Verse 1-2
Psalms 9:1-2. I will praise thee
with my whole heart — With a
sincere, affectionate, and
devout heart. I will show forth
all thy marvellous works — I
will discourse, in the general,
of thy manifold wonders wrought
for me, and for thy church and
people formerly. The particle
all is here, as it is often
elsewhere, taken in a restrained
sense. I will rejoice in thee —
In thy favour and help
vouchsafed to me.
Verse 3
Psalms 9:3. When mine enemies
are turned back — Discomfited
and put to flight; they shall
fall and perish — They shall not
save themselves by flight and so
reserve themselves to do farther
mischief but shall stumble, as
it were, at the obstacles and
impediments laid by thee in
their way, and shall be pursued,
overtaken, and cut off; at thy
presence — Upon thy appearing
against them. One angry look of
thine is sufficient to confound
and destroy them. Hebrew, מפניךְ,
mippaneicha, from thy face; they
could not stand before thee,
because thou didst march at the
head of our armies against them.
So he ascribes the honour of his
victories to God only, and to
his presence and assistance.
Verse 4-5
Psalms 9:4-5. My right and my
cause — That is, my righteous
cause against thy and my
enemies. Thou sattest in the
throne, &c. — Thou didst judge
and give sentence for me. Thou
hast rebuked — That is, punished
or destroyed, as it is explained
in the next clause; the heathen
— Namely, the Philistines and
other heathen nations who, from
time to time, molested David and
the people of Israel. Thou hast
put out their name for ever —
Meaning either that fame and
honour which they had gained by
their former exploits, but had
now utterly lost by their
shameful defeats; or their very
memorial, as it fared with
Amalek.
Verse 6
Psalms 9:6. O thou enemy, &c. —
This is a sudden apostrophe to
the enemies of God’s people, the
Philistines, Amorites, or other
nations which had formerly made
great havoc and waste among
them: Destructions are come to a
perpetual end — Thou hast
formerly wasted and destroyed
the people of God, but those
destructions have now come to an
end, and shall cease. Thy power
to annoy Israel is now broken.
Christians, when repeating those
words, “may take a retrospect
view of the successive fall of
those empires, with their
capital cities, in which the
enemy had, from time to time,
fixed his residence, and which
had vexed and persecuted the
people of God in different ages.
Such were the Assyrian or
Babylonian, the Persian and the
Grecian monarchies. All these
vanished away, and came to
nothing. Nay, the very memorial
of the stupendous Nineveh and
Babylon is so perished with them
that the place where they once
stood is now no more to be
found. The Roman empire was the
last of the pagan persecuting
powers; and when the church saw
that under her feet, well might
she cry out, The destructions of
the enemy are completed to the
uttermost! How lovely will this
song be in the day when the last
enemy shall be destroyed, and
the world itself shall become
what Babylon is at present.” —
Horne.
Verses 7-9
Psalms 9:7-9. But the Lord shall
endure for ever — Though cities
and people may perish, yet the
Lord abides for ever. Which is
sufficient for the terror of his
enemies, and the comfort of his
church. He hath prepared his
throne — Or, established it by
his immutable purpose and his
irrevocable promise. And he
shall judge the world — Not you
only, but all the enemies of his
people and all the men in the
world. The Lord will be a refuge
for the oppressed — God will not
only judge the world at the last
day, and then give sentence for
his people against their
enemies, but even at present he
will give them his protection.
Verse 10
Psalms 9:10. They that know —
That is, that thoroughly
understand and duly consider thy
name — Thy infinite power and
wisdom, and faithfulness and
goodness. The name of God is
frequently put for God. Will put
their trust in thee — The
experience of thy faithfulness
to thy people in all ages is a
just ground for their
confidence. Thou hast not
forsaken them that seek thee —
That seek help and relief from
thee by fervent prayer, mixed
with faith or trust in thee, as
is expressed in the former
clause.
Verse 11
Psalms 9:11. Sing praises to the
Lord — Those who believe God is
greatly to be praised not only
desire to do that work better
themselves, but desire that
others also may join with them
in it, and would gladly be
instrumental to bring them to
it. Which dwelleth in Zion — As
the special residence of his
glory is in heaven, so the
special residence of his grace
is in his church, of which Zion
was a type: there he meets his
people with his promises and
graces, and there he expects
they should meet him with their
praises and services. Declare
among the people his doings —
Not only among the Israelites,
but to the heathen nations, that
they may also be brought to the
knowledge and worship of the
true God.
Verse 12
Psalms 9:12. When he maketh
inquisition for blood — The
bloodshed of his innocent and
holy ones: which though he may
not seem to regard for a season,
yet he will certainly call the
authors of it to a severe
account; he remembereth them —
The humble, as it follows, or
the oppressed, (Psalms 9:9,)
that trust in him, and seek to
him, (Psalms 9:10,) whom he
seemed to have forgotten. He
forgetteth not the cry of the
humble — Or, meek, as the word
עני, gnani, which occurs also
Zechariah 9:9, is translated,
Matthew 21:5. Who do not,
cannot, and will not avenge
themselves, but commit their
cause to God, as the God to whom
vengeance belongeth.
Verse 13-14
Psalms 9:13-14. Consider my
trouble — Namely,
compassionately and effectually,
so as to bring me out of it;
thou that liftest me up from the
gates of death — From the brink
or mouth of the grave, into
which I was dropping, being as
near death as a man is to the
city who is come to the very
gates of it. That I may show
forth thy praise in the gates —
In the great assemblies which
were usually held in the gates
of cities; of the daughter of
Zion — Of the people who live
in, or belong to, or meet
together in Zion. These gates of
Zion he elegantly opposes to the
gates of death, and declares, if
he be brought off from the
latter, he will go into the
former. Cities, it must be
observed, are, as it were,
mothers to their people, and
people are commonly called their
daughters. So the daughters of
Egypt, Jeremiah 46:11; and of
Edom, Lamentations 4:21; and of
Tyre, Psalms 45:12; are put for
the people of those places. I
will rejoice in thy salvation —
Namely, with spiritual joy and
thanksgiving; else it would be
no fit motive to be used to God
in prayer.
Verse 15-16
Psalms 9:15-16. The heathen are
sunk in the pit they made —
Fallen into that destruction
which they designed to bring
upon others. “Faith beholds, as
already executed, that righteous
judgment whereby wicked men will
fall into the perdition which
they had prepared for others,
either openly by persecution, or
more covertly by temptation: see
Psalms 7:15-16.” — Horne. The
Lord is known — Or hath made
himself known, or famous, even
among his enemies; by the
judgment which he executeth —
Upon the wicked. By this it is
known, there is a God who
judgeth in the earth: that he is
a righteous God, and one that
hates and will punish sin; by
this the wrath of God is
revealed from heaven against all
ungodliness and unrighteousness
of men. And therefore the
psalmist adds here a note
extraordinary, Higgaion, calling
for special regard, as to a
matter of the deepest
importance, and which deserved
and required deep and frequent
consideration: for so the word
signifies.
Verse 17
Psalms 9:17. The wicked shall be
turned into hell — Either, 1st,
Into the grave, which is often
called שׁאול, sheol, into which
persons are said to be turned,
or to return, because they were
made of, or taken out of, the
dust, Ecclesiastes 12:7; or, 2d,
Into the place of eternal
perdition, which also is
sometimes called sheol, as
Proverbs 15:24, and elsewhere.
For he seems evidently to speak
here of those punishments which
are peculiar to the wicked,
whereas the grave is common to
the good and bad: and, as in
Psalms 9:8, he appears to speak
of the last and general judgment
of all the world, so this verse
may be understood of the general
punishment of all wicked persons
and nations consequent upon that
judgment; and, into this place
men may be said to be turned
back, or to return, because it
is their own proper place, (Acts
1:25,) to which they belong, and
from which they have their
wicked qualities, as being of
their father the devil. For as
“all wickedness,” says Dr.
Horne, “came, originally, with
the wicked one, from hell;
thither it will be again
remitted, and they who hold on
its side must accompany it on
its return to that place of
torment, there to be shut up for
ever.” And all the nations —
Whom neither their great numbers
nor power can protect from God’s
wrath; that forget God — That do
not consider nor regard him, nor
his precepts, nor his
threatenings and judgments; but
go on securely and
presumptuously in their wicked
ways. Observe well, reader,
forgetfulness of God is the
primary cause of the wickedness
of mankind, and there are whole
nations, immense multitudes of
persons, that forget him, though
he is their Maker, Preserver,
and Benefactor, and the Being on
whom they are daily dependant
for all things, and who live
without him in the world; of all
whom hell will at last be the
portion, the pit of destruction
in which they, and all their
comforts, will be for ever lost
and buried. Consider this well,
and turn to the Lord with all
thy heart.
Verse 18
Psalms 9:18. The needy shall not
always be forgotten — Though
God, for a time, may seem to
forget or neglect them, and
suffer their enemies to triumph
over them; The expectation of
the poor — Namely, of their
receiving help from God, shall
not perish for ever — Though
they may be tempted to think it
shall. The vision is for an
appointed time, and at the end
it shall speak. He that
believeth shall not make haste.
Verse 19-20
Psalms 9:19-20. Arise, O Lord —
Stir up thyself, exert thy
power: let not man prevail —
Consult thine own honour and let
not men, Hebrew, weak,
miserable, and mortal men,
prevail against the kingdom and
interest of the almighty and
immortal God: shall mortal man
be too hard for God, too strong
for his Maker? Let the heathen
be judged in thy sight — Let
them be evidently called to an
account for all the dishonour
done to thee, and the mischief
done to thy people. Impenitent
sinners will be punished in
God’s sight, and when their day
of grace is over, the bowels
even of infinite mercy will not
relent toward them, Revelation
14:10. Put them in fear, O Lord:
that the nations may know
themselves to be but men —
Subdue their proud and insolent
spirits, strike a terror upon
them, and make them afraid of
thy judgments. God knows how to
make the strongest and stoutest
of men to tremble, and to flee
when none pursues. That the
nations may know themselves to
be but men — Weak, miserable,
and mortal men, and therefore
altogether unable to oppose the
omnipotent and eternal God. He
speaks thus because wicked men,
when they are advanced to great
power and majesty, are very
prone to forget their own
frailty, and to carry themselves
as if they were gods: and
because it is much for the glory
of God, and the peace and
welfare of the world, that all,
even the highest and haughtiest,
should know and consider
themselves to be dependant,
mutable, mortal, and accountable
creatures. |