Verse 1
Psalms 10:1. Why standest thou
afar off — As one unconcerned in
the indignities offered to thy
name, and the injuries done to
thy people? Why hidest thou
thyself — Withdrawest thy
presence and aid, and the light
of thy countenance which was
wont to shine upon us? Why art
thou as a person concealing
himself, so as not to be found
of those who would petition for
aid or counsel? In times of
trouble? — When we most need thy
pity and succour. Do not add
affliction to the afflicted.
God’s withdrawing his presence
and favour from his people is
very grievous to them at any
time, but particularly in times
of trouble. For when outward
blessings are afar off, and, as
it were, hidden from them, then
especially do they want the
inward support and comfort which
his gracious presence affords.
But that we have not this, is
generally our own fault. We
stand afar off from God by
unbelief and love of the world,
and then complain, that God
stands afar off from us, and
does not favour us with
manifestations of his love and
mercy.
Verse 2
Psalms 10:2. The wicked in his
pride — The pride of his heart
which makes him forget God,
despise the poor, and oppress
others: Hebrew, בגאות,
begaa-vath, in his exaltation;
doth persecute the poor — With
great earnestness and burning
fury, as the verb דלק, dalak,
here used, signifies: as if he
had said, The use which he makes
of that power and authority to
which thou hast advanced him is
to persecute those whom he ought
to protect and cherish.
Verse 3
Psalms 10:3. The wicked boasteth
himself of — Hebrew, הלל, hillel,
glorieth, or, praiseth himself,
upon, concerning, or, because of
his heart’s desire — נפשׁו תאות,
naphsho taavath, the
concupiscence, or, lust of his
soul, which latter word is added
to denote the vehemence and
fervency of his desire. He
glorieth in his very sins, which
are his shame, and especially in
the satisfaction of his desire,
how wickedly soever he obtains
it. And blesseth the covetous —
As he applaudeth himself, so he
commends others that eagerly
pursue and get abundance of
gain, though it be by fraud and
violence, accounting such the
only happy men; whom the Lord
abhorreth — So his judgment, as
well as practice, is contrary to
God. But the latter part of this
verse is differently rendered in
some other versions, namely, The
covetous blesseth himself in
those things which the Lord
abhorreth, namely, in his
unjustly gotten riches. See also
the margin.
Verse 4
Psalms 10:4. The wicked, through
the pride of his countenance —
By which he scorns to stoop to
God, or to own any superior, but
makes himself his last end, and
his own will and lust his only
rule; and is full of
self-confidence and a conceit of
his own self-sufficiency and
permanent felicity. He says the
pride of his countenance,
because, though pride be
properly seated in the heart,
yet it is manifested in the
countenance; will not seek after
God —
Will not seek and inquire into
the mind and will of God, that
he may order his life according
thereto, so as to please God;
nor will he seek to him by
prayer for his favour and
blessing. The words, after God,
however, are not in the Hebrew,
and may be omitted, and then the
sense will be, He will not
search, or consider, namely, his
actions; will not trouble
himself to inquire whether they
be just or unjust, pleasing or
offensive to God; but, without
any care or consideration,
rushes into sin, and does
whatever seems right in his own
eyes. God is not in all his
thoughts — He hath no serious
thought of, nor regard to, God,
or his word, which ought to
govern him, nor his threats or
judgments, which should keep him
in awe. Or, as the Hebrew may be
rendered, All his thoughts are,
There is no God, namely, no such
God as minds the affairs of the
world and the actions of men, or
that punishes sinners. “The
psalmist hath here given us the
true character of an ungodly
man. By a long disuse of
devotion, and open neglect of
divine worship, he gradually
forgets every duty he owes his
Maker; and when he has for some
time habituated himself to live
without God in the world, he
then begins to doubt his very
existence; he then begins to
forget that in him we live, and
move, and have our being.” See
Dodd and Delaney.
Verse 5
Psalms 10:5. His ways are always
grievous — The whole course of
his conduct is vexatious to all
that are within his reach, but
especially to the poor, who
cannot defend themselves, and to
just and good men, whom he hates
and persecutes. Thy judgments —
Either thy laws, which are often
called judgments, or rather, thy
threatenings denounced against,
and punishments inflicted upon,
sinners; are far above out of
his sight — He neither discerns,
nor regards, nor fears, nor
thinks of them, but goes on
securely and resolutely in his
wicked courses. In other words,
though all his actions tend to
molest and injure his
neighbours, and he is always
bringing forth some mischief or
other, yet that thou wilt judge
him for it, is the furthest
thing from his thoughts. As for
all his enemies, he puffeth at
them — He doth not regard or
fear them; yea, he despises
them, being confident that he
can blow them away with a
breath. This is an expression of
contempt and disdain, both in
Scripture and other authors.
Verse 6
Psalms 10:6. He hath said in his
heart — He thinks and persuades
himself; I shall not be moved —
From my place and happy state: I
shall never be in adversity —
Because I am not in adversity, I
never shall be in it. His
present prosperity makes him
secure for the future. Compare
Revelation 18:7. “Prosperity,”
says Dr. Horne, “begets
presumption, and he who has been
long accustomed to see his
designs succeed, begins to think
it impossible they should ever
do otherwise. The long-suffering
of God, instead of leading such
a one to repentance, only
hardens him in his iniquity.”
Verse 7
Psalms 10:7. His mouth is full
of cursing — Of oaths and
blasphemies against God; of
reviling and execration of other
men, especially of those that
are good, and those that stand
in his way, and hinder his
wicked designs; and, perhaps,
also of oaths and imprecations
against himself, by which he
endeavours to gain credit, and
to make his neighbours secure,
and so to make way for the
deceit and fraud here next
mentioned. He sticks at nothing
that may serve his ends: for he
makes no conscience of calling
for one curse after another upon
himself to confirm those
promises which he never intends
to keep, or to swear that which
he knows is false, that by these
impious means he may deceive
those who rely on his word or
oath. Under his tongue — Under
his fair and plausible speeches;
is mischief — Mischievous
wickedness lies hid, and vanity,
or iniquity, as the word און,
aven, is often rendered, or
injury; the vexation or
oppression of other men, which
he covers with these fair
pretences.
Verse 8-9
Psalms 10:8-9. He sitteth in the
lurking places of the villages —
Not within the villages, but in
the ways bordering upon them, or
leading to them, as robbers used
to do. In the secret places —
That he may avoid the shame and
punishment of men; which is the
only thing that he fears. His
eyes are privily set — Hebrew,
יצפנו, jitzponu, delitescunt,
lie hid; skulk, or lurk. He
watches, and looks out of his
lurking place, to spy what
passengers come that way. The
allusion is still to the
practice of robbers. As a lion
in his den — Which lurks and
waits for prey. He doth catch —
יחתŠ, jachtop, snatch, or seize
upon; the poor — Namely, with
violence, and to devour or
destroy him; when he draweth him
— Or rather, by drawing him, or,
after he hath drawn him, as
במשׁכו, bemashecho, properly
signifies, into his net. He lays
snares for him, and when he
takes him he tears him in
pieces.
Verse 10
Psalms 10:10. He croucheth and
humbleth himself — Like a lion
(for he continues the same
metaphor) which lies close upon
the ground, partly that he may
not be discovered, and partly
that he may more suddenly and
surely lay hold on his prey.
“When the lion means to leap,”
says the Jewish Arabic
translator, “he first coucheth
that he may gather himself
together; then he rouseth
himself, and puts out his
strength, that he may tear his
prey: therefore when he speaketh
thee fair, beware of him: for
this is but his deceit.” That
the poor may fall — Or, taking
the verb נפל, naphal, actively,
(as Joshua 11:7; Job 1:15,) that
he may fall upon the poor; that,
having first couched and lain
down, and then of a sudden
rising, he may leap and fall
upon his prey, like a lion. By
his strong ones — His strong
members, his teeth or paws.
Verse 11
Psalms 10:11. He hath said in
his heart, God hath forgotten —
Namely, the poor, (Psalms
10:10,) or, the humble. He
forgets or neglects their
oppressions and prayers, and
doth not avenge their cause, as
he hath said he would do. He
hideth his face — Lest he should
see. He takes no notice of their
sufferings, lest he should be
engaged to help them. He will
not encumber himself with the
care of things done upon the
earth, but leaves it wholly to
men to manage their affairs as
they think fit. He will never
see it — Namely, the oppression
of the poor, or the design of
oppressors against them.
Verse 12-13
Psalms 10:12-13. Lift up thy
hand — To rescue the poor, and
to smite their oppressors;
forget not the humble — Show, by
thy appearing for their
vindication, that thou dost
remember and regard them.
Wherefore doth the wicked
contemn God? — Why dost thou, by
giving them impunity, suffer and
occasion them to despise thee?
Verse 14
Psalms 10:14. Thou hast seen it
— Or, But thou hast seen it, and
therefore they are horribly
mistaken, as they will find to
their cost; for thou beholdest —
And not as an idle spectator,
but with an eye of observation
and vindication; mischief and
spite — All the malicious,
spiteful, and injurious conduct
of wicked men toward those who
are more righteous than they; to
requite it with thy hand —
Hebrew, to give (to restore, to
repay to them the mischief they
have done to others) by the hand
of thy extraordinary providence,
because the oppressed were
destitute of all other succours.
The poor committeth himself unto
thee — Hebrew, יעזב עליךְ,
jagnazob gnalecka, leaveth to
thee the care of his person and
righteous cause. Thou art the
helper of the fatherless — Of
such poor and oppressed ones as
have no friend nor helper; one
kind of them being put for all.
“We may collect from hence,”
says Dodd, “that there were two
kinds of infidels at the time
this Psalm was written; one of
whom made God a sort of
epicurean deity, and supposed
him not to concern himself with
the moral government of the
world; the other altogether
denied his being,” Psalms 10:4.
Verse 15
Psalms 10:15. Break thou the arm
of the wicked — That is, their
strength, the instrument of
their violence and cruelty.
Deprive them of all power to do
mischief. Seek out his
wickedness — Search for it, and
punish these wicked atheists;
till thou find none — Till no
such wickedness be left in the
world, or at least, in the
church. “This,” says Dr. Horne,
“may be either a prayer or a
prediction, implying that the
time will come when the power of
Jehovah will dash in pieces that
of the enemy, by the demolition
either of sin or the sinner,
until wickedness be come utterly
to an end, and righteousness be
established for ever in the
kingdom of Messiah.”
Verse 16
Psalms 10:16. The Lord is king —
To whom it belongs to protect
his subjects. Therefore thou
wilt save the humble, and punish
the oppressors; for ever and
ever — Therefore his people’s
case is never desperate, seeing
he ever lives and reigns to help
them, and, therefore, he will
help them in his time, sooner or
later. The heathen — Either,
1st, Those impious Israelites
who oppressed David and other
good men, whom, although they
were reputed Israelites by
themselves and others, yet he
might call heathen for their
heathenish opinions of God and
his providence, and for their
ungodly and unrighteous lives.
Compare Isaiah 1:9, and Amos
9:7. Or, 2d, The Canaanites whom
God, as king of the world, did
expel or destroy, and gave their
land to his people. By which
great example David confirms his
faith and hope for the future.
Are perished out of his land —
Out of Canaan, which God calls
his land, Leviticus 25:23,
because he chose it for them,
Ezekiel 20:6, and gave it to
them, and fixed his presence and
dwelling in it.
Verse 17-18
Psalms 10:17-18. Thou hast heard
the desire of the humble — And,
therefore, wilt still hear it,
being unchangeable, and the same
for ever. Thou wilt prepare
their heart — By kindling
therein holy desires by thy Holy
Spirit, strengthening their
faith, collecting their
thoughts, and raising their
affections to things above, that
they may so pray as that thou
wilt hear: or, that they may be
made fit to receive the mercies
they desire, which, when they
are, they shall have their
prayers answered. Thou wilt
cause thine ear to hear — In due
time, though, for a season, thou
seemest to turn a deaf ear to
their requests. To judge the
fatherless, &c. — That is, to
defend them, and give sentence
for them against their enemies.
That the man of the earth —
Earthly and mortal men, who,
though great and powerful, are
of no better origin than those
whom they oppress, but are made
of the dust, and must return to
it; may no more oppress — Which
they have wickedly done, and
thereby have presumed, most
audaciously, to contend with
thee their Maker and Judge.
Therefore it is time for thee to
suppress such insolence, and to
show how unable they are to
stand before thee. |