Verses 1-3
Psalms 139:1-3. O Lord, thou
hast searched me, and known me —
That is, known me exactly, as
men know those things which they
diligently search out. Thou
knowest my down-sitting, &c. —
All my postures and motions; my
actions, and my cessation from
action. Thou understandest my
thoughts — All my secret
counsels, designs, and
imaginations; afar off — Before
they are perfectly formed in my
own mind. Thou knowest what my
thoughts will be in such and
such circumstances, long before
I know it, yea, from all
eternity. Thou compassest my
path — Thou watchest me on every
side, and therefore discernest
every step which I take. The
expression is metaphorical, and
seems to be taken either from
huntsmen watching all the
motions and lurking places of
the beasts they hunt, and
endeavour to catch; or from
soldiers besieging their enemies
in a city, and setting watches
round about them. And my lying
down — When I am withdrawn from
all company, and am reflecting
on what has passed during the
day, and am composing myself to
rest, thou knowest what I have
in my heart, and with what
thoughts I lie down to sleep;
and art acquainted with all my
ways — At all times, in all
places, and in all situations
and circumstances. Thou knowest
what rule I walk by, what end I
walk toward, and what company I
walk with.
Verse 4-5
Psalms 139:4-5. There is not a
word in my tongue, &c. — Thou
knowest what I speak, and with
what design and disposition of
mind. There is not a vain word,
not a good word, but thou
knowest it altogether — What it
means, what thought gives birth
to it, and with what intention
it is uttered. Or, as others
render the clause, When there is
not a word, &c.; thou knowest
what I am about to speak, either
in prayer to thee, or in
conversation with men, when I
have not yet uttered one word of
it. Thou hast beset me behind
and before — With thine
all-seeing and all-disposing
providence; so that, go which
way I will, I am under thine
eyes, and cannot escape its
penetrating view in any way
possible; and laid thy hand upon
me — Thou keepest me, as it
were, with a strong hand, in thy
sight, and under thy power.
Verse 6
Psalms 139:6. Such knowledge is
too wonderful for me, &c. — It
is such a knowledge as I cannot
comprehend, much less describe.
I cannot conceive, or even form
any idea in what manner thou
dost so perfectly know all
things, especially things which
have yet no being, and seem to
depend on many casualties and
uncertainties. Dr. Hammond
renders the verse, Such
knowledge is admirable, above
me: it is high; I cannot deal
with it. But the sense of the
original of the last clause, לא
אוכל לה, seems better expressed
in our translation. The mind of
the psalmist, when he uttered
these words, was evidently
impressed “with such a
veneration and awe of the
infinite Jehovah, the fountain
and support of universal life
and being; and he found his
faculties so swallowed up, and,
as it were, lost in meditating
on so deep and immense a
subject; that man’s reason, in
its utmost pride and glory, and
with its most boasted
improvements and acquisitions of
knowledge, seemed now so
debased, so weak, so narrow,
and, in comparison with
infinity, so despicable, that he
could proceed no further without
expressing his admiration at
such a boundless scope of
intelligence as he could neither
explain nor comprehend:” see
Foster’s Discourses, vol. Psalms
1:4 to. p. 76.
Verses 7-12
Psalms 139:7-12. Whither shall I
go from thy Spirit? — From thy
knowledge and observation; or,
from thee who art a Spirit?
Whither shall I flee from thy
presence? — I can go nowhere but
thou art there, observing and
judging, approving or
disapproving: nor are there any
means imaginable by which I can
escape the reach of thy
all-penetrating eye, or withdraw
myself from thy universal and
unbounded presence: neither can
an ascent to heaven, nor a
descent to the state of the
dead, secure me from thine
inspection, or divide me from
thee. Nay, though I were able,
with the swiftness of the rays
of the rising sun, in an instant
to shoot myself to the remotest
parts of the earth or sea, even
there should thy hand lead me —
I should still exist in thee:
thy presence would be diffused
all around me; and thine
enlivening power would support
my frame. If I say, Surely the
darkness, &c.; the darkness and
the light are both alike to thee
—
“Equally conspicuous am I, and
all my circumstances, all my
actions, under the thickest and
most impenetrable shades of
night, as in the brightest
splendours of the noon-day sun.”
Dr. Horne, who very properly
applies this doctrine of the
divine omniscience and
omnipresence to practical
purposes, very justly observes
here, We can never sin with
security, but in a place where
the eye of God cannot behold us;
and, he asks, “Where is that
place? Had we a mind to escape
his inspection, whither should
we go! Heaven is the seat of his
glory, creation the scene of his
providence, and the grave itself
will be the theatre of his
power; so that our efforts will
be equally vain whether we
ascend or descend, or fly abroad
upon the wings of the morning
light, which diffuseth itself
with such velocity over the
globe, from east to west. The
arm of the Almighty will still,
at pleasure, prevent and be
ready to arrest the fugitives in
their progress. Darkness may
indeed conceal us and our deeds
from the sight of men; but the
divine presence, like that of
the sun, turns night into day,
and makes all things manifest
before God. The same
consideration which should
restrain us from sin, should
also encourage as to work
righteousness, and comfort us
under all our sorrows; namely,
the thought that we are never
out of the sight and protection
of our Maker. The piety and the
charity which are practised in
cottages, the labour and pain
which are patiently endured in
the field, and on the bed of
sickness; the misery and torment
inflicted by persecution in the
mines, the galleys, and the
dungeons; all are under the
inspection of Jehovah, and are
noted down by him against the
day of recompense. He sees, and
he will reward all we do, and
all we suffer, as becometh
Christians.”
Verse 13
Psalms 139:13. Thou hast
possessed — Or, thou dost
possess, my reins — The most
inward and hidden part of my
body, supposed also to be the
seat of men’s lusts and
passions: thou dwellest in them,
thou art the owner and governor
of them, and therefore must
needs know them. My most secret
thoughts and intentions, and the
innermost recesses of my soul,
are subject to thy control. Thou
hast covered me in my mother’s
womb — With skin and flesh, as
it is expressed Job 10:11. Dr.
Waterland renders this verse,
Thou hast formed my reins; thou
hast compacted me.
Verse 14
Psalms 139:14. I am fearfully
and wonderfully made — Thy
infinite wisdom and power,
manifested in the singular and
curious structure of man’s body,
fill me with wonder and
astonishment, and with the dread
of thy Majesty. Marvellous are
thy works — Both in the lesser
world, man, and in the greater;
and that my soul knoweth right
well — I am well assured, both
by thy word, and by the
contemplation and study of thy
works, that they are wonderful,
although I do not so accurately
understand them in all their
parts as I wish to do.
Verse 15
Psalms 139:15. My substance was
not hid from thee — Hebrews
עצמי, my bone. So the LXX. το
οστουν μου. Bone may be here
taken collectively for bones,
or, rather for the whole fabric
of the bones: or may be put
synecdochically for the whole
body, as being the most
substantial part of it, as in
Psalms 35:10. When I was made in
secret — In the womb; termed, in
the next clause, in the lowest
parts of the earth, in a place
as remote from human eyes as the
lowest parts of the earth are.
He seems to allude to plants and
flowers, the roots and first
rudiments of which are formed
under ground. And curiously
wrought — Exquisitely composed
of bones, muscles, sinews,
arteries, veins, nerves, and
other parts, all framed with
such wonderful skill, that even
heathen, upon the contemplation
of the human body in all its
parts, and observing how
admirably they were formed for
beauty and use, have broken
forth into admiration and
adoration of the Creator. The
word רקמתי, here rendered,
curiously wrought, signifies,
embroidered, or, wrought with a
needle. “The process,” says Dr.
Horne, “whereby the fœtus is
gradually formed and matured for
the birth, is compared to that
of a piece of work wrought with
a needle, or fashioned in the
loom; which, with its beautiful
variety of colour, and
proportion of figure, ariseth,
by degrees, to perfection, under
the hand of the artist.”
Thus also Bishop Lowth, speaking
of metaphors in the Hebrew
poetry, taken from things
sacred, observes, “In that most
perfect hymn, where the
immensity of the Omnipresent
Deity, and the admirable wisdom
of the Divine Artificer, in
framing the human body, are
celebrated, the poet uses a
remarkable metaphor drawn from
the nicest tapestry work; When I
was wrought as with a needle,
&c. He who remarks this, and at
the same time reflects on the
wonderful composition of the
human body, the various
implication of veins, arteries,
fibres, membranes, and the
inexplicable texture of the
whole frame, will immediately
understand the beauty and
elegance of this most apt
expression. But he will not
attain the whole force and
dignity of it, unless he also
considers that the most artful
embroidery with the needle was
dedicated, by the Hebrews, to
the service of the sanctuary;
and that the proper and singular
use of this work was, by the
immediate prescript of the
divine law, applied in a certain
part of the high- priest’s
dress, and in the curtains of
the tabernacle. So that the
psalmist may well be supposed to
have compared the wisdom of the
Divine Artificer particularly
with that specimen of human art,
whose dignity was, through
religion, the highest, and whose
elegance was so exquisite, that
the sacred writer seems to
attribute it to a divine
inspiration.” — Lowth’s Eighth
Prelection.
Verse 16
Psalms 139:16. Thine eyes did
see my substance — Hebrews גלמי,
my rude mass, as Dr. Waterland
renders the word: massa rudis et
intricata adhuc, says Buxtorf,
neque in veram formam evoluta, a
mass, yet rude and entangled,
and not unfolded into proper
form. When the matter, out of
which I was made, was an
unshapen embryo, without any
form, it was visible to thee how
every part, however minute,
would be wrought; and in thy
book all my members were written
— Before any of them were in
being they lay open before thy
eyes, and were discerned by thee
as clearly as if the plan of
them had been drawn in a book.
Thy eternal wisdom formed the
plan, and according to that, thy
almighty power raised the
structure. The allusion to the
needlework seems to be still
carried on. “As the embroiderer
hath his book or pattern before
him, to which he always recurs;
so by a method as exact were all
my members in continuance
fashioned; and as from the rude
skeins of silk, under the
artificer’s hands, there at
length arises an unexpected
beauty, and an accurate harmony
of colours and proportions; so,
by the skill of the divine
workman, is a shapeless mass
wrought into the most curious
texture of parts, most skilfully
interwoven and connected with
each other, until it becomes a
body harmoniously diversified
with all the limbs and
lineaments of a man, not one of
which at first appeared, any
more than the figures were to be
seen in the ball of silk. But
then, (which is the chief thing
here insisted on by the
psalmist,)
whereas the human artificer must
have the clearest light, whereby
to accomplish his task, the
divine work-master seeth in
secret, and effecteth all his
wonders within the dark and
narrow confines of the womb.” —
Horne.
Verse 17-18
Psalms 139:17-18. How precious
also, &c. — “From the wonders of
God’s forming hand, the psalmist
proceeds to those of his
all-directing providence, which
afford additional proofs of the
divine omniscience and
omnipresence.” Are thy thoughts
unto me — Thy counsels, or
contrivances, in my behalf,
which are admirable and amiable
in my eyes, and replete with
kindness. Thou didst not only
form me at first, but ever since
my conception and birth thy
thoughts have been employed for
my good, preserving, providing
for, and blessing me. How great
is the sum of them! — Thy
gracious counsels, designs, and
providential dispensations
toward me are numberless. If I
should count them — Hebrew,
אספרם, rather, shall I count
them? that is, shall I attempt
to count them? They are more in
number than the sand — I might
as well undertake to number the
grains of sand. When I awake, I
am still with thee — Thy
wonderful counsels and works on
my behalf come constantly into
my mind, not only in the
day-time, but even in the
night-season, whenever I awake.
“The thoughts and counsels of
Jehovah,” says Dr. Horne,
“concerning David, his
appointment to the throne, his
troubles, and his preservation
in the midst of them, were
precious and delightful subjects
of meditation and praise, never
to be exhausted of the rich
matter they contained. With
these in his mind he lay down at
night, and when he awoke in the
morning his thoughts naturally
recurred to the pleasing theme.
He began where he had left off,
and found himself, in heart and
soul, still present with God,
still ruminating on him and his
works.”
Verse 19
Psalms 139:19. Surely, thou wilt
slay the wicked, O God — And as
thou hast precious and gracious
thoughts toward me, (which thou
also hast toward all that love
and fear thee,) so thou wilt not
now desert me and leave me in
the hands of those wicked men
who, unmindful of thy presence
and thy all-seeing eye, regard
not by what means they plot my
ruin. But rather, as thou
knowest all things, and art
perfectly acquainted “with the
justice of my cause, and the
iniquity of my adversaries; and
as thou hast formed, and
hitherto in so wonderful a
manner watched over and
preserved me, thou wilt slay the
wicked, and deliver me, as thou
hast promised to do, out of
their hands. Depart from me,
therefore, ye bloody men — I
trust in my God, and will have
no connection in the way of
treaty or friendship with you.”
Thus David, in this verse, draws
the intended conclusion from the
premises so largely expatiated
upon in the former part of the
Psalm.
Verse 20
Psalms 139:20. For they speak
against thee wickedly — It is
not so much me that they
persecute, in opposing,
misrepresenting, and speaking
against me, as virtue and piety,
in persecuting which they oppose
and speak against thee;
contemning thy omniscience and
omnipresence, and thy
superintending providence. And
thine enemies take thy name in
vain — Or, according to the
order of the Hebrew words, They
take thy name in vain, and are
thine enemies. Or, are haters of
thee, as it follows, Psalms
139:21. They abuse thy blessed
name with oaths, blasphemies,
and perjuries, calling thee to
witness the truth of their lies
and calumnies. Or, as some
render the clause, Thine enemies
take thee to falsehood, (the
words; thy name, being not in
the Hebrew,) “they take thee,
only to swear falsely by thee.”
Verse 21-22
Psalms 139:21-22. Do not I hate
them that hate thee? — I appeal
to thee, the omnipresent and
omniscient God, whether I do not
perfectly hate them, (that is,
hate their ways,) so far as they
are enemies to thee and
goodness. Am I not grieved —
With the folly and sin of those
that rise up against thee? —
That act in open hostility
against thy authority. I am
grieved to see their wickedness,
and to foresee the ruin in which
it will certainly end. I count
them mine enemies — I am no less
grieved with their enmity
against thee than if they
directed it against myself. “A
faithful servant hath the same
interests, the same friends, the
same enemies, with his Master,
whose cause and honour he is,
upon all occasions, in duty
bound to support and maintain. A
good man hates, as God himself
doth; he hates not the persons
of men, but their sins; not what
God made them, but what they
have made themselves. We are
neither to hate the men on
account of the vices they
practise, nor love the vices for
the sake of the men who practise
them. He who observes invariably
this distinction, fulfils the
perfect law of charity, and hath
the love of God and of his
neighbour abiding in him.” —
Horne.
Verse 23-24
Psalms 139:23-24. Search me, O
God — Do thou, who art the
searcher of hearts, judge
whether I do not speak this from
my very heart, and deal with me
accordingly. See if there be any
wicked way in me — Hebrew, דרךְ
עצב, way of trouble or grief;
any course of life, or temper of
mind, which is a source of grief
or trouble, either, 1st, To
myself, as all sin is to the
sinner, sooner or later; or, 2d,
To others, as I am accused of
causing much trouble, and
designing evil to the king and
kingdom; and lead me in the way
everlasting — In the way of
godliness, the way which is
right and good, and leads to
everlasting life; whereas the
way of wickedness, to which this
is opposed, will perish, as is
said Psalms 1:6, and bring men
to utter destruction. Or, as the
words may be rendered, In the
old way, which is the good way,
as it is called Jeremiah 6:16,
the way of righteousness and
holiness, which may well be
called the old way, because it
was written on the hearts of men
from the beginning of the world,
whereas wickedness is of later
date. Observe, reader, they that
are upright can take comfort in
God’s omniscience, as a witness
of their uprightness, and can,
with an humble confidence, beg
of him to search and try them,
and discover them to themselves,
for a good man desires to know
the worst of himself. Nay, they
have no objection, but rather
desire to be discovered to
others. He that means honestly
could wish he had a window in
his breast, that any man might
look into his heart; for his
ruling desire is, in all things,
to know and do the will of God. |