Verse 1
Psalms 6:1. O Lord, rebuke me
not — That is, do not chasten or
correct me, as the next clause
explains it; in thine anger —
With rigour or severity, as my
sins deserve, but with
gentleness and moderation,
Jeremiah 10:24; or, in such a
manner that the chastisement may
not be the effect of thy strict
justice, or anger, but of thy
mercy and faithfulness.
Verse 2
Psalms 6:2. Have mercy upon me —
I plead not my merit, but thy
free mercy; for I am weak — Or,
I languish; my body pines away,
and my spirit fails through my
excessive pains and troubles. O
Lord, heal me — That is, the
distempers of my soul and body,
of both which the word רפא,
rapha, is used; for my bones are
vexed — That is, my inward
parts. Bones, reins, inward
parts, often in Scripture
signify the same as heart, soul,
thought: see Psalms 35:10.
Verse 3
Psalms 6:3. My soul is sore
vexed — Partly by sympathy with
my body, and partly with the
burden of my sins, and the sense
of thine anger, and my own
danger and misery. O Lord, how
long? — Wilt thou suffer me to
lie and languish in this
condition? or, as the Chaldee
paraphrast supplies the
ellipses, How long wilt thou
defer to give me some
refreshment?
Verse 4-5
Psalms 6:4-5. Return — Unto me,
from whom thou hast withdrawn
thy smiling countenance and
helping hand. Deliver my soul —
From guilt and fear; or preserve
my life, for the word soul often
signifies life. David, and other
pious men in those times, were
much averse to, and afraid of
death, partly because the
manifestations of God’s love to
his people, and the discoveries
of an immortal state of glory
awaiting them after death, were
then more dark and doubtful; and
partly because thereby they were
deprived of all opportunities of
advancing God’s glory and
kingdom in the world. For in
death — Or among the dead, or in
the grave, as it follows; there
is no remembrance of thee — This
is meant only of the bodies of
persons deceased; not of their
souls, which still survive, and
do not sleep till the
resurrection, as some have
vainly imagined: and yet even
their souls are incapable, when
departed from the body, of
remembering, praising, and
glorifying God, in his church on
earth; of celebrating his mercy
and grace in the land of the
living; of propagating his
worship, or of exciting others
to piety by their example: which
is the remembrance of God of
which he speaks. Hence, also,
good men have often desired to
have their lives prolonged, even
under the Christian, as well as
under the Patriarchal and Jewish
dispensation, that they might be
capable of glorifying God, and
of fully executing his will in
this world, in order, as the
Hebrews speak, to increase the
reward of their souls in the
world to come.
Verse 6-7
Psalms 6:6-7. All the night —
Or, every night, as the margin
renders כל לילה, cal lailah;
make I my bed to swim — With
tears, an hyperbole used also
elsewhere. It well becomes the
greatest spirits to be tender,
and to relent under the tokens
of God’s displeasure. David, who
could face Goliath himself,
melts into tears at the
remembrance of sin, and under
the apprehension of divine
wrath, and it is no diminution
to his character. Mine eye is
consumed — Or grown dim, or
dull, as עשׁשׁה, gnosheshah, may
be rendered; namely, through the
many tears which I shed, or
through the decay of my spirits.
Because of grief — For my sins
and miseries, or grief arising
from mine enemies; as the next
clause interprets it, and from
the consideration of their
multitude, rage, and falseness.
Verse 8-9
Psalms 6:8-9. Depart from me,
all ye workers of iniquity —
With whom I am resolved not to
associate or have any
fellowship; and cease from
opposing or molesting, or
insulting, over me, or
approaching me with designs of
deceiving and betraying me, all
ye my wicked enemies; desist
from all your wicked
contrivances against me, and be
not so vain as to hope to
triumph over me; for the Lord
hath heard the voice of my
weeping — And will grant me that
which I have sought with so many
tears. By the workings of God’s
grace upon his heart, he knew
his prayer was accepted. His
tears had a voice in the ears of
the God of mercy. Silent tears
are not speechless ones. Our
tears are cries to God. The Lord
hath heard my supplication — He
hath not rejected me, I say, as
you imagine; but is graciously
pleased both with my deprecation
of his displeasure and with my
petitions to him for his favour.
Verse 10
Psalms 6:10. Let all mine
enemies be ashamed — Or, they
shall be ashamed, of their vain
confidence; and sore vexed —
Because of their great and
unexpected disappointment. Let
them return — Namely, from their
wicked ways, and from their
hostile and malicious practices
against me. Hebrew, ישׁבו,
jeshubu, they shall return, turn
back, or be converted; that is,
repent of their sins and return
to their obedience. And be
ashamed suddenly — Sooner than I
could hope, or they did expect,
or believe. “Many mournful
Psalms,” says Mr. Scott, “end
thus triumphantly, for the
encouragement of other mourners
to hope and pray.” |