gethsemane. He too drank of the brook by the way and therefore doth he lift up the head. By very many expositors this is entitled THE MORNING HYMN. May we ever wake with holy confidence in our hearts and a song upon our lips!

DIVISION. This Psalm may be divided into four parts of two verses each. Indeed many of the Psalms cannot be well understood unless we attentively regard the parts into which they should be divided. They are not continuous descriptions of one scene but a set of pictures of many kindred subjects. As in our modern sermons we divide our discourse into different heads so is it in these Psalms. There is always unity but it is the unity of a bundle of arrows and not of a single solitary shaft. Let us now look at the Psalm before us. In the first two verses you have David making a complaint to God concerning his enemies; he then declares his confidence in the Lord (3 4) sings of his safety in sleep (5 6) and strengthens himself for future conflict (7 8).


EXPOSITION

Verse 1. The poor broken-hearted father complains of the multitude of his enemies: and if you turn to 2 Samuel 15:12 you will find it written that "the conspiracy was strong; for the people increased continually with Absalom " while the troops of David constantly diminished! "Lord how are they increased that trouble me!" Here is a note of exclamation to express the wonder of woe which amazed and perplexed the fugitive father. Alas! I see no limit to my misery for my troubles are enlarged! There was enough at first to sink me very low; but lo! my enemies multiply. When Absalom my darling is in rebellion against me it is enough to break my heart; but lo! Ahithophel hath forsaken me my faithful counsellors have turned their backs on me; lo! my generals and soldiers have deserted my standard. "How are they increased that trouble me!" Troubles always come in flocks. Sorrow hath a numerous family.
    "Many are they that rise up against me." Their hosts are far superior to mine! Their numbers are too great for my reckoning!
    Let us here recall to our memory the innumerable host which beset our Divine Redeemer. The legions of our sins the armies of fiends the crowd of bodily pains the host of spiritual sorrows and all the allies of death and hell set themselves in battle against the Son of Man. O how precious to know and believe that he has routed their hosts and trodden them down in his anger! They who would have troubled us he has removed into captivity and those who would have risen up against us he has laid low. The dragon lost his sting when he dashed it into the soul of Jesus.

Verse 2. David complains before his loving God of the worst weapon of his enemies' attacks and the bitterest drop of his distresses. "Oh!" saith David "many there be that say of my soul There is no help for him in God." Some of his distrustful friends said this sorrowfully but his enemies exultingly boasted of it and longed to see their words proved by his total destruction. This was the unkindest cut of all when they declared that his God had forsaken him. Yet David knew in his own conscience that he had given them some ground for this exclamation for he had committed sin against God in the very light of day. Then they flung his crime with Bathsheba into his face and they said "Go up thou bloody man; God hath forsaken thee and left thee." Shimei cursed him and swore at him to his very face for he was bold because of his backers since multitudes of the men of Belial thought of David in like fashion. Doubtless David felt this infernal suggestion to be staggering to his faith. If all the trials which come from heaven all the temptations which ascend from hell and all the crosses which arise from earth could be mixed and pressed together they would not make a trial so terrible as that which is contained in this verse. It is the most bitter of all afflictions to be led to fear that there is no help for us in God. And yet remember our most blessed Saviour had to endure this in the deepest degree when he cried "My God my God why hast thou forsaken me?" He knew full well what is was to walk in darkness and to see no light. This was the curse of the curse. This was the wormwood mingled with the gall. To be deserted of his Father was worse than to be the despised of men. Surely we should love him who suffered this bitterest of temptations and trials for our sake. It will be a delightful and instructive exercise for the loving heart to mark the Lord in his agonies as here pourtrayed for there is here and in very many other Psalms far more of David's Lord than of David himself.
    "Selah." This is a musical pause; the precise meaning of which is not known. Some think it simply a rest a pause in the music; others say it means "Lift up the strain—sing more loudly—pitch the tune upon a higher key—there is nobler matter to come therefore retune your harps." Harp-strings soon get out of order and need to be screwed up again to their proper tightness and certainly our heart-strings are evermore getting out of tune Let "Selah" teach us to pray

"O may my heart in tune be found
Like David's harp of solemn sound."

At least we may learn that wherever we see "Selah " we should look upon it as a note of observation. Let us read the passage which preceeds and succeeds it with greater earnestness for surely there is always something excellent where we are required to rest and pause and meditate or when we are required to lift up our hearts in grateful song. "SELAH."

Verse 3. Here David avows his confidence in God. "Thou O Lord art a shield for me." The word in the original signifies more than a shield; it means a buckler round about a protection which shall surround a man entirely a shield above beneath around without and within. Oh! what a shield is God for his people! He wards off the fiery darts of Satan from beneath and the storms of trials from above while at the same instant he speaks peace to the tempest within the breast. Thou art "my glory." David knew that though he was driven from his capital in contempt and scorn he should yet return in triumph and by faith he looks upon God as honouring and glorifying him. O for grace to see our future glory amid present shame! Indeed there is a present glory in our afflictions if we could but discern it; for it is no mean thing to have fellowship with Christ in his sufferings. David was honoured when he made the ascent of Olivet weeping with his head covered; for he was in all this made like unto his Lord. May we learn in this respect to glory in tribulations also! "And the lifter up of mine head"—thou shalt yet exalt me. Though I hang my head in sorrow I shall very soon lift it up in joy and thanksgiving. What a divine trio of mercies is contained in this verse!—defence for the defenceless glory for the despised and joy for the comfortless. Verily we may well say "there is none like the God of Jeshurun."

Verse 4. "I cried unto the Lord with my voice." Why doth he say "with my voice?" Surely silent prayers are heard. Yes but good men often find that even in secret they pray better aloud than they do when they utter no vocal sound. Perhaps moreover David would think thus:—"My cruel enemies clamour against me; they lift up their voices and behold I lift up mine and my cry outsoars them all. They clamour but the cry of my voice in great distress pierces the very skies and is louder and stronger than all their tumult; for there is one in the sanctuary who hearkens to me from the seventh heaven and he hath heard me out of his holy hill." Answers to prayers are sweet cordials for the soul. We need not fear a frowning world while we rejoice in a prayer-hearing God.
    Here stands another Selah. Rest awhile O tried believer and change the strain to a softer air.

Verse 5. David's faith enabled him to lie down; anxiety would certainly have kept him on tiptoe watching for an enemy. Yea he was able to sleep to sleep in the midst of trouble surrounded by foes. "So he giveth his beloved sleep." There is a sleep of presumption; God deliver us from it! There is a sleep of holy confidence; God help us so to close our eyes! But David says he awaked also. Some sleep the sleep of death; but he though exposed to many enemies reclined his head on the bosom of his God slept happily beneath the wing of Providence in sweet security and then awoke in safety. "For the Lord sustained me." The sweet influence of the Pleiades of promise shone upon the sleeper and he awoke conscious that the Lord had preserved him. An excellent divine has well remarked—"This quietude of a man's heart by faith in God is a higher sort of work than the natural resolution of manly courage for it is the gracious operation of God's Holy Spirit upholding a man above nature and therefore the Lord must have all the glory of it."

Verse 6. Buckling on his harness for the day's battle our hero sings "I will not be afraid of ten thousands of people that have set themselves against me round about." Observe that he does not attempt to under- estimate the number or wisdom of his enemies. He reckons them at tens of thousands and he views them as cunning huntsmen chasing him with cruel skill. Yet he trembles not but looking his foeman in the face he is ready for the battle. There may be no way of escape; they may hem me in as the deer are surrounded by a circle of hunters; they may surround me on every side but in the name of God I will dash through them; or if I remain in the midst of them yet shall they not hurt me; I shall be free in my very prison.
    But David is too wise to venture to the battle without prayer; he therefore betakes himself to his knees and cries aloud to Jehovah.

Verse 7. His only hope is in his God but that is so strong a confidence that he feels the Lord hath but to arise and he is saved. It is enough for the Lord to stand up and all is well. He compares his enemies to wild beasts and he declares that God hath broken their jaws so that they could not injure him; "Thou hast broken the teeth of the ungodly." Or else he alludes to the peculiar temptations to which he was then exposed. They had spoken against him; God therefore has smitten them upon the cheek bone. They seemed as if they would devour him with their mouths; God hath broken their teeth and let them say what they will their toothless jaws shall not be able to devour him. Rejoice O believer thou hast to do with a dragon whose head is broken and with enemies whose teeth are dashed from their jaws!

Verse 8. This verse contains the sum and substance of Calvinistic doctrine. Search Scripture through and you must if you read it with a candid mind be persuaded that the doctrine of salvation by grace alone is the great doctrine of the word of God: "Salvation belongeth unto the Lord." This is a point concerning which we are daily fighting. Our opponents say "Salvation belongeth to the free will of man; if not to man's merit yet at least to man's will;" but we hold and teach that salvation from first to last in every iota of it belongs to the Most High God. It is God that chooses his people. He calls them by his grace; he quickens them by his Spirit and keeps them by his power. It is not of man neither by man; "not of him that willeth nor of him that runneth but of God that showeth mercy." May we all learn this truth experimentally for our proud flesh and blood will never permit us to learn it in any other way. In the last sentence the peculiarity and speciality of salvation are plainly stated: "Thy blessing is upon thy people." Neither upon Egypt nor upon Tyre nor upon Ninevah; thy blessing is upon thy chosen thy blood-bought thine everlastingly-beloved people. "Selah:" lift up your hearts and pause and meditate upon this doctrine. "Thy blessing is upon thy people." Divine discriminating distinguishing eternal infinite immutable love is a subject for constant adoration. Pause my soul at this Selah and consider thine own interest in the salvation of God; and if by humble faith thou art enabled to see Jesus as thine by his own free gift of himself to thee if this greatest of all blessings be upon thee rise up and sing—

"Rise my soul! adore and wonder!
Ask 'O why such love to me?'
Grace hath put me in the number
Of the Saviour's family:
Hallelujah!
Thanks eternal thanks to thee!"


EXPLANATORY NOTES AND QUAINT SAYINGS

Title. With regard to the authority of the TITLES it becomes us to speak with diffidence considering the very opposite opinions which have been offered upon this subject by scholars of equal excellence. In the present day it is too much the custom to slight or omit them altogether as though added nobody knows when or by whom and as in many instances inconsistent with the subject-matter of the Psalm itself: while Augustine Theodoret and various other early writers of the Christian church regard them as a part of the inspired text; and the Jews still continue to make them a part of their chant and their rabbins to comment upon them.
    It is certainly unknown who invented or placed them where they are; but it is unquestionable that they have been so placed from time immemorial; they occur in the Septuagint which contains also in a few instances titles to Psalms that are without any in the Hebrew; and they have been copied after the Septuagint by Jerome. So far as the present writer has been able to penetrate the obscurity that occasionally hangs over them they are a direct and most valuable key to the general history or subject of the Psalms to which they are prefixed; and excepting where they have been evidently misunderstood or misinterpreted he has never met with a single instance in which the drift of the title and its respective Psalm do not exactly coincide. Many of them were doubtless composed by Ezra at the time of editing his own collection at which period some critics suppose the whole to have been written; but the rest appear rather to be coeval or nearly so with the respective Psalms themselves and to have been written about the period of their production. John Mason Good M.D. F.R.S. 1854.
    See title. Here we have the first use of the word Psalm. In Hebrew Mizmor which hath the signification of pruning or cutting off superfluous twigs and is applied to songs made of short sentences where many superfluous words are put away. Henry Ainsworth.
    Upon this note an old writer remarks "Let us learn from this that in times of sore trouble men will not fetch a compass and use fine words in prayer but will offer a prayer which is pruned of all luxuriance of wordy speeches."

Whole Psalm. Thus you may plainly see how God hath wrought in his church in old time and therefore should not discourage yourselves for any sudden change; but with David acknowledge your sins to God declare unto him how many there be that vex you and rise up against you naming you Huguenots Lutherans Heretics Puritans and the children of Belial as they named David. Let the wicked idolaters brag that they will prevail against you and overcome you and that God hath given you over and will be no more your God. Let them put their trust in Absalom with his large golden locks; and in the wisdom of Ahithophel the wise counsellor; yet say you with David "Thou O Lord art my defender and the lifter up of my head." Persuade yourselves with David that the Lord is your defender who hath compassed you round about and is as it were a "shield" that doth cover you on every side. It is he only that may and will compass you about with glory and honour. It is he that will thrust down those proud hypocrites from their seat and exalt the lowly and meek. It is he which will "smite" your "enemies on the cheek bone " and burst all their teeth in sunder. He will hang up Absalom by his own long hairs; and Ahithophel through desperation shall hang himself. The bands shall be broken and you delivered; for this belongeth unto the Lord to save his from their enemies and to bless his people that they may safely proceed in their pilgrimage to heaven without fear. Thomas Tymme's "Silver Watch Bell" 1634.

Verse 1. Absalom's faction like a snowball strangely gathered in its motion. David speaks of it as one amazed; and well he might that a people he had so many ways obliged should almost generally revolt from him and rebel against him and choose for their head such a silly giddy young fellow as Absalom was. How slippery and deceitful are the many! And how little fidelity and constancy is to be found among men! David had had the hearts of his subjects as much as ever any king had and yet now of a sudden he had lost them! As people must not trust too much to princes (Psalm 146:3) so princes must not build too much upon their interest in the people. Christ the Son of David had many enemies when a great multitude came to seize him when the crowd cried "Crucify him crucify him " how were they then increased that troubled him! Even good people must not think it strange if the stream be against them and the powers that threaten them grow more and more formidable. Matthew Henry.

Verse 2. When the believer questions the power of God or his interest in it his joy gusheth out as blood out of a broken vein. This verse is a sore stab indeed. William Gurnall.

Verse 2. A child of God startles at the very thought of despairing of help in God; you cannot vex him with anything so much as if you offer to persuade him "There is no help for him in God." David comes to God and tells him what his enemies said of him as Hezekiah spread Rabshakeh's blasphemous letter before the Lord; they say "There is no help for me in thee;" but Lord if it be so I am undone. They say to my soul "There is no salvation" (for so the word is) "for him in God;" but Lord do thou say unto my soul "I am thy salvation" (Psalm 35:3) and that shall satisfy me and in due time silence them. Matthew Henry.

Verses 2 4 8. "Selah." (Heb.) Much has been written on this word and still its meaning does not appear to be wholly determined. It is rendered in the Targum or Chaldee paraphrase (Hebrew) lealmin for ever or to eternity. In the Latin Vulgate it is omitted as if it were no part of the text. In the Septuagint it is rendered Diaqalma supposed to refer to some variation or modulation of the voice in singing. Schleusner Lex. The word occurs seventy-three times in the Psalms and three times in the book of Habakkuk (3:3 9 13). It is never translated in our version but in all these places the original word Selah is retained. It occurs only in poetry and is supposed to have had some reference to the singing or cantillation of the poetry and to be probably a musical term. In general also it indicates a pause in the sense as well as in the musical performance. Gesenius (Lex.) supposes that the most probable meaning of this musical term or note is silence or pause and that its use was in chanting the words of the Psalm to direct the singer to be silent to pause a little while the instruments played an interlude or harmony. Perhaps this is all that can now be known of the meaning of the word and this is enough to satisfy every reasonable enquiry. It is probable if this was the use of the term that it would commonly correspond with the sense of the passage and be inserted where the sense made a pause suitable; and this will doubtless be found usually to be the fact. But anyone acquainted at all with the character of musical notation will perceive at once that we are not to suppose that this would be invariably or necessarily the fact for the musical pauses by no means always correspond with pauses in the sense. This word therefore can furnish very little assistance in determining the meaning of the passages where it is found. Ewald supposes differing from this view that it rather indicates that in the places where it occurs the voice is to be raised and that it is synonymous with up higher loud or distinct from (Hebrew) sal (Hebrew) salal to ascend. Those who are disposed to enquire further respecting its meaning and the uses of musical pauses in general may be referred to Ugolin "Thesau. Antiq. Sacr. " tom. xxii. Albert Barnes 1868.

Verses 2 4 8. Selah (Heb.) is found seventy-three times in the Psalms generally at the end of a sentence or paragraph; but in Psalm 55:19 and 57:3 it stands in the middle of the verse. While most authors have agreed in considering this word as somehow relating to the music their conjectures about its precise meaning have varied greatly. But at present these two opinions chiefly obtain. Some including Herder De Wette Ewald (Poet. Böcher i. 179) and Delitzsch derive it from (Heb.) or (Heb.) to raise and understand an elevation of the voice or music; others after Gesenius in Thesaurus derive it from (Heb.) to be still or silent and understand a pause in the singing. So Rosenmüller Hengstenberg and Tholuck. Probably selah was used to direct the singer to be silent or to pause a little while the instruments played an interlude (so Sept. diuqalma or symphony. In Psalm 9:16 it occurs in the expression higgaion selah which Gesenius with much probability renders instrumental music pause; i.e. let the instruments strike up a symphony and let the singer pause. By Tholuck and Hengstenberg however the two words are rendered meditation pause; i.e. let the singer meditate while the music stops. Benjamin Davies Ph.D. L.L.D. article Psalms in Kitto's Cyclopaedia of Biblical Literature.

Verse 3. "Lifter up of my head." God will have the body partake with the soul—as in matters of grief so in matters of joy; the lanthorn shines in the light of the candle within. Richard Sibbs 1639.
    There is a lifting up of the head by elevating to office as with Pharaoh's butler; this we trace to the divine appointment. There is a lifting up in honour after shame in health after sickness in gladness after sorrow in restoration after a fall in victory after a temporary defeat; in all these respects the Lord is the lifter up of our head. C. H. S.

Verse 4. When prayer leads the van in due time deliverance brings up the rear. Thomas Watson.

Verse 4. "He heard me." I have often heard persons say in prayer "Thou art a prayer-hearing and a prayer-answering God " but the expression contains a superfluity since for God to hear is according to Scripture the same thing as to answer. C. H. S.

Verse 5. "I laid me down and slept; I awaked; for the Lord sustained me." The title of the Psalm tells us when David had this sweet night's rest; not when he lay on his bed of down in his stately palace at Jerusalem but when he fled for his life from his unnatural son Absalom and possibly was forced to lie in the open field under the canopy of heaven. Truly it must be a soft pillow indeed that could make him forget his danger who then had such a disloyal army at his back hunting of him; yea so transcendent is the influence of this peace that it can make the creature lie down as cheerfully to sleep in the grave as on the softest bed. You will say that child is willing that calls to be put to bed; some of the saints have desired God to lay them at rest in their beds of dust and that not in a pet and discontent with their present trouble as Job did but from a sweet sense of this peace in their bosoms. "Now let thy servant depart in peace for mine eyes have seen thy salvation " was the swan-like song of old Simeon. He speaks like a merchant that had got all his goods on ship-board and now desires the master of the ship to hoist sail and be gone homewards. Indeed what should a Christian that is but a foreigner here desire to stay any longer for in the world but to get his full lading in for heaven? And when hath he that if not when he is assured of his peace with God? This peace of the gospel and sense of the love of God in the soul doth so admirably conduce to the enabling of a person in all difficulties and temptations and troubles that ordinarily before he calls his saints to any hard service or hot work he gives them a draught of this cordial wine next their hearts to cheer them up and embolden them in the conflict. William Gurnall.

Verse 5. Gurnall who wrote when there were houses on old London Bridge has quaintly said "Do you not think that they sleep as soundly who dwell on London Bridge as they who live at Whitehall or Cheapside? for they know that the waves which rush under them cannot hurt them. Even so may the saints rest quietly over the floods of trouble or death and fear no ill."

Verse 5. Xerxes the Persian when he destroyed all the temples in Greece caused the temple of Diana to be preserved for its beautiful structure: that soul which hath the beauty of holiness shining in it shall be preserved for the glory of the structure; God will not suffer his own temple to be destroyed. Would you be secured in evil times? Get grace and fortify this garrison; a good conscience is a Christian's fort-royal. David's enemies lay round about him; yet saith he "I laid me down and slept". A good conscience can sleep in the mouth of a cannon; grace is a Christian's coat of mail which fears not the arrow or bullet. True grace may be shot at but can never be shot through; grace puts the soul into Christ and there it is safe as the bee in the hive as the dove in the ark. "There is no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus " Romans 8:1. Thomas Watson.

Verse 5. "The Lord sustained me." It would not be unprofitable to consider the sustaining power manifested in us while we lie asleep. In the flowing of the blood heaving of the lung etc. in the body and the continuance of mental faculties while the image of death is upon us. C. H. S.

Verse 6. "I will not be afraid of ten thousands of people that have set themselves against me round about." The psalmist will trust despite appearances. He will not be afraid though ten thousands of people have set themselves against him round about. Let us here limit our thoughts to this one idea "despite appearances." What could look worse to human sight than this array of ten thousands of people? Ruin seemed to stare him in the face; wherever he looked an enemy was to be seen. What was one against ten thousand? It often happens that God's people come into circumstances like this; they say "All these things are against me;" they seem scarce able to count their troubles; they cannot see a loophole through which to escape; things look very black indeed; it is great faith and trust which says under these circumstances "I will not be afraid."
    These were the circumstances under which Luther was placed as he journeyed toward Worms. His friend Spalatin heard it said by the enemies of the Reformation that the safe conduct of a heretic ought not to be respected and became alarmed for the reformer. "At the moment when the latter was approaching the city a messenger appeared before him with this advice from the chaplain 'Do not enter Worms!' And this from his best friend the elector's confidant from Spalatin himself! . . . . . But Luther undismayed turned his eyes upon the messenger and replied 'Go and tell your master that even should there be as many devils in Worms as tiles upon the housetops still I would enter it.' The messenger returned to Worms with this astounding answer: 'I was then undaunted ' said Luther a few days before his death 'I feared nothing.'"
    At such seasons as these the reasonable men of the world those who walk by sight and not by faith will think it reasonable enough that the Christian should be afraid; they themselves would be very low if they were in such a predicament. Weak believers are now ready to make excuses for us and we are only too ready to make them for ourselves; instead of rising above the weakness of the flesh we take refuge under it and use it as an excuse. But let us think prayerfully for a little while and we shall see that it should not be thus with us. To trust only when appearances are favourable is to sail only with the wind and tide to believe only when we can see. Oh! let us follow the example of the psalmist and seek that unreservedness of faith which will enable us to trust God come what will and to say as he said "I will not be afraid of ten thousands of people that have set themselves against me round about." Philip Bennet Power's 'I wills' of the Psalms 1862.

Verse 6. "I will not be afraid " etc. It makes no matter what our enemies be though for number legions; for power principalities; for subtlety serpents; for cruelty dragons; for vantage of place a prince of the air; for maliciousness spiritual wickedness; stronger is he that is in us than they who are against us; nothing is able to separate us from the love of God. In Christ Jesus our Lord we shall be more than conquerors. William Cowper 1612.

Verse 7. "Arise O Lord " Jehovah! This is a common scriptural mode of calling upon God to manifest his presence and his power either in wrath or favour. By a natural anthropomorphism it describes the intervals of such manifestations as periods of inaction or of slumber out of which he is besought to rouse himself. "Save me " even me of whom they say there is no help for him in God. "Save me O my God " mine by covenant and mutual engagement to whom I therefore have a right to look for deliverance and protection. This confidence is warranted moreover by experience. "For thou hast " in former exigencies "smitten all mine enemies " without exception "(on the) cheek" or jaw an act at once violent and insulting. J. A. Alexander D.D.

Verse 7. "Upon the cheek bone."—The language seems to be taken from a comparison of his enemies with wild beasts. The cheek bone denotes the bone in which the teeth are placed and to break that is to disarm the animal. Albert Barnes in loc.

Verse 7. When God takes vengeance upon the ungodly he will smite in such a manner as to make them feel his almightiness in every stroke. All his power shall be exercised in punishing and none in pitying. O that every obstinate sinner would think of this and consider his unmeasurable boldness in thinking himself able to grapple with Omnipotence! Stephen Charnock.

Verse 8. "Salvation belongeth unto the Lord:" parallel passage in Jonah 2:9 "Salvation is of the Lord." The mariners might have written upon their ship instead of Castor and Pollux or the like device Salvation is the Lord's; the Ninevites might have written upon their gates Salvation is the Lord's; and whole mankind whose cause is pitted and pleaded by God against the hardness of Jonah's heart in the last might have written on the palms of their hands Salvation is the Lord's. It is the argument of both the Testaments the staff and supportation of heaven and earth. They would both sink and all their joints be severed if the salvation of the Lord's were not. The birds in the air sing no other notes the beasts in the field give no other voice than Salus Jehovæ Salvation is the Lord's. The walls and fortresses to our country's gates to our cities and towns bars to our houses a surer cover to our heads than a helmet of steel a better receipt to our bodies than the confection of apothecaries a better receipt to our souls than the pardons of Rome is Salus Jehovæ the salvation of the Lord. The salvation of the Lord blesseth preserveth upholdeth all that we have; our basket and our store the oil in our cruses our presses the sheep in our folds our stalls the children in the womb at our tables the corn in our fields our stores our garners; it is not the virtue of the stars nor nature of all things themselves that giveth being and continuance to any of these blessings. And "What shall I more say?" as the apostle asked (Hebrews 9) when he had spoken much and there was much more behind but time failed him. Rather what should I not say? for the world is my theatre at this time and I neither think nor can feign to myself anything that hath not dependence upon this acclamation Salvation is the Lord's. Plutarch writeth that the Amphictions in Greece a famous council assembled of twelve sundry people wrote upon the temple of Apollo Pythius instead of the Iliads of Homer or songs of Pindarus (large and tiring discourses) short sentences and memoratives as Know thyself Use moderation Beware of suretyship and the like; and doubtless though every creature in the world whereof we have use be a treatise and narration unto us of the goodness of God and we might weary our flesh and spend our days in writing books of that inexplicable subject yet this short apothegm of Jonah comprehendeth all the rest and standeth at the end of the song as the altars and stones that the patriarch set up at the parting of the ways to give knowledge to the after-world by what means he was delivered. I would it were daily preached in our temples sung in our streets written upon our door-posts painted upon our walls or rather cut with an adamant claw upon the tables of our hearts that we might never forget salvation to be the Lord's. We have need of such remembrances to keep us in practise of revolving the mercies of God. For nothing decayeth sooner than love; nihil facilius quam amar putrescit. And of all the powers of the soul memory is most delicate tender and brittle and first waxeth old memoria delicata tenera fragilis in quam primum senectus incurrit; and of all the apprehensions of memory first benefit primum senescit beneficium. John King's Commentary on Jonah 1594.

Verse 8. "Thy blessing is upon thy people." The saints are not only blessed when they are comprehensors but while they are viators. They are blessed before they are crowned. This seems a paradox to flesh and blood: what reproached and maligned yet blessed! A man that looks upon the children of God with a carnal eye and sees how they are afflicted and like the ship in the gospel which was covered with waves (Matthew 8:24) would think they were far from blessedness. Paul brings a catalogue of his sufferings (2 Corinthians 11:24-26) "Thrice was I beaten with rods once was I stoned thrice I suffered shipwreck " etc. And those Christians of the first magnitude of whom the world was not worthy "Had trials of cruel mockings and scourgings they were sawn asunder they were slain with the sword." Hebrews 11:36 37. What! and were all these during the time of their sufferings blessed? A carnal man would think if this be to be blessed God deliver him from it. But however sense would give their vote our Saviour Christ pronounceth the godly man blessed; though a mourner though a martyr yet blessed. Job on the dunghill was blessed Job. The saints are blessed when they are cursed. Shimei did curse David (2 Samuel 16:5) "He came forth and cursed him;" yet when he was cursed David he was blessed David. The saints though they are bruised yet they are blessed. Not only they shall be blessed but they are so. Psalm 119:1. "Blessed are the undefiled." Psalm 3:8. "Thy blessing is upon thy people." Thomas Watson.


As a curious instance of Luther's dogmatical interpretations we give very considerable extracts from his rendering of this Psalm without in any degree endorsing them. C. H. S.

Whole Psalm. That the meaning of this Psalm is not historical is manifest from many particulars which militate against its being so understood. And first of all there is this which the blessed Augustine has remarked; that the words "I laid me down to sleep and took my rest " seem to be the words of Christ rising from the dead. And then that there is at the end the blessing of God pronounced upon the people which manifestly belongs to the whole church. Hence the blessed Augustine interprets the Psalm in a threefold way; first concerning Christ the head; secondly concerning the whole of Christ that is Christ and his church the head and the body; and thirdly figuratively concerning any private Christian. Let each have his own interpretation. I in the meantime will interpret it concerning Christ; being moved so to do by the same argument that moved Augustine—that the fifth verse does not seem appropriately to apply to any other but Christ. First because "lying down" and "sleeping " signify in this place altogether a natural death not a natural sleep. Which may be collected from this—because it then follows "and rose again." Whereas if David had spoken concerning the sleep of the body he would have said "and awoke;" though this does not make so forcibly for the interpretation of which we are speaking if the Hebrew word would be closely examined. But again what new thing would he advance by declaring that he laid him down and slept? Why did he not say also that he walked ate drank laboured or was in necessity or mention particularly some other work of the body? And moreover it seems an absurdity under so great a tribulation to boast of nothing else but the sleep of the body; for that tribulation would rather force him to a privation from sleep and to be in peril and distress; especially since those two expressions "I laid me down " and "I slept " signify the quiet repose of one lying down in his place which is not the state of one who falls asleep from exhausture through sorrow. But this consideration makes the more forcibly for us—that he therefore glories in his rising up again because it was the Lord that sustained him who raised him up while sleeping and did not leave him in sleep. How can such a glorying agree and what new kind of religion can make it agree with any particular sleep of the body? (for in that case would it not apply to the daily sleep also?) and especially when this sustaining of God indicates at the same time an utterly forsaken state in the person sleeping which is not the case in corporal sleep; for there the person sleeping may be protected even by men being his guards; but this sustaining being altogether of God implies not a sleep but a heavy conflict. And lastly the word HEKIZOTHI itself favours such an interpretation; which being here put absolutely and transitively signifies "I caused to arise or awake." As if he had said "I caused myself to awake I roused myself." Which certainly more aptly agrees with the resurrection of Christ than with the sleep of the body; both because those who are asleep are accustomed to be roused and awaked and because it is no wonderful matter nor a matter worthy of so important a declaration for anyone to awake of himself seeing that it is what takes place every day. But this matter being introduced by the Spirit as a something new and singular is certainly different from all that which attends common sleeping and waking.

Verse 2. "There is no help for him in his God." In the Hebrew the expression is simply "in God " without the pronoun "his" which seems to me to give clearness and force to the expression. As if he had said They say of me that I am not only deserted and oppressed by all creatures but that even God who is present with all things and preserves all things and protects all things forsakes me as the only thing out of the whole universe that he does not preserve. Which kind of temptation Job seems also to have tasted where he says "Why hast thou set me as a mark against thee?" Job 7:20. For there is no temptation no not of the whole world together nor of all hell combined in one equal unto that wherein God stands contrary to man which temptation Jeremiah prays against (Jeremiah 17:17) "Be not a terror unto me; thou art my hope in the days of evil;" and concerning which also the sixth Psalm following saith "O Lord rebuke me not in thine anger;" and we find the same petitions throughout the psaltery. This temptation is wholly unsupportable and is truly hell itself; as it is said in the same sixth Psalm "for in death there is no remembrance of thee " etc. In a word if you have never experienced it you can never form any idea of it whatever.

Verse 3. "For thou O Lord art my helper my glory and the lifter up of my head." David here contrasts three things with three; helper with many troublings; glory with many rising up; and the lifter up of the head with the blaspheming and insulting. Therefore the person here represented is indeed alone in the estimation of man and even according to his own feelings also; but in the sight of God and in a spiritual view he is by no means alone; but protected with the greatest abundance of help; as Christ saith (John 16:32) "Behold the hour cometh when ye shall leave me alone; and yet I am not alone because the Father is with me.". . . . The words contained in this verse are not the words of nature but of grace; not of free-will but of the spirit of strong faith; which even though seeing God as in the darkness of the storm of death and hell a deserting God acknowledges him a sustaining God; when seeing him as a condemner acknowledges him a Saviour. Thus this faith does not judge of things according as they seem to be or are felt like a horse or mule which have no understanding; but it understands things which are not seen for "hope that is seen is not hope: for what a man seeth why doth he yet hope for?" Romans 8:24.

Verse 4. "I cried unto the Lord with my voice and he heard me out of his holy hill." In the Hebrew the verb is in the future and is as Hieronymus translates it "I will cry " and "he shall hear;" and this pleases me better than the perfect tense; for they are the words of one triumphing in and praising and glorifying God and giving thanks unto him who sustained preserved and lifted him up according as he had hoped in the preceeding verse. For it is usual with those that triumph and rejoice to speak of those things which they have done and suffered and to sing a song of praise unto their helper and deliverer; as in Psalm 66:16 "Come then all ye that fear God and I will declare what he hath done for my soul. I cried unto him with my mouth and he was extolled with my tongue." And also Psalm 81:1 "Sing aloud unto God our strength." And so again Exodus 15:1 "Let us sing unto the Lord for he hath triumphed gloriously." And so here being filled with an overflowing sense of gratitude and joy he sings of his being dead of his having slept and rose up again of his enemies being smitten and of the teeth of the ungodly being broken. This it is which causes the change; for he who hitherto had been addressing God in the second person changes on a sudden his address to others concerning God in the third person saying "and he heard me" not "and thou heardest me;" and also "I cried unto the Lord" not "I cried unto thee " for he wants to make all know what benefits God has heaped upon him; which is peculiar to a grateful mind.

Verse 5. "I laid me down and slept; I awaked; for the Lord sustained me." Christ by the words of this verse signifies his death and burial. . . . For it is not to be supposed that he would have spoken so importantly concerning mere natural rest and sleep; especially since that which preceeds and that which follows compel us to understand him as speaking of a deep conflict and a glorious victory over his enemies. By all which things he stirs us up and animates us to faith in God and commends unto us the power and grace of God; that he is able to raise us up from the dead; an example of which he sets before us and proclaims it unto us as wrought in himself. . . . . . . And this is shown also farther in his using gentle words and such as tend wonderfully to lessen the terror of death. "I laid me down (saith he) and slept." He does not say I died and was buried; for death and the tomb had lost both their name and their power. And now death is not death but a sleep; and the tomb not a tomb but a bed and resting place; which was the reason why the words of this prophecy were put somewhat obscurely and doubtfully that it might by that means render death most lovely in our eyes (or rather most contemptible) as being that state from which as from the sweet rest of sleep an undoubted arising and awaking are promised. For who is not most sure of an awaking and arising who lies down to rest in a sweet sleep (where death does not prevent)? This person however does not say that he died but that he laid him down to sleep and that therefore he awaked. And moreover as sleep is useful and necessary for a better renewal of the powers of the body (as Ambrosius says in his hymn) and as sleep relieves the weary limbs so is death also equally useful and ordained for the arriving at a better life. And this is what David says in the following Psalm "I will lay me down in peace and take my rest for thou O Lord in a singular manner hast formed me in hope." Therefore in considering death we are not so much to consider death itself as that most certain life and resurrection which are sure to those who are in Christ; that those words (John 8:51) might be fulfilled "If a man keep my sayings he shall never see death." But how is it that he shall never see it? Shall he not feel it? Shall he not die? No! he shall only see sleep for having the eyes of his faith fixed upon the resurrection he so glides through death that he does not even see death; for death as I have said is to him no death at all. And hence there is that also of John 11:25 "He that believeth in me though he were dead yet shall he live."

Verse 7. "For thou hast smitten all mine enemies upon the cheekbone; thou hast broken the teeth of the ungodly." Hieronymus uses this metaphor of "cheek bones" and "teeth" to represent cutting words detractions calumnies and other injuries of the same kind by which the innocent are oppressed: according to that of Proverbs 30:14 "There is a generation whose teeth are as swords and their jaw-teeth as knives to devour the poor from off the earth and the needy from among men." It was by these that Christ was devoured when before Pilate he was condemned to the cross by the voices and accusations of his enemies. And hence it is that the apostle saith (Galatians 5:15) "But if ye bite and devour one another take heed that ye be not consumed one of another."

Verse 8. "Salvation is of the Lord and thy blessing is upon thy people." A most beautiful conclusion this and as it were the sum of all the feelings spoken of. The sense is it is the Lord alone that saves and blesses: and even though the whole mass of all evils should be gathered together in one against a man still it is the Lord who saves: salvation and blessing are in his hands. What then shall I fear? What shall I not promise myself? When I know that no one can be destroyed no one reviled without the permission of God even though all should rise up to curse and to destroy; and that no one of them can be blessed and saved without the permission of God how much soever they may bless and strive to save themselves. And as Gregory Nazianzen says "Where God gives envy can avail nothing; and where God does not give labour can avail nothing." And in the same way also Paul saith (Romans 8:31) "If God be for us who can be against us?" And so on the contrary if God be against them who can be for them? And why? Because "salvation is of the Lord " and not of them nor of us for "vain is the help of man." Martin Luther.


HINTS TO THE VILLAGE PREACHER

Verse 1. The saint telling his griefs to his God.
    (1) His right to do so.
    (2) The proper manner of telling them.
    (3) The fair results of such holy communications with the Lord.
    When may we expect increased troubles? Why are they sent? What is our wisdom in reference to them?

Verse 2. The lie against the saint and the libel upon his God.

Verse 3. The threefold blessing which God affords to his suffering ones—Defence Honour Joy. Show how all these may be enjoyed by faith even in our worst estate.

Verse 4.
    (1) In dangers we should pray.
    (2) God will graciously hear.
    (3) We should record his answers of grace.
    (4) We may strengthen ourselves for the future by remembering the deliverances of the past.

Verse 5.
    (1) Describe sweet sleeping.
    (2) Describe happy waking.
    (3) Show how both are to be enjoyed "for the Lord sustained me."

Verse 6. Faith surrounded by enemies and yet triumphant.

Verse 7.
    (1) Describe the Lord's past dealing with his enemies; "thou hast."
    (2) Show that the Lord should be our constant resort "O Lord " "O my God."
    (3) Enlarge upon the fact that the Lord is to be stirred up: "Arise."
    (4) Urge believers to use the Lord's past victories as an argument with which to prevail with him.

Verse 7. (last clause). Our enemies vanquished foes toothless lions.

Verse 8. (first clause). Salvation of God from first to last. (See the exposition.)

Verse 8. (last clause). They were blessed in Christ through Christ and shall be blessed with Christ. The blessing rests upon their persons comforts trials labours families etc. It flows from grace is enjoyed by faith and is insured by oath etc. James Smith's Portions 1802-1862.

── C.H. SpurgeonThe Treasury of David