Verse 1
Psalms 27:1. The Lord is my
light — My counsellor in my
difficulties, and my comforter
and deliverer in all my
distresses. David’s subjects
called him the light of Israel;
but he owns he shone, as the
moon doth, with a borrowed
light: the light which God
communicated to him reflected
upon them. God is our light, as
he shows us the state we are in
by nature and practice, and that
into which we may and must be
brought by grace, in order to
our salvation. As our light, he
shows us the way in which we
must walk, and gives us comfort
in walking therein: shows us the
hinderances that are in our way,
the difficulties, and enemies,
and oppositions, we have to
encounter, and how we may be
enabled to overcome them. It is
only in his light that we now
proceed on in our Christian
course, and it is in his light
that we hope to see light for
ever. And my salvation — In whom
I am safe, and by whom I am and
shall be saved. The Lord is the
strength of my life — The
protector of my exposed life,
who keeps me from being slain,
and the supporter of my weak and
frail life, by whom I am upheld
and preserved in being. God, who
is a believer’s life, is the
strength of his life: not only
the person by whom, but in whom
he lives.
Verse 2-3
Psalms 27:2-3. When my foes came
upon me to eat up my flesh —
Greedy to devour me: aiming at
no less than my utter
destruction, and confident they
should effect it; they stumbled
and fell — Not, I smote them and
they fell, but they stumbled,
namely, of their own accord,
without my lifting a hand
against them; and fell — They
were so confounded and weakened
that they could not go on with
their enterprise. Thus they that
came to take Christ were, by a
word of his, made to stagger and
fall to the ground, John 18:6.
The ruin of some of the enemies
of God’s people is an earnest of
the complete conquest of them
all. And, therefore, these being
fallen, he is fearless of the
rest. Though a host should
encamp, &c. — Though my enemies
be numerous as a host; though
they be daring, and their
attempts threatening; though
they encamp against me, an army
against one man; though they
wage war upon me, yet my heart
shall not fear — Hosts cannot
hurt us, if the Lord of hosts
protect us.
Verse 4
Psalms 27:4. One thing have I
desired of the Lord — It greatly
encouraged David’s confidence in
God, that he was conscious to
himself of an entire affection
to him and his ordinances, and
that he was in his element when
he was in the way of his duty,
and in the way of increasing his
acquaintance with God. If our
hearts can witness for us, that
we delight in God above any
creature, we may from thence
take encouragement to depend
upon him; for it is a proof that
we are of those whom he protects
as his own. That I may dwell in
the house of the Lord — That I
may have opportunity of duly and
constantly attending on God in
the public service of his house,
with other faithful Israelites,
as the duty of every day may
require; all the days of my life
— That I may not hereafter be
disturbed in, or driven away
from God’s sanctuary and
worship, as I have been; to
behold the beauty of the Lord —
That there I may delight myself
in the contemplation of his
amiable and glorious majesty,
and of his infinite wisdom,
holiness, justice, truth, grace,
and mercy, and other
perfections, which, though
concealed, in a great measure,
from the world, are clearly
manifested in his church and
ordinances. To inquire in his
temple — That is, in his
tabernacle, which he here and
elsewhere calls his temple;
because his ordinances were
there administered, as they were
afterward to be in the temple.
The word לבקר, lebakker, here
rendered to inquire, properly
signifies to search, or seek
diligently, namely, to know the
mind and will of God and his own
duty; or, to behold the Lord’s
beauty, last mentioned, and the
light of his countenance, which
is discovered more or less, as
men are more or less diligent or
negligent, in seeking or
inquiring into it. When, with an
eye of faith and holy love, we
behold this beauty; when, with
fixedness of thought, and a holy
flame of devout affections, we
contemplate the divine
excellences, and entertain
ourselves with the tokens of his
peculiar favour to us, we
observe in a still higher degree
how infinitely amiable and
admirable they are, till our
hearts are ravished therewith,
and we are lost in wonder, love,
and praise.
Verse 5-6
Psalms 27:5-6. In the time of
trouble he shall hide, or, hath
hid me — Justly do I prize the
house and service of God so
highly, both because I am under
such vast obligations to him for
his former protection and
favours, and because all my
confidence and hope of security
depend upon him; in the secret
of his tabernacle — Into which
mine enemies cannot come; or, as
it were in the secret of his
tabernacle he shall hide me —
That is, in a place as safe as
the holy of holies, termed God’s
secret place, (Ezekiel 7:22,)
into which none might enter but
the high-priest, and he only one
day in a year. He alludes to the
ancient custom of offenders
fleeing to the tabernacles or
altars for safety. He shall set
me upon a rock — Upon a place
high and inaccessible, strong
and impregnable, where I shall
be out of the reach of mine
enemies. The temple was thought
a safe place for Nehemiah to lie
hid in, Nehemiah 6:10; but the
safety of believers is not in
the walls of the temple, but in
the God of the temple, and their
comfort in communion with him.
My head shall be lifted up above
mine enemies —
He will advance me above them,
and give me a complete victory
over them. Therefore will I
offer sacrifices of joy —
Hebrew, תרועה, terugnah, of
shouting, or resounding, that
is, of thanksgiving and praise,
which used to be accompanied
with the sound of trumpets and
other instruments.
Verse 8
Psalms 27:8. When thou saidst —
Either by thy word commanding or
inviting me so to do; or, by thy
Spirit directing and inclining
me; Seek ye my face — Seek my
presence, and favour, and help,
by fervent, faithful prayer; my
heart said unto thee — My heart
readily and thankfully complied
with the motion; and upon the
encouragement of this command,
or invitation, I resolved I
would do so, and I do so at this
time. As the words, when thou
saidst, are not in the original,
and as the verse is rather
obscure, some think that the
word Elohim, God, should be
inserted, and then it may be
rendered, To thee, O my heart,
God said, Seek ye my face; thy
face, Lord, will I seek. Dr.
Waterland and Houbigant render
it, To thee, said my heart, Seek
ye my face; thy face, Lord, will
I seek.
Verse 9
Psalms 27:9. Hide not thy face
far from me — Which, in
obedience to thy command, I am
now seeking. Let me never want
the reviving sense of thy
favour; love me, and give me to
know that thou lovest me. Put
not thy servant away in anger —
Namely, from thy face or
presence, or from the place of
thy worship. Two ways God and he
might be parted, either by God’s
withdrawing himself from him,
which he might do even in the
place of his worship; or by
God’s putting him away from the
place of his worship. Against
the first he seems to pray in
the first clause, and against
the latter in this.
Verse 10
Psalms 27:10. When my father and
mother forsake me — That is, the
nearest and dearest friends I
have in the world, from whom I
may expect most relief, and with
most reason; when they either
die, or are at a distance from
me, or are unable to help me in
the time of need, or are unkind
to me, or unmindful of me, and
will not help me; when I am as
helpless as ever poor orphan was
that was left fatherless and
motherless, then I know the Lord
will take me up, as a poor
wandering sheep is taken up, and
saved from perishing. His time
to help those that trust in him
is when all other helpers fail,
when it is most for his honour
and their comfort: with him the
fatherless find mercy. This
promise has often been fulfilled
in the letter of it. Forsaken
orphans have been taken under
the special care of Divine
Providence, which has raised up
relief and friends for them that
way that one would not have
expected. God is a surer and
better friend than our earthly
parents are, or can be.
Verse 11-12
Psalms 27:11-12. Teach me thy
way — What course I shall take
to please thee, and to discharge
my duty, and to save myself from
ruin; and lead me in a plain
path — Of which see the note on
Psalms 26:12; where the Hebrew
words are the same; because of
mine enemies — That I may
neither give them cause to open
their mouths against me or
religion, by my misconduct, nor
fall into their hands by my
folly, nor afford them any
occasion of triumphing over me.
Deliver me not over unto the
will — Hebrew, בנפשׁ, benephesh,
to the soul, that is, the lust,
or desire, as the word here
means; of mine enemies — Who
watch for my halting, and seek
my ruin; such as breathe out
cruelty — Against me. He presses
his request from the
consideration of the quality of
his enemies, who were both false
and cruel, and in both respects
hateful to God and men.
Verse 13
Psalms 27:13. I had fainted —
These words are not in the
original, but are added to
complete the sense. For the
speech is abrupt and imperfect,
as is very usual, not only with
the inspired penmen, but many
other authors, in all vehement
passions or commotions of mind,
such as David was in at this
time. Having declared what
perfidious and cruel enemies
assaulted and encompassed him,
he now subjoins what impression
the thoughts thereof made upon
him, and speaks like one that
wanted words to express how sad
and desperate his condition
would have been, if he had not
been supported by faith in God’s
promises. Even the best saints
are subject to faint when their
troubles become grievous and
tedious; their spirits are
overwhelmed, and their flesh and
heart fail; but then faith is a
sovereign cordial: it keeps them
from desponding under their
burdens; it keeps them hoping,
and praying, and waiting; it
maintains in them honourable
thoughts of God, and an
expectation of relief in due
time. But what was it, the
belief of which kept David from
fainting? That he should see the
goodness of the Lord in the land
of the living — By which he
means, not only a continuance of
the mercy and grace of God to
his soul which he already
possessed, and which supported
him under his trials, but that
he should outlive his troubles,
and see or enjoy in this life
that deliverance from them, and
from all his enemies, implied in
the promise of the kingdom which
God had given him. For, by the
land of the living, he means
this world, which is often so
called in Scripture, and is
opposed to the grave, which is
the place of the dead. And David
was thus earnestly desirous of
this mercy in this life, not
because he placed his portion in
these things, but because the
truth and glory of God were
highly concerned in making good
the promise of the kingdom to
him. Heaven, however, is still
more properly termed the land of
the living; where there is no
more death; this earth being
rather the land of the dying.
And nothing is so effectual to
keep the soul from fainting
under the calamities of this
present time as the believing
hope of seeing the goodness of
the Lord in that world, with
foresights of those glories, and
foretastes of those pleasures,
which are for evermore.
Verse 14
Psalms 27:14. Wait on the Lord —
O my soul, to which some think
he now turns his speech: or
rather, O reader, whosoever thou
art, wait on God by faith and
prayer, and in an humble
resignation to his will. Hebrew,
יהוה
קוה אל, kavveh eel Jehovah, look
to, or hope for, or expect, the
Lord. Be of good courage — Keep
up thy spirits in the midst of
thy greatest dangers and
difficulties: let thy heart be
fixed, trusting in God, and thy
mind stayed on him, and then
none of these things will move
thee; wait, I say, on the Lord —
Whatever thou doest, grow not
remiss or careless in thy
attendance upon God, but keep
close to him and thy duty. “The
psalmist here,” says Dr. Dodd,
after Bishop Patrick,
“admonishes any person who shall
fall into such straits as his,
to learn by his example not to
be impatient, or to despond
presently, much less to despair
of relief, if God do not send it
just when it is expected. There
is no misery so strong and
grievous, no devotion so fervent
and powerful, as can bring God
to article for the time of
deliverance; if we will not
wait, he will not come. It may
be one of the greatest ends for
which the affliction we labour
under is applied to us, to
reform and reduce us, and root
out the passion and impatience
of our nature; and God is too
good a physician to remove the
medicine before it hath wrought
its effect, or to put us out of
his hand before he hath cured
us. Indeed, he hath greater
reason to teach us this lesson
thoroughly, since when he hath
given us the deliverance we pray
for, and all that we can desire
in this life, there is still
somewhat more, and of more value
than that which he hath given
us, which we must wait for:” we
must wait “till the few and evil
days of our pilgrimage pass
away, and we arrive at the
mansions prepared for us in the
house of our heavenly Father;
till our warfare be
accomplished, and terminate in
the peace of God; till the
storms and tempests of wintry
time shall give place to the
unclouded calm and the
ever-blooming pleasures of
eternal spring.” — Horne. |