Verses 1-3
Psalms 18:1-3. I will love thee
— Hebrew, ארחמךְ, erchamecha, I
will love thee most
affectionately, and with my
whole soul. I can make thee no
better return for all thy
favours than my love, which I
pray thee to accept. By loving
the Lord, however, here and
elsewhere, we are not only to
understand giving him the inward
affection of the soul, but also
all the proper outward
expressions and testimonies of
it, in praising, glorifying, and
serving him. O Lord, my strength
— From whom alone I have
received all my strength, and
success, and my establishment in
the peaceable possession of the
kingdom, and in whom alone I
trust, as it follows. The Lord
is my rock and my fortress — To
which I flee for refuge, as the
Israelites did to their rocks
and strong holds; and as David
himself did when driven into
banishment by Saul, and forced
to conceal himself in rocks and
caverns, and to retreat for
safety to steep hills and
precipices rendered by nature
almost inaccessible. See 6:2; 1
Samuel 13:6; 1 Samuel 23:19; 1
Samuel 23:25; 1 Samuel 24:2. My
buckler — Or, shield, by whom I
have been protected, amidst the
dangers of those perilous wars
in which I have been engaged, as
the soldier is by the shield in
his hand. The horn of my
salvation — By which I have both
defended myself and subdued my
enemies: a metaphor taken from
the horns of animals, which are
their ornament and strength; by
which they both protect
themselves, and assault those
who oppose or injure them. The
horn is frequently put for
strength and power, by the
sacred writers, as Psalms 92:10;
Amos 6:13, and elsewhere, as
also for riches and dignity. The
reader will observe that this
verse contains a continued chain
of metaphors, and is a sublime
paraphrase on the first
commandment, declaring that
Jehovah, the God of Israel,
alone, was the foundation of his
confidence, and the author of
his security and happiness: by
whom he had been supported under
his troubles, and delivered out
of them; whose protection had
secured him, and whose power had
broken and scattered his
enemies; by whose mercy and
truth he was now set up on high
above them all. I will call —
Or, I did call, and was saved.
For the future tense is commonly
used for that which is past. And
this seems best to agree with
the whole context.
Verse 4-5
Psalms 18:4-5. The sorrows of
death compassed me — That is,
dangerous and deadly troubles.
Or, the bands, or cords, of
death, as חבלי, cheblee, may be
rendered, quĉ hominem quasi fune
arctissime constringunt, which
binds a man most closely, as
with a cord, whence the word is
used concerning the pains of
women in labour. And the floods
of ungodly men — Literally, of
Belial, as in the margin. Their
great multitudes, strength, and
violence, broke in upon me like
an irresistible flood, carrying
all before it, or like a torrent
came down upon me as though they
would have swept me away by
their fury. “Nothing,” says Dr.
Delaney, “can be a finer emblem
of a host of men, in their
several ranks, than the waves of
the sea succeeding one another
in their natural order.” And
when we consider them pressing
forward to the destruction of
their adversaries, they may be
very properly termed waves of
death. The sorrows — Or, cords,
of hell, or of death, compassed
me about — Brought me to the
brink of the grave; the snares
of death prevented me — Deadly
snares came upon me, and almost
took hold on me, before I was
aware of my danger.
Verse 6-7
Psalms 18:6-7. He heard out of
his temple — Either, 1st, Out of
his sanctuary, where he was
represented as dwelling between
the cherubim, in the most holy
place, and where he promised to
hear and answer the prayers of
his people, which were either
made in or directed to it. Or,
2d, Out of his heavenly
habitation, which is often
called his temple. Then the
earth shook and trembled — Then
God appeared on my behalf in a
miraculous and glorious manner,
and to the great terror and
confusion of all mine enemies,
as though they had been
surprised with an earthquake, in
which the earth was shaken from
its foundations, and all its
rocks and mountains trembled.
David proceeds, in this and the
eight following verses, to
describe, by the sublimest
expressions, the awful manner in
which Jehovah came to his
assistance. The imagery
employed, Dr. Horne thinks, is
borrowed from mount Sinai, and
those tremendous circumstances
which attended the delivery of
the law from thence. When a
monarch is angry and prepares
for war, the whole kingdom is
instantly in commotion. Thus
universal nature is here
represented as feeling the
effects of its great Sovereign’s
displeasure, and all the visible
elements appear disordered. The
description must be allowed, by
all skilful and impartial
judges, to be truly noble and
sublime, and in the genuine
spirit of poetry. “The majesty
of God, and the manner in which
he is represented as coming to
the aid of his favourite king,
surrounded with all the powers
of nature as his attendants and
ministers, and arming heaven and
earth to fight his battles and
execute his vengeance, are
described in the loftiest and
most striking terms. The shaking
of the earth, the trembling of
the mountains and pillars of
heaven; the smoke that ascended
out of his nostrils; the flames
of devouring fire that flashed
from his mouth; the heavens
bending down to convey him to
the battle; his riding upon a
cherub, and rapidly flying on
the wings of a whirlwind; his
concealing his majesty in the
thick clouds of heaven; the
bursting of the lightnings from
the horrid darkness; the
uttering his voice in peals of
thunder; the storm of fiery
hail; the melting of the
heavens, and their dissolving
into floods of tempestuous
rains; the cleaving of the
earth, and disclosing the bottom
of the hills, and the
subterraneous channels, or
torrents of water, by the very
breath of the nostrils of the
Almighty; are all of them
circumstances which create
admiration, excite a kind of
horror, and exceed every thing
of this nature that is to be
found in any of the remains of
heathen antiquity. The grandest
pieces thereof will be found,
upon comparison, infinitely
short of this description of the
psalmist; throughout the whole
of which God is represented as a
mighty warrior, going forth to
fight the battles of David, and
highly incensed at the
opposition his enemies made to
his power and authority. When he
descended to the engagement, the
very heavens bowed down to
render his descent more awful;
his military tent was
substantial darkness; the voice
of his thunder was the warlike
alarm which sounded to the
battle; the chariot in which he
rode were the thick clouds of
heaven, conducted by cherubs,
and carried on by the
irresistible force and rapid
wings of an impetuous tempest;
and the darts and weapons he
employed were thunder-bolts,
lightnings, fiery hail, deluging
rains, and stormy winds! No
wonder that when God thus arose,
all his enemies should be
scattered, and those who hated
him should flee before him! It
does not appear, from any part
of David’s history, that there
ever was literally such a storm
as is here described, which
proved destructive to his
enemies, and salutary to
himself. There might, indeed,
have been such a one, though
there be no particular mention
of it.” But it is more probable
that the whole passage is to be
understood figuratively, and
that by these metaphorical and
lofty expressions, and this
sublime description, David only
meant to set forth that storm of
wrath and vengeance which God
had poured upon his enemies and
the glorious deliverance he had
thereby wrought for him. See
Dodd and Chandler.
Verse 8
Psalms 18:8. There went up a
smoke out of his nostrils, &c. —
Here “the further effects of
God’s indignation are
represented by those of fire,
which is the most terrible of
the created elements, burning
and consuming all before it:
scorching the ground, and
causing the mountains to smoke.
Under this appearance God
descended on the top of Sinai;
thus he visited the cities of
the plain; and thus he is to
come at the end of time.” —
Horne. In the poetical figure of
the smoke issuing from God’s
nostrils, the psalmist is
thought to allude to the
well-known circumstance, that
when the passion of anger
becomes warm and violent in any
man it is wont to discover
itself by the heated, vehement
breath which proceeds from his
nose and mouth. The latter
clause of the verse is better
rendered, Fire out of his mouth
devoured, coals burned from
before, or around him.
Verse 9
Psalms 18:9. He bowed the
heavens — By producing thick and
dark clouds, by which the
heavens seemed to come down to
the earth; and came down — Not
by change of place, but by the
manifestation of his presence
and power on my behalf. In other
words, he, as it were, made the
heavens bend under him, when he
descended to take vengeance on
his and my enemies. And darkness
was under his feet — The
psalmist seems here to express
the appearance of the Divine
Majesty in a glorious cloud,
descending from heaven, which,
underneath, was substantially
dark, but above bright, and
shining with an amazing lustre;
and which, by its gradual
descent, would appear as if the
heavens themselves were bending
down and approaching toward the
earth.
Verse 10
Psalms 18:10. He rode upon a
cherub, and did fly — Or, upon
the cherubim, upon the angels
who are so called, (Genesis
3:24,) and who are also termed
God’s chariots, (Psalms 68:17,)
upon which he is said to sit and
ride, which is not to be
understood literally and
grossly, but only figuratively,
to denote God’s using the
ministry of angels in raising
such storms and tempests as are
here described, whether they be
interpreted literally or
figuratively, and especially in
effecting many of those great
events which take place in the
administration of his
providence; and particularly
such as manifest his immediate
interposition in the
extraordinary judgments by which
he punishes sinful nations, or
in the remarkable deliverances
which he works out for his
people. Yea, he did fly upon the
wings of the wind — As swiftly
as the wind. He came to my
rescue with all speed.
Verse 11
Psalms 18:11. He made darkness
his secret place — Or, his
hiding place: his covert, says
Dr. Waterland; his tent, says
Chandler. He covered himself
with dark clouds. God is
frequently represented as
surrounded with clouds, in the
sacred writings; this
representation is peculiarly
proper in this place, as thick,
heavy clouds, deeply charged,
and with lowering aspects, are
always the forerunners and
attendants of a tempest, and
greatly heighten the horrors of
the appearance; and the
representation of them, as
spreading around the Almighty
for his pavilion and tent, is
truly poetical and grand. And,
as storms and tempests in the
air are often instruments of the
divine displeasure, they are
therefore here selected with
great propriety as figures of
it; and God, who has the whole
artillery of the aerial regions
at his command, and holds the
reins of whirlwinds in his hand,
and directs their impetuous
course through the world when
and how he pleases, is here
fifty represented as employing
them against his enemies in the
day of battle and war.
Verse 12
Psalms 18:12. At the brightness
that was before him, &c. —
Schultens, Waterland, and some
others, translate this verse, At
his lightning, his clouds
swelled and burst out into
hail-stones and balls of fire.
The meaning is, that through the
lightning his clouds fermented,
that is, swelled, and, as it
were, boiled over, being
rarefied by the heat. In the
former part of this description,
the clouds are represented as
condensed, heavy, and lowering,
ready to burst out with all the
fury of a tempest; and here, as
beginning to disburden and
discharge themselves, by the
eruption of the lightning in
fire, flames, and hail-stones
mixed. The abrupt manner in
which the burning coals and
hail-stones are mentioned,
points out the sudden and
impetuous fall of them. The
words rendered coals of fire
here signify living, burning
coals. Where the lightning fell
it devoured all before it, and
turned whatever it touched into
burning embers. See Chandler and
Dodd.
Verse 13-14
Psalms 18:13-14. The Lord also
thundered, &c. — The preceding
verse mentioned the lightning
with its effects; this gives us
the report of the thunder, and
the increasing storm of hail and
fire that attended it. Yea, he
sent out his arrows — Namely,
lightnings, as it is expressed
in the next clause; and
scattered them — Namely, mine
enemies, which is sufficiently
understood from Psalms 18:3;
Psalms 18:17, and from the whole
context. Thus magnificently does
the psalmist describe the
discharge of the celestial
artillery upon God’s enemies.
Terrible was the execution of
the divine vengeance upon them,
“as when lightnings and
thunders, hail-stones and balls
of fire, making their way
through the dark clouds which
contain them, strike terror and
dismay into the hearts of men.
Such is the voice, and such are
the arrows of the Lord Almighty,
wherewith he discomfiteth all
who oppose the execution of his
counsels, and obstruct the
salvation of his chosen. Every
display and description of this
sort, and indeed every
thunder-storm which we behold,
should remind us of that
exhibition of power and
vengeance which is hereafter to
accompany the general
resurrection.” — Horne.
Verse 15
Psalms 18:15. Then the channels
of waters were seen — This is a
description of the effects of
the earthquake, by which the
earth was rent in sunder, and
such clefts made in it that the
subterraneous passages of the
waters were discovered, as has
frequently been the case in
violent earthquakes, whole
rivers of waters sometimes
issuing from the clefts, and
spouting up a great height into
the air. The foundations of the
world were discovered — That is,
Such large and deep chasms, or
apertures, were made by the
violence of the shock that the
lower parts of the earth were
laid open to view, and made
perfectly visible.
Verses 16-18
Psalms 18:16-18. He sent from
above — This may either denote,
in general, that God assisted
him by his divine power to
overcome and deliver himself
from his enemies, and thereby
extricate himself from his
troubles, or that he sent his
angels from heaven to protect
and rescue him from the many
dangers that surrounded him;
which he figuratively calls
drawing him out of great waters
— Afflictions and great
calamities being frequently
represented by deep waters and
floods in the sacred writings.
Or, as Theodoret thinks, by
these waters, he means the
strong enemies mentioned in the
next verse. They prevented me in
the day of my calamity — They
were too crafty for me, and had
almost surprised me, coming upon
me suddenly, unawares, when I
was unprepared and helpless; and
would have destroyed me, had not
God upheld and supported me when
I was in danger of perishing.
But God was my stay — They could
not prevent him; and, what a
staff is to one who is ready to
fall, that was God to me in the
time of my extremity.
Verse 19
Psalms 18:19. He brought me
forth also — Out of my straits
and difficulties; out of the
little caves in which I was shut
up and imprisoned; into a large
place — Into a state of freedom,
and plenty, and comfort. David
was several times shut up in
close confinement in rocks and
caverns; but God had now set him
at liberty, and placed him in
such happy circumstances that he
could live and act with the
utmost freedom, without any
constraint of his enemies, or
danger of his person. Because he
delighted in me — Or, loved me,
or had good will toward me, as
חפצ בי, chapetz bi, commonly
signifies. Whereby he ascribes
all his mercies to God’s good
pleasure and free grace, as the
first spring of them. Which he
thought fit to premise, lest the
following expressions should
seem to savour of boasting of
his own merits, which he often
disclaims.
Verses 20-24
Psalms 18:20-24. The Lord
rewarded me according to my
righteousness — “Commentators
have been much perplexed,” says
Dr. Horne, “to account for these
unlimited claims to
righteousness made by David, and
that long after the matter of
Uriah, and toward the close of
life. Certain, indeed, it is,”
adds he, “that the expressions
considered as David’s must be
confined, either to his
steadfast adherence to the true
worship, in opposition to
idolatry, or to his innocence
with regard to some particular
crimes falsely alleged against
him by his adversaries. But if
the Psalm be prophetical, and
sung by the victorious monarch
in the person of King Messiah,
then do the verses now before us
no less exactly than beautifully
delineate that all- perfect
righteousness wrought by the
Redeemer, in consequence of
which he obtained deliverance
for himself and his people.”
Most commentators, however, are,
and have always been, of
opinion, that David spoke here
in his own person, and not in
the person of the Messiah, to
whom no part of the Psalm, upon
a fair construction, except the
last two verses, appears to have
any reference. But as, by
rewarding and recompensing him,
David chiefly meant the Lord’s
delivering him from Saul and his
other enemies that then were,
and exalting him to the throne
of Judah and Israel; so he must
of necessity be understood as
speaking principally of his
righteousness, and the cleanness
of his hands, prior to that
period. And, certainly, in that
former part of his life, “no
instance can be alleged against
him,” as Dr. Dodd observes, “in
which he violated the known
precepts of religion and virtue,
enjoined by that constitution he
was under;” and therefore,
conscious of his integrity thus
far, he might justly glory and
rejoice that God, who was a
witness to it, had thus
bountifully rewarded it. And, as
to his great sin in the matter
of Uriah, wherein he highly
offended and greatly dishonoured
God, and for which God chastised
him for many years, by various
calamities, his repentance for
that dreadful crime, or rather,
for that complication of crimes,
was so sincere, and the fruits
and proofs of it were so
manifest, that God was pleased
to remove the judgments by which
he had corrected him, and to
deliver him from his rebellious
son Absalom and his party, and
from all the other enemies that
rose up against him. Many
learned men, however, are of
opinion that David did not
compose this Psalm after his sin
in the matter of Uriah, much
less in his old age, but rather
in his younger days upon his
deliverance from Saul, and the
other enemies who persecuted him
in Saul’s days, and opposed his
advancement to the crown. This,
they suppose, appears from the
title of the Psalm, compared
with 2 Samuel 22:1. Dr. Delaney
thinks he wrote the greater part
of it soon after the deliverance
he obtained from Saul’s
messengers, when they were sent
to his house to take him, and
when he was let down by Michal
out of the window, and escaped
over the garden or city-wall:
and he thinks the 29th verse
refers to this escape, and is a
proof that he penned the Psalm
on that occasion. But Dr. Dodd,
and many others think it was
composed some time after he was
put in peaceable possession of
the kingdom, and had introduced
the ark into Jerusalem. If
either of these opinions be
correct, he wrote the Psalm
before his fall, and while his
character was quite unblemished.
But be this as it may, if he
wrote it even after that unhappy
event, it must also have been
written after his repentance,
and after he was become a new
creature in heart and life: and
it does not appear, on a candid
examination of the particulars
included in the account which he
here gives of the uprightness of
his conduct, that there is any
clause or expression contained
in it which will not admit of a
fair and easy interpretation, in
perfect consistency with his
real character, according to the
delineation which the inspired
writers of his history have
given of it. The following short
explication of the passage,
chiefly taken from Bishop
Patrick’s paraphrase, it is
thought, makes this evident.
The Lord rewarded me, &c. — The
Lord knew that I was unjustly
persecuted, and therefore
rewarded me according to the
integrity and purity of my
actions, as I was never guilty
of that whereof they accused me.
For (Psalms 18:21) I have kept
the ways of the Lord — I never
took any unlawful courses for my
deliverance; and have not
wickedly departed from my God —
But when Saul, my great enemy,
(who maliciously and unweariedly
sought my life,) fell into my
hands, and I had it in my power
and was urged to kill him, I
would not do it, because he was
the Lord’s anointed: nor did I
ever injure him or his party.
For (Psalms 18:22) all his
(God’s) judgments were before
me, &c. — I laid his precepts
before me as the rule of my
actions, and did not put them
away, or bid them, as it were,
stand aside. I was also (Psalms
18:23) upright before him — I
chose rather to suffer any thing
than lose my integrity; and I
kept myself from mine iniquity —
How unjustly soever my enemies
dealt with me, I would not
imitate them, but though I could
not hinder their iniquity, I
kept myself from that, which, if
I had committed it, would have
been mine; guarding especially
against that sin to which I was
most inclined or tempted.
Therefore (Psalms 18:24) hath
the Lord recompensed me, &c. —
He who administers all things
with the greatest justice and
the greatest goodness heard my
prayer, and dealt with me
according to my innocent
intentions, which would not
suffer me to act unmercifully or
unjustly toward Saul in any
respect, much less to defile my
hands with his blood.
Verses 25-27
Psalms 18:25-27. In these verses
David lays down the general
method of the procedure of God’s
providence and moral government,
which, in the issue, will be
according to the moral character
and conduct of men themselves.
With the merciful, &c. — A
declaration similar to that of
our Lord, Blessed are the
merciful, for they shall obtain
mercy. With an upright man thou
wilt show thyself upright — An
invariable friend to his
integrity; just to reward it,
and faithful in all thy promises
to encourage it. With the pure
thou wilt show thyself pure —
That is, the lover of purity,
righteousness, and truth, and
ever acting toward those whose
character this is, according to
the perfect rectitude and
unspotted purity of thy own
nature. With the froward thou
wilt show thyself froward —
Hebrew, עם עקשׁ תתפתל, gnim
gnickesh Tithpattal, cum
perverso eluctaris, Buxtorff.
With the perverse thou
strugglest, or, rather, wilt
struggle or wrestle; that is,
says Ab. Ezra, donec deviceris,
until thou shalt conquer him.
The word rendered froward
signifies one of a perverse
disposition, who twists and
twines himself, just as his
humour, passions, and interest
lead him; or, a crafty, wily
person, who accustoms himself to
all the wiles of deceit. With
one of this character, the
psalmist says, God will wrestle.
The meaning is, that he will
deal with perverse, designing,
and crafty men, according to
their deserts; will oppose them
in their designs, struggle
against, and walk contrary to
them, Leviticus 26:23-24; that
he will disappoint them in all
their subtlest devices, and
cause them to fall by those very
wiles by which they endeavour to
deceive and ruin others. See
Chandler and Dodd. For thou wilt
save the afflicted people — Thou
art wont to deliver those who
are poor and distressed when
they humbly wait upon thee; but
wilt bring down high looks —
Wilt lay those low who, proud of
their power, insolently oppress
them; or, those proud persons
who discover the pride of their
hearts by their haughty looks
and overbearing conduct.
Verses 28-31
Psalms 18:28-31. Thou wilt
light, or, thou dost light, or,
hast lighted, my candle — That
is, given me safety, and
comfort, and glory, and
posterity also: all which
particulars are often signified
by a candle, or a light. Thou
wilt or dost advance me to
honour, increase my prosperity,
and make me continually joyful
by thy favour. Nothing was more
usual among the oriental writers
than representing any person, or
family, by a lamp enlightening
the whole house, 1 Kings 11:36;
1 Kings 15:4, and Job 18:5-6.
For by thee I have run through a
troop — Broken through the armed
troops of mine enemies. And by
my God have I leaped over a wall
— I have scaled the walls of
their strongest cities and
castles, and so taken them.
David, soon after his settlement
on the throne, drove the
Jebusite garrison out of
Jerusalem, and reduced the city
to his obedience, making it the
future capital of his kingdom.
And it is not improbable but he
may refer to these actions, or
to his two victories over the
Philistines, mentioned 2 Samuel
5:17, &c. “David’s habitual
piety should be here remarked,
as he ascribes all his successes
to the assistance of God; and in
the next two verses celebrates
the unerring rectitude of his
providence: As for God, his way
is perfect — In every thing just
and kind: the truth of his
promises; the word of the Lord
is tried — Free from deceit, as
gold refined by fire, and
certainly to be performed: and
that powerful protection he
affords to good men; he is a
buckler — A sure defence, to all
those who trust in him. To this
he could bear witness from his
own experience; and therefore he
breaks out in that just
acknowledgment, Psalms 18:31,
Who is God, save Jehovah? Or,
who is a rock — Who can give
absolute security from all
dangers, save our God? — He then
goes on to enumerate the
particular favours which God had
bestowed upon himself, and the
various perils he had been in,
under which he had experienced
the divine protection.” —
Chandler.
Verse 32
Psalms 18:32. It is God that
girdeth me with strength — That
inspires me with courage,
fortitude, and resolution, and
gives me strength both of mind
and body in battle and war. It
is a metaphor taken, either from
a military girdle, or a common
girdle, wherewith their loose
garments were girded about them,
and whereby they were rendered
fitter for any action. He maketh
my way perfect — Perfectly
plain, and clear from
impediments, as pioneers use to
prepare the way for the march of
an army. Or, the meaning is, he
guides me in all my counsels and
enterprises, so that I neither
miss my way, nor stumble in it,
nor come short of my end. “A
man’s way, in the pursuit of any
end, is perfect when the means
he uses to attain it are proper
and direct, and will finally
render him successful in it: and
thus God made David’s way
perfect as he gave him the
surest directions how to act,
and prospered him in all his
measures, to support the dignity
of his crown and government.” —
Chandler.
Verse 33
Psalms 18:33. He maketh my feet
like hinds’ feet — That is, most
swift and nimble. As he makes me
wise in counsel and contrivance,
Psalms 18:32; so he makes me
speedy and expeditious in
execution; which are the two
great excellences of a captain.
He gives me great agility,
either to flee and escape from
my enemies when prudence
requires it, or to pursue them
when I see occasion. Swiftness
of foot was reckoned a very
honourable qualification among
the ancient warriors, who, as
they generally fought on foot,
were enabled, by their agility
and swiftness, speedily to run
from place to place, give
orders, attack their enemies,
defend their friends, and
perform divers other offices the
service might require of them:
of which we have many instances
in the battles of Homer and
Virgil. One of the highest
commendations Homer gives his
principal hero is taken from his
swiftness, terming him
continually ποδας οκυς αχιλλευς,
swift-footed Achilles. This
qualification was peculiarly
useful to David, as the country
of Judea, and some of those
where he was obliged to make
war, were very mountainous and
steep. And setteth me upon my
high places — Hebrew,
יעמידני, jagnamideeni, he maketh
me to stand — That is, either he
places me in safe and strong
places, out of the reach of mine
enemies; or he confirms and
establishes me in that high and
honourable estate, into which he
hath advanced me, and gives me
wisdom to improve my victories.
Verse 34
Psalms 18:34. He teacheth my
hands to war — To him I owe all
the military skill, or strength,
or courage which I have. A bow
of steel is broken by mine arm —
Chandler renders it, Mine arms
have bent the bow of steel. That
David was able to bend and draw
together even a brazen bow, or
one of steel, and to use it in
his wars, was a proof of his
great strength. Dr. Delaney,
however, certainly draws an
unwarranted conclusion from
these poetical expressions when
he infers from them, “that David
was the swiftest and strongest
of all mankind.”
Verse 35
Psalms 18:35. Thou hast given me
the shield of thy salvation —
Thy protection, which hath been
to me like a shield to defend
me. Thy right hand hath holden
me up — Kept me from falling
into those snares and mischiefs
which mine enemies designed, and
I feared I should fall into. And
thy gentleness hath made me
great — Or, meekness, as the
word ענוה, gnanvah, is
translated, Numbers 12:3; Psalms
45:4; Zechariah 2:3; that is,
thy clemency, whereby thou hast
pardoned my sins, which
otherwise would have undone me,
and hast mitigated thy
corrections which I have
deserved: or, thy grace and
benignity, which thou hast
manifested to me, and exercised
in and for me.
Verse 36
Psalms 18:36. Thou hast enlarged
my steps — Which before were
confined within narrow limits,
and entangled with the
straitness and difficulty of the
way. Thou hast set my feet in a
large room, Psalms 31:8; Psalms
118:5. It must be observed, that
the eastern writers were wont to
denote any person’s condition in
life by his steps, or goings.
Hence narrow, or straitened
steps, according to their
phraseology, signified a state
of distress and great
affliction; and large and
unconfined steps, the contrary
state of prosperity and plenty.
So that David here praises God
for advancing him to great
honour and prosperity. That my
feet did not slip — Or stumble,
as they are apt to do in narrow
and uneven ways.
Verse 38-39
Psalms 18:38-39. They are fallen
under my feet — Cast down to the
ground, so that I may tread upon
their necks, after the manner of
conquerors, Deuteronomy 33:29;
Joshua 10:24. Thou hast girded
me, &c. — Thus again, as in
Psalms 18:32, he gives God the
whole praise of his great
achievements and victories. It
was he that inspired his forces
with resolution and vigour, and
thereby subdued under him those
that rose up against him —
Namely, his enemies who joined
in battle to oppose and oppress
him.
Verses 40-42
Psalms 18:40-42. Thou hast given
me the necks, &c. — That I might
put my yoke upon their necks, or
bring them into subjection. But
Houbigant and some others render
the clause, more agreeably to
the Hebrew, As for my enemies,
thou givest, or hast given, me
their back: that is, hast made
them turn their backs and flee
from me. For the word ערŠ,
gnoreph, here rendered neck,
signifies the back part of the
neck, and therefore is put for
the back, as the LXX. translate
it, and as it is rendered Exodus
23:27; Joshua 7:8; Joshua 7:12,
and elsewhere. That I might
destroy them that hate me — That
I might have opportunity to
destroy them. They cried unto
the Lord — He speaks of his
Israelitish enemies, who in
their distresses prayed to God
for help against him. I did beat
them small as dust — These are
hyperbolical expressions,
signifying that his enemies had
been perfectly subdued, and
deprived of all power to make
any further resistance. I did
cast them out as dirt, &c. — As
the mire in the streets I
trampled them down. — Chandler.
Verse 43-44
Psalms 18:43-44. Thou hast
delivered me from the strivings
of the people — From the
contentions, seditions, and
tumults of my own people under
Saul, and during the civil war
raised by Abner in favour of
Ishbosheth, when the tribes
strove with each other; and from
the invasions of the Philistines
who attacked him soon after his
accession to the throne. Thou
hast made me the head of the
heathen — Of the Ammonites,
Moabites, Edomites, Syrians, and
others, who were become
tributary to him by his
victories over them: see 2.
Samuel Psalms 8:1; 1 Chronicles
18. A people whom I have not
known — Whom I had no
acquaintance with nor relation
to, not even by thy promise or
grant; that is, barbarous and
remote nations, shall serve me —
Shall be subject to me. As soon
as they hear of me — At the fame
of my name and victorious arms,
or upon the first tidings of my
coming toward them; they shall
obey me — They shall instantly
comply with my will, as soon as
they understand it. The
strangers shall submit
themselves unto me — The Hebrew
is literally, the sons of the
strangers shall lie unto me;
that is, shall submit themselves
to me, not willingly and
cheerfully, as they will
pretend, but only out of fear
and by constraint. By this it
appears, that this is spoken
with reference to David, and not
(as some would have it) to
Christ; because Christ’s people
are a willing people, (Psalms
110:3,) and those whom he
conquers freely obey him.
Verse 45
Psalms 18:45. The strangers
shall fade away — Shall wither
and decay in their hopes end
strength; and be afraid — That
is, shall come trembling, one
verb being put for two; out of
their close places — Out of
their strong holds, where they
shall lurk and keep themselves
close, for fear of me, not
daring to stir out without
trembling, lest I should assault
and take them. Dr. Waterland
renders it, They shall faint
away, and come creeping out of
their coverts. Grotius’s comment
is, “They shall suspect their
safety in the very places to
which they flee for refuge.”
Verse 46
Psalms 18:46. The Lord liveth —
Jehovah, and he only, is the
true and living God, and he hath
manifested himself to be such
for my comfort, and for the
confusion of my enemies, when
other gods are dead and impotent
idols. Or, Let the Lord live, as
חי יהוה, chai Jehovah, may be
translated; and so it is a
joyful and thankful acclamation,
spoken after the manner in which
earthly princes are addressed;
and blessed be my rock — Let him
have all blessing and praise,
for he is worthy of it.
Verses 47-50
Psalms 18:47-50. It is God that
avengeth me — That executeth
vengeance, both by me, against
his malicious enemies, and for
me, against Saul, on whom I
would not avenge myself. Thou
liftest me up above those, &c. —
Above their malice and power.
Thou hast delivered me from the
violent man — From Saul, whose
name, for honour’s sake, he
forbears to mention. Therefore I
will give thanks to thee among
the heathen — In the great
congregations, consisting of the
Israelites of all the tribes, of
whom the word גוים, goim,
nations, here rendered heathen,
is used, Joshua 3:17; Joshua
4:1; Ezekiel 2:3, and elsewhere.
Or, he means that he would give
thanks to Jehovah, in the
presence of those Gentiles who
resorted to Jerusalem in great
numbers, and before others of
them who were either subject to
him, or confederate with him, as
he should have occasion of
speaking or writing to any of
them. It is probable, however,
that David was here transported
beyond himself, and spoke this
with a special reference to
Christ, who was to be his seed,
of whom he was an eminent type,
and by whom, what he here
mentions, was most eminently
done. Accordingly these words
are applied to him, and to his
calling of the Gentiles, Romans
15:9. Great deliverance giveth
he to his king — The king whom
he himself hath chosen and
constituted. Literally the
words, מגדל ישׁעוהmean, He
magnifies the salvations of his
king, which are said to be
magnified, because “they are
great and wonderful in
themselves, and because they add
a dignity and lustre to the king
on whom they are bestowed; there
being nothing that can tend more
to advance the honour, and
heighten the reverence, due to a
prince than his being highly
distinguished by the divine
protection and care, and
delivered thereby out of
numerous dangers which
threatened his prosperity and
life.” —
Chandler. And showeth mercy to
his anointed, to David and his
seed — To all his posterity, and
especially to the Messiah, in
whom only the words, for
evermore, are properly
accomplished, it being only true
of his kingdom, that it shall
have no end. |