Verse 1-2
Psalms 37:1-2. Fret not thyself
— Give not way to immoderate
grief, or anger, or impatience;
because of evil-doers — Because
they prosper in their wicked
enterprises, while thou art
sorely afflicted. Neither be
thou envious, &c. — Esteeming
them happy, and secretly wishing
that thou wert in their
condition. They shall wither as
the green herb — For their
happiness, the matter of thy
envy, is but short-lived.
Verse 3
Psalms 37:3. Trust in the Lord —
Depend upon God’s promise for
thy protection and support, for
their infidelity is the root of
their wickedness. And do good —
Continue in the practice of that
which is good and well- pleasing
to God. So shalt thou dwell in
the land — That is, upon this
condition thou shalt dwell in
safety and quietness in Canaan,
as God had often promised.
Hebrew, שׁכן ארצ, dwell in the
land, as if it were a command to
abide in Canaan when troubles
came, and not to flee to the
Philistines or other heathen for
shelter, as he had foolishly
done. But it is rather a
promise, as appears by comparing
this with Psalms 37:27; Psalms
37:29, such promises being often
expressed by imperative verbs
put for futures. And verily thou
shalt be fed — Hebrew, רעה אמונה,
feed, or, thou shalt be fed,
(that is, every way provided
for,) in truth, that is, truly
or assuredly; or with, or by
faith, as this word signifies;
that is, by thy trusting in the
Lord: thou shalt live by faith,
as is said Habakkuk 2:4.
Verse 4
Psalms 37:4. Delight thyself
also in the Lord — In his favour
and service, and in the study of
his word and promises; and he
shall give thee the desire of
thy heart — Thy just desires, or
whatsoever is truly desirable
and good for thee. This
limitation is necessary to be
understood, both from divers
places of Scripture, and from
the nature of the things; for it
is unreasonable to imagine that
God would engage himself to
grant their sinful and
inordinate desires, and it would
also be a curse to them to have
them granted.
Verse 5-6
Psalms 37:5-6. Commit thy way
unto the Lord — All thy cares
and business, thy desires and
necessities. Commend them to God
by fervent prayer, referring
them to his good-will, and
expecting a happy issue of all
from him. And he shall bring it
to pass — Hebrew, he shall do,
or work, namely, for thee, or
what is fit to be done; or what
thou desirest, in the sense
explained on Psalms 37:4. He
shall bring forth thy
righteousness — Namely, to the
view of the world, from which it
hath hitherto appeared to be
hid, or eclipsed, by reproaches,
and by grievous calamities,
which most men are apt to
mistake for tokens and
punishments of great wickedness;
as the light — It shall be as
visible to men as the light of
the sun at noon-day.
Verse 7-8
Psalms 37:7-8. Rest in the Lord
— Hebrew, דום, dom, Be silent
unto, or for, or because of, the
Lord: that is, do not murmur or
repine at his dealings with
thee, but silently and quietly
submit to his will, and adore
his judgments, and, as it
follows, wait for his help. This
advice and command is urged
again and again, to teach us how
hard it is to learn and practise
this lesson. Fret not because of
him who prospereth in his way —
In his evil way, as it is
limited in the following words.
Cease from anger —
Either against the sinner for
his success, or against God for
suffering him to prosper. Fret
not, &c., in any wise to do evil
— Or, at least so far as to do
evil. If any such anger or grief
do secretly arise in thy mind,
take care that it do not cause
thee to reproach or distrust
God’s providence, or to dislike
his ways, or to approve of or
imitate the wicked practices of
those men, in hopes of the same
success.
Verses 9-11
Psalms 37:9-11. For evil-doers
shall be cut off — Namely, from
the earth, as appears by
comparing this with the next
clause, and with Psalms 34:16.
Their end shall certainly be
most miserable. But those that
wait, &c., shall inherit the
earth — According to God’s
promise, often made to such;
which also generally was
literally fulfilled in that
state of the church; and if in
any instances it was not, it was
fulfilled with far greater
advantage in spiritual and
eternal blessings. For yet a
little while, and the wicked
shall not be — Namely, in the
land of the living. His time and
prosperity are very short, and
therefore no matter for envy. He
shall be dead and gone; as the
phrase here used is commonly
taken. Thou shalt diligently
consider his place —
Industriously seeking to find
him; and it shall not be — That
is, his place, and estate, and
glory shall be gone. Or, he
shall not be, as איננו, eenennu,
rather signifies. But the meek —
The godly, who are frequently so
called; those who patiently bear
God’s afflicting hand, and
meekly pass by injuries from
ungodly men; shall delight
themselves in the abundance of
peace — Partly of outward peace
and prosperity, which God, in
his due time, will give them:
but principally of inward peace
and satisfaction of mind,
arising from a sense of God’s
favour and the assurance of
their own endless happiness.
Verse 12-13
Psalms 37:12-13. The wicked
plotteth against the just —
There is a rooted enmity in the
seed of the wicked one against
the righteous seed: their aim
is, if they can, to destroy
their righteousness; if that
fail, then to destroy them. To
this end they plot, or act with
a great deal of policy and
contrivance; and gnasheth upon
him with his teeth — Out of
malice and rage. They join zeal
and fury to craft and subtlety,
inflamed with eager desire to
have it in their power to
destroy them, and full of wrath
and indignation because it is
not in their power. The Lord
shall laugh at him — Shall
despise and deride all their
hopes and endeavours against the
good, as vain and foolish. For
he seeth that his day is coming
— The day of his punishment.
Thus, Jeremiah 5:31, Thy day is
come, the time that I will visit
thee.
Verse 14-15
Psalms 37:14-15. The wicked have
drawn out the sword, &c. — They
are furnished with all sorts of
arms, and are ready to give the
deadly blow. To slay such as be
of upright conversation — Those
against whom they have no
quarrel, for any injury they
have done them; but only for
their integrity and
righteousness, or because they
are better than themselves, and
will not comply with their
wicked counsels and courses.
Their sword shall enter into
their own heart — God will not
only defend the upright from
their mischievous designs, but
will make those designs to fall
upon their own heads. “I cannot
but think,” says a writer quoted
here by Dr. Dodd, “that David
understood by these weapons,
with which he has furnished the
ungodly, their bitter and
malicious invectives, their
false and foul reproaches, &c.
These were the arms, in the use
of which, as he frequently
complains, they were admirably
well skilled.” Thus, (Psalms
57:4,) speaking of wicked men,
he says, Whose teeth are spears
and arrows, and their tongue a
sharp sword. And if so, then
Psalms 37:15 “will mean that
their intention will be
frustrated; they shall not do
the mischief they intended;
their bows shall be broken — And
their invectives and calumnies
shall recoil and do themselves
hurt; their sharp sword, their
false and malicious tongues,
shall pierce through their own
soul. And that this was the
psalmist’s meaning, who can
doubt, after reading Psalms
64:3, where the wicked doers are
said to have whet their tongue
like a sword, and to shoot out
their arrows, even bitter
words.”
Verse 16-17
Psalms 37:16-17. Is better than
the riches of many wicked —
Because he hath it with many
great and glorious advantages;
with God’s favour and blessing,
with great serenity and
satisfaction of his own mind,
which is infinitely more
desirable and comfortable than
all earthly possessions, with
the consolations of God’s
Spirit, and the assurance of
everlasting felicity: while
wicked men’s riches are loaded
with many encumbrances; with the
wrath and curse of God; the
torment of their own consciences
and passions; and the dreadful
expectation of an
after-reckoning, and of endless
miseries. The Lord upholdeth the
righteous — This is a proof of
what he had said Psalms 37:16.
For what the wicked have shall
suddenly be lost and gone, but
God will maintain the righteous
in their happy estate.
Verses 18-20
Psalms 37:18-20. The Lord
knoweth — Observeth with
singular care and affection; the
days of the upright — Their
condition, and all things which
do or may befall them; their
dangers, and fears, and
sufferings from ungodly men; and
therefore will watch over them,
and preserve them from all the
designs and attempts of their
enemies. Days, or years, or
times, are often put for things
done, or events happening in
them. And their inheritance
shall be for ever — To them and
their seed for ever: see Psalms
37:29. When they die the
inheritance is not lost, but
exchanged for one infinitely
better. They shall not be
ashamed — For the disappointment
of their hopes, but their hopes
and desires shall be satisfied;
as it follows. But the wicked
shall be as the fat of lambs —
Which in an instant melteth
before the fire. They shall
consume into smoke — Utterly and
irrecoverably.
Verse 21-22
Psalms 37:21-22. The wicked
borroweth and payeth not again —
Either through covetousness, or
injustice; or, rather, because
of that great penury into which
God brings him; while the
righteous is not only provided
for sufficiently for himself,
but hath abundance and to spare
for others. For the psalmist is
here comparing the wicked and
the righteous, not so much with
respect to their virtues or
moral qualities as their outward
conditions. This also appears
from the following verse, which
gives the reason of this. For
such as be blessed of him — Of
the Lord, as appears from Psalms
37:20, where he is named, and
from the nature of the thing,
this being God’s prerogative to
bless or to curse men. And this
he mentions, both as the
foundation and as the proof of
the certainty of their future
happiness.
Verse 23-24
Psalms 37:23-24. The steps of a
good man — Hebrew, of man,
namely, of the righteous, or
blessed man, mentioned Psalms
37:21-22; are ordered by the
Lord — Or, directed, or
disposed, that is, so governed
as to attain the end at which he
aims; or strengthened, or
established, so as he shall not
stumble and fall into mischief.
For he seems still to be
describing, not their virtue,
but their prosperity. And he
delighteth in his way — Hebrew,
ודרכו יחפצ, vedarcho jechpats,
he favoureth his way, that is,
succeeds and prospers his
counsels and enterprises. Though
he fall — Into distress or
trouble, as Micah 7:8; he shall
not be utterly cast down — Not
totally, or irrecoverably
ruined.
Verse 25-26
Psalms 37:25-26. I have been
young, and now am old, &c. — As
if he had said, “I say nothing
but what I can confirm by my own
long observation: when I was
young I began to take notice of
it; and I have continued so to
do, till now that I am grown
old: and I cannot remember that
in all my life I ever saw a
truly pious; just, and
charitable man, left destitute
of necessary things, or his
children after him,” (treading
in his steps,) “reduced to such
poverty that they were
constrained to beg from door to
door.” — Bishop Patrick. He is
ever merciful and lendeth — He
is so far from begging from
others, that he hath ability, as
well as inclination, to give, or
lend to others, as need
requires. And his seed is
blessed — Not only with
spiritual, but with temporal
blessings, wherewith God rewards
his benevolence and liberality
to the poor and destitute. So
far shall he be from wasting his
property, and undoing himself
and family by his charity and
bounty, as covetous and worldly
people supposed he would do,
that he and his posterity will
rather be enriched thereby. It
must be observed that these
temporal promises were more
express and particular to the
Jews in the times of the Old
Testament, than to Christians in
the New, and therefore were more
generally fulfilled. Under the
Christian dispensation, however,
godliness hath so far the
promise of the life that now is,
that they who seek first and
principally the kingdom of God,
shall have the necessaries of
life provided for them in some
way or other, Matthew 6:33, and
he that watereth others shall be
watered himself. To fear and
serve God is the readiest way to
secure ourselves and families
from want; and “so far is
charity from empoverishing, that
what is given away, like vapours
emitted by the earth, returns in
showers of blessings, into the
bosom of the person who gave it;
and his offspring is not the
worse, but infinitely the better
for it. The bread which
endureth, as well as that which
perisheth, is his; and the
blessings of time are crowned
with those of eternity.” —
Horne.
Verses 27-29
Psalms 37:27-29. Depart from
evil and do good — Having
therefore these glorious
promises and privileges, let no
man do any evil or unjust thing,
to enrich or secure himself, nor
abstain from any pious or
charitable action, for fear of
empoverishing himself thereby:
but let every man live in a
conscientious discharge of all
his duties to God and men,
committing himself and all his
affairs to God’s fatherly care
and providence, and confidently
expecting his blessing
thereupon. And dwell for
evermore —
That is, he shall dwell for
evermore in heaven, and for a
long time on earth. See on
Psalms 37:3. The Lord loveth
judgment — That is, just
judgment, or righteousness, as
the word משׁפשׂ, mishpat, often
signifies. That is, he loves it
in himself: he loveth to execute
it upon the wicked, and for the
righteous: which he doth in the
manner expressed in this Psalm.
And he loves it in the
righteous, whose justice, and
piety, and charity he sees,
approves, and will reward. And
forsaketh not his saints —
Hebrew, חסידיו, chasidaiv, his
kind, merciful, and beneficent
ones who exercise benignity and
charity to others.
Verse 30
Psalms 37:30. The mouth of the
righteous speaketh wisdom — And
that freely, customarily, and
from his heart, as the next
verse shows. Having showed, in
divers verses, God’s singular
care over and respect to the
righteous, he proceeds to give a
character of them, and withal to
assign one reason of the great
difference of God’s way of
dealing with them, and with
other men. And his tongue
talketh of judgment — This
respects either, 1st, The manner
of his discourse: it is with
wisdom and judgment; or, rather,
2d, The matter of it, which is
God’s judgment, word, or law, as
it follows, Psalms 37:31. While
the discourses of other men are
either wicked, or vain and
useless, his are serious, pious,
and edifying, concerning the
word and ways of God.
Verse 31
Psalms 37:31. The law of his God
is in his heart — According to
God’s command, Deuteronomy 6:6,
and promise, Jeremiah 31:33. His
thoughts, and meditations, and
affections are fixed upon it. He
doth not talk religiously with
design, or with ostentation, but
out of the abundance of his
heart, Matthew 12:35. None of
his steps shall slide — Or,
slip, or swerve from the rule of
God’s law. His piety and virtue
shall continue and increase: or,
God will uphold and preserve him
from falling into that mischief
which wicked men plot against
him.
Verse 32-33
Psalms 37:32-33. The wicked
watcheth the righteous — To find
out a fit season or occasion to
destroy him. The Lord will not
leave him in his hand — That is,
will not give him up to his
power and rage; nor condemn him
when he is judged — Will not
give his consent to the sentence
of condemnation, which the
wicked have pronounced against
him, but will justify him, and
vindicate his innocence, and
deliver him. Some understand the
words thus: Nor shall he (the
wicked) condemn him when he is
judged, observing, “that it
seems more to the purpose to
say, that God would not suffer
the wicked man to condemn the
righteous, or to find him
guilty, (for that probably was
the way in which he proposed to
murder him,) than that he would
not do it himself.” — Mudge.
Verse 34
Psalms 37:34. Wait on the Lord —
Seeking and trusting to him, and
to him only, for help and
deliverance. And keep his way —
Continue in the practice of thy
duty, or in those ways which God
hath prescribed to thee in his
word, and do not use indirect
and irregular means to deliver
thyself. When the wicked are cut
off, thou shalt see it — Thou
shalt not only escape the
destruction they designed for
thee, but shalt live to see
their ruin.
Verse 35-36
Psalms 37:35-36. I have seen the
wicked in great power — Hebrew,
עריצ, gnaritz, violent, or
formidable: not only himself out
of danger, as it seemed, but
terrible to others; and
spreading himself — And
therefore firmly and deeply
rooted; like a green bay-tree —
Which is continually green and
flourishing, yea, even in the
winter season. Hebrew, כאזרח,
cheezrach, sicut arbor indigena
virens, like a green native
plant, or a green tree in its
native soil, where trees
flourish much better than when
they are transplanted into
another soil. Houbigant, after
the LXX., and many of the
ancient versions, renders it,
Like a flourishing cedar. Yet he
passed away — Houbigant, I
passed by; and lo, he was not —
He was gone, like a tree blasted
and blown down, or cut off and
rooted out, and carried away in
a moment. I sought him, but he
could not be found — There was
no monument nor remainder of him
left.
Verses 37-39
Psalms 37:37-39. Mark the
perfect man, &c. — Behold now a
very different character, a man
who is upright before God, who
sincerely desires and endeavours
to please and glorify him, and
therefore makes it his care to
walk in his ordinances and
commandments blameless: mark
him, keep your eye upon him, and
observe the issue of his course
and conversation. For the end of
that man is peace — Though he
may meet with troubles in his
way; though his days may be
long, dark, and cloudy; yet all
shall end well with him; he
shall be happy at last. But the
transgressors shall be destroyed
together — Or, alike, one as
well as another, all without any
exception or respect of persons.
The end of the wicked shall be
cut off — That is, he shall be
cut off at last, or in the end.
His prosperity shall end in
destruction. But the salvation
of the righteous is of the Lord
— And therefore it shall
certainly come to and be
conferred upon them. |