Verse 1
Psalms 51:1. Have mercy upon me,
O God — O thou, who art the
supreme Lawgiver, Governor, and
Judge of the world, whom I have
most highly offended many ways,
and, therefore, may most justly
be condemned to suffer the
effects of thy severest
displeasure; I cast myself down
before thee, and humbly
supplicate for mercy. O pity,
help, and answer me in the
desires I am now about to spread
before thee; according to thy
loving- kindness — Thy known
clemency and infinite
compassions. For I pretend to no
merit: I know my desert is
everlasting destruction of body
and soul; but I humbly implore
the interposition of thy free
grace and unmerited goodness.
According to the multitude of
thy tender mercies — Hebrew,
רחמיךְ, rachameicha, thy bowels
of mercies, yearning over thy
fallen, sinful, and miserable
creatures. Thy mercies are
infinite, and, therefore,
sufficient for my relief: and
such mercies, indeed, do I now
need. “How reviving,” says
Chandler, “is the belief and
consideration of these abundant
and tender compassions of God,
to one in David’s circumstances;
whose mind laboured under the
burden of the most heinous,
complicated guilt, and the fear
of the divine displeasure and
vengeance!” Blot out — מחה,
mechee, deleto, absterge,
destroy, wipe away, my
transgressions — That is,
entirely and absolutely forgive
them; so that no part of the
guilt I have contracted may
remain, and the punishment of it
may be wholly remitted. The word
properly signifies to wipe out,
or to wipe any thing absolutely
clean, as a person wipes a dish:
see 2 Kings 21:13. Blot out my
transgressions — As a debt is
blotted or crossed out of the
book, when either the debtor has
paid it, or the creditor has
remitted it; wipe them out —
That they may not appear to
demand judgment against me, nor
stare me in the face to my
confusion and terror. Give me
peace with thee, by turning away
thine anger from me, and taking
me again into thy favour; and
give me peace in my own
conscience, by assuring me thou
hast done so.
Verse 2
Psalms 51:2. Wash me thoroughly
from mine iniquity, &c. — “I
have made myself exceeding
loathsome by my repeated and
heinous acts of wickedness,
which, like a stain that hath
long stuck to a garment, is not
easily purged away; but do not,
therefore, I beseech thee, abhor
me, but rather magnify thy mercy
in purifying me perfectly, and
cleansing me so thoroughly, that
there may be no spot remaining
in me.” — Bishop Patrick.
Hebrew, הרבה כבסני, harbeh
chabbeseeni, is literally,
multiplica, lava me, multiply,
wash me: that is, Wash me very
much. By which phrase he implies
the greatness of his guilt, the
insufficiency of all legal
washing, and the absolute
necessity of some other and
better means of cleansing him
from it, even God’s grace and
the atoning blood of Christ;
which as Abraham saw by faith,
John 8:56, so did David, as is
sufficiently evident (allowance
being made for the darkness of
the Old Testament dispensation)
from divers passages of his
Psalms. Observe, reader, sin
defiles us, renders us odious in
the sight of the holy God, and
uneasy to ourselves; it unfits
us for communion with God, in
grace or glory. But when God
pardons sin, he cleanses us from
it, so that we become acceptable
to him, easy to ourselves, and
have liberty of access to him.
Nathan had assured David, upon
his first profession of
repentance, that his sin was
pardoned. The Lord has taken
away thy sin, thou shalt not
die, 2 Samuel 12:13 : yet he
prays, Wash me, cleanse me, blot
out my transgressions; for God
will be sought unto, even for
that which he has promised; and
those whose sins are pardoned,
must pray that the pardon may be
more and more evidenced to them.
God had forgiven him, but he
could not forgive himself, and
therefore he is thus importunate
for pardon as one that thought
himself unworthy of it.
Verse 3
Psalms 51:3. For I acknowledge
my transgressions — With grief,
and shame, and abhorrence of
myself and of my sins, which
hitherto I have dissembled and
covered. And, being thus truly
penitent, I hope and beg that I
may find mercy with thee. This
David had formerly found to be
the only way of obtaining
forgiveness and peace of
conscience, Psalms 32:4-5, and
he now hoped to find the same
blessings in the same way. And
my sin is ever before me — That
sin, which I had cast behind my
back, is now constantly in my
view, to humble and mortify, and
make me continually to blush and
tremble. We see here David’s
contrition for his sin was not a
slight, sudden passion, but all
abiding grief. He was put in
mind of his crimes on all
occasions; they were continually
in his thoughts: and he was
willing they should be so for
his further abasement. Let us
learn from hence, that our acts
of repentance, for the same sin,
ought to be often repeated, and
that it is very expedient, and
will be of great use for us, to
have our sins ever before us,
that by the remembrance of those
that are past, we may be armed
against temptations for the
future, and may be kept humble,
quickened to duty, and made
patient under the cross.
Verse 4
Psalms 51:4. Against thee, thee
only, have I sinned — Which is
not to be understood absolutely,
because he had sinned against
Bath-sheba and Uriah, and many
others; but comparatively. So
the sense is, Though I have
sinned against my own
conscience, and against others,
yet nothing is more grievous to
me than that I have sinned
against thee. And done this evil
in thy sight — With gross
contempt of thee, whom I knew to
be a spectator of my most secret
actions. That thou mightest be
justified — This will be the
fruit of my sin, that whatsoever
severities thou shalt use toward
me, it will be no blemish to thy
righteousness, but thy justice
will be glorified by all men.
When thou speakest — Hebrew, in
thy words, in all thy
threatenings denounced against
me. And be clear when thou
judgest — When thou dost execute
thy sentence upon me.
Verse 5
Psalms 51:5. Behold, I was
shapen in iniquity — Hebrew,
חוללתי, cholaleti, I was born,
or brought forth: for it does
not appear that the word ever
signifies, I was shapen; and
then the ensuing words will
contain the reason of it; the
sense being, because in sin did
my mother conceive me, therefore
I was brought forth in iniquity;
that is, with great propensities
and dispositions to sin. This
verse is, both by Jewish and
Christian, by ancient and later
interpreters generally, and most
justly, understood of what we
call original sin; which David
here mentions, not as an excuse
for, but as an aggravation of,
his transgression, inasmuch as
the knowledge which he had of
the total corruption of his
nature, and its tendency to
evil, ought to have made him
more on his guard, and to have
watched more carefully over his
sensual passions and affections.
And the sense of the place is
this: Nor is this the only sin
which I have reason to
acknowledge and bewail before
thee; for this filthy stream
leads me to a corrupt fountain.
And, upon a serious review of my
heart and life, I find that I am
guilty of innumerable other
sins; and that this heinous
crime, though drawn forth by
external temptations, yet was
indeed the proper fruit of my
own vile nature, which, without
the restraints of thy providence
or grace, ever was and still
will be inclinable and ready to
commit ten thousand sins as
occasion offers. Thus, as Dr.
Dodd, after Chandler, justly
observes, “The psalmist owns
himself to be the corrupted,
degenerate offspring, of
corrupted, degenerate parents,
agreeable to what was said long
before he was born, Who can
bring a clean thing out of an
unclean? Not one, Job 14:4. Nor
is it unusual with good men,
when confessing their own sins
before God, to make mention of
the sins of their parents, for
their greater mortification and
humiliation.”
Verse 6
Psalms 51:6. Behold, thou
desirest — Hebrew, חפצת,
chaphatzta, delightest in,
willest, or requirest, truth in
the inward parts — Uprightness
of heart, which seems to be here
opposed to that iniquity
mentioned in the last verse, in
which all men are conceived and
born; and it may be here added
as a proof, or aggravation, of
the sinfulness of original
corruption, because it is
contrary to the holy nature and
will of God, which requires not
only unblameableness in men’s
actions, but also the universal
innocence and rectitude of their
minds and hearts; and as an
aggravation of his own actual
sin, in which he had used gross
deceit and treachery. And in the
hidden part, &c. — That is, in
the heart, called the hidden man
of the heart, 1 Peter 3:4; and,
in the former clause, the reins,
or inward parts; thou shalt make
me to know wisdom — That is,
true piety and integrity, called
wisdom, Job 28:28; Psalms
111:10, and in many other
passages; as sin, on the
contrary, is commonly called, as
it really is, folly. And to know
wisdom is here to be understood
of knowing it practically and
experimentally; so as to
approve, and love, and practise
it: as words of knowledge are
most commonly to be understood
in Scripture, and in other
authors. According to this
interpretation the psalmist, in
these words, declares his hope
that God would pardon and cure
the folly which he had
discovered, and make him wiser
for the future. But, as this
does not seem to suit perfectly
with the context, which runs in
rather another strain, the word
תודיעני, todigneeni, may, and it
seems ought to, be rendered in
the past time, thou hast made me
to know. And so this is another
aggravation of his sin, that it
was committed against that
knowledge which God had not only
revealed to him outwardly by his
word, but also inwardly by his
Spirit, writing it on his heart,
according to his promise,
Jeremiah 31:33. Or, the future
verb may be here taken
imperatively; and the words may
be understood as a prayer, Do
thou make me to know, &c., as
the following future verbs
(Psalms 51:7-8) are translated.
Having then now said, for the
aggravation of his sin, that God
required truth in the inward
parts, he takes occasion to
break forth into prayer, which
also he continues in the
following verses.
Verse 7
Psalms 51:7. Purge me with
hyssop — Or, as with hyssop; the
note of similitude being
frequently understood. As
lepers, and other unclean
persons, are by thy appointment
purified by the use of hyssop
and other things, Leviticus
14:6; Numbers 19:6; so do thou
cleanse me, a most leprous and
polluted creature, by thy grace,
and by the virtue of that blood
of Christ, which is signified by
those ceremonial usages. The
word
תחשׂאני, techatteeni, here
rendered purge me, properly
means, expiate my sin. “The
psalmist well knew that his sins
were too great to be expiated by
any legal purifications, and
therefore prays that God would
himself expiate them, and
restore him; that is,” not only
remove their guilt, but “make
him as free from those criminal
propensities to sin, and from
all the bad effects of his
aggravated crimes, as though he
had been purified from a
leprosy, by the water of
cleansing, sprinkled on him by a
branch of hyssop; and that he
might be, if possible, clearer
from all the defilement and
guilt of sin than the new fallen
snow. I think both these senses
are included in the expiation
which the psalmist prays for; as
the person whose leprosy was
expiated was wholly cured of his
disease, and freed from all the
incapacities attending it.” —
Dodd.
Verse 8
Psalms 51:8. Make me to hear joy
and gladness — Send me glad
tidings of thy reconciliation to
me; and by thy Spirit seal the
pardon of my sins on my
conscience, which will fill me
with joy. That the bones which
thou hast broken may rejoice —
That my heart, which hath been
sorely wounded, and terrified by
thy dreadful message sent by
Nathan, and by the awful
sentence of thy law, denounced
against such sinners as I am,
may be revived and comforted by
the manifestation of thy favour
to my soul. For he compares the
pains and agonies of his mind,
arising from the deep sense he
had of the aggravated nature of
his sins, and of the displeasure
of God against him on account of
them, to that exquisite torture
he must have felt if all his
bones had been crushed: “for the
original word דכית, dicchita,
signifies more than broken;
namely, the being entirely
mashed. And he compares the joy
that God’s declaring himself
fully reconciled to him would
produce in his mind to that
inconceivable pleasure which
would have arisen from the
instantaneous restoring and
healing those bones, after they
had been thus broken and crushed
to pieces.”
Verse 9-10
Psalms 51:9-10. Hide thy face
from my sins — Do not look upon
them with an eye of indignation
and wrath, but forgive and
forget them. Create in me a
clean heart — Seeing I have not
only defiled myself by these
actual sins, but also have a
most unclean heart, corrupt even
from my birth, which nothing but
thy almighty, new-creating power
can purify; I beseech thee to
exert that power to produce in
me a new and holy frame of
heart, free from those impure
inclinations and vile
affections, the effects of which
I have too fatally felt; a heart
in possession, and under the
influence, of those sacred
dispositions of piety and
virtue, in which the moral
rectitude and purity of the mind
consist. Thus shall both my
inward uncleanness be purged
away, and I shall be prevented
from falling again into such
actual and scandalous sins. And
renew a right spirit in me —
Hebrew, רוח נכון, ruach nachon,
a firm, constant, or steadfast
disposition or temper of soul,
that I may not be shaken and
cast down by temptation, as I
have been, but that my
resolution may be fixed and
immoveable. He says, חדשׁ,
chaddesh, renew, because he had
had this good temper, in a great
measure, before his late
apostacy, and here prays that it
might be restored to him with
increase. Within me — Hebrew,
בקרבי, bekirbi, in my inward
parts. Thus he wisely strikes at
the root and cause of all sinful
actions.
Verse 11-12
Psalms 51:11-12. Cast me not
away from thy presence — That
is, from thy favour and care.
Take not thy Holy Spirit from me
— Thy sanctifying Spirit, by
which alone I can have
acquaintance and fellowship with
thee. Restore unto me the joy of
thy salvation — The comfortable
sense of thy saving grace,
promised and vouchsafed to me,
both for my present and
everlasting salvation. And
uphold me — A weak and frail
creature, not able to stand
against temptation and the
corruption of my nature, without
thy powerful and gracious
succours; with thy free Spirit —
Or ingenuous, liberal, or
princely, which he seems to
oppose to this own base,
illiberal, disingenuous, and
servile spirit, which he had
discovered in his wicked and
unworthy practices. And he now
desires a better spirit of God,
which might free him from the
bondage of sin, and incline and
enable him freely, cheerfully,
and constantly to run the way of
God’s precepts.
Verse 13
Psalms 51:13. Then will I teach
transgressors thy way — Thy will
and their duty, and the way to
eternal happiness; or, rather,
the manner of thy dealing with
sinners, whom thou dost so
severely chastise for their
sins, and yet so graciously
receive to mercy upon their
repentance. Both which I will
show them in my own example, for
I will make known unto them my
fall and recovery, through thy
grace, although I shall thereby
publish, not only thy goodness,
but my own shame, which I shall
most willingly bear, that I may,
in some measure, repair the
injury which I have done to thy
cause and to my
fellow-creatures, by my public
and scandalous crimes. And
sinners shall be converted unto
thee — I persuade myself that my
endeavours shall not want
success; and that either thy
justice and severity on the one
hand, or thy goodness and
clemency on the other, will
bring some sinners to
repentance. Certainly, as Dr.
Delaney observes in this verse,
this instance of David’s
miserable fall and happy
restoration is well “fitted to
mortify the vanity and merit of
human virtue, and to raise the
power and price of humble
penitence, to abate the pride of
self-sufficiency, and support
the hope of frailty! Who can
confide in his own strength when
he sees a David fall? Who can
despair of divine mercy when he
sees him forgiven? Sad triumph
of sin over all that is great
and excellent in man! Glorious
triumph of repentance over all
that is shameful and dreadful in
sin!” Book 4. chap. 24.
Verse 14-15
Psalms 51:14-15. Deliver me from
blood-guiltiness — Hebrew,
מדמים, middamim, from bloods,
because he had been the cause of
the death, not only of Uriah,
but of others of the Lord’s
people with him, 2 Samuel 11:17.
My tongue shall sing of thy
righteousness, of thy
faithfulness in making good thy
promises; or, rather, of thy
clemency and goodness, as the
word righteousness often
signifies. Open thou my lips —
Which are shut with shame, and
grief, and horror. Restore unto
me the opportunity, ability, and
liberty which I formerly had of
speaking to thee in prayer and
praise, and to my
fellow-creatures, by way of
instruction, reproof, or
exhortation, with freedom and
boldness. And my mouth shall
show forth thy praise — In thy
mercy and thy faithfulness
remember thy gracious promises,
and accomplish them,
notwithstanding my unworthiness,
and, as I shall be furnished
with new motives and occasions
for gratitude and thankfulness,
my mouth shall everywhere
declare thy goodness, to thy
perpetual praise and glory.
Verse 16-17
Psalms 51:16-17. For thou
desirest not sacrifice — Which
is not to be understood
absolutely and universally, as
appears from Psalms 51:19, but
comparatively, (see on Psalms
40:6,) and with particular
respect to David’s crimes of
murder and adultery, which were
not to be expiated by any
sacrifice, but, according to the
law of God, were to be punished
with death. Thou requirest more
and better sacrifices, namely,
such as are mentioned Psalms
51:17. Else would I give it — I
should have spared no cost of
that kind. The sacrifices of God
— Which God, in such cases as
mine, requires, and will accept;
are a broken spirit, &c. — A
heart deeply afflicted and
grieved for sin, humbled under a
sense of God’s displeasure, and
earnestly seeking, and willing
to accept of, reconciliation
with God upon any terms: see
Isaiah 57:15; Isaiah 61:2;
Isaiah 66:2; Matthew 11:28. This
is opposed to that hard or stony
heart, of which we read so
often, which implies an
insensibility of the burden of
sin, a spirit stubborn and
rebellious against God,
impenitent and incorrigible. O
God, thou wilt not despise —
This is such an acceptable
sacrifice that thou canst not
possibly reject it.
Verse 18
Psalms 51:18. Do good in thy
good pleasure unto Zion —
Hebrew, ברצונךְ, birtzonecha,
for, or according to, thy grace,
favour, or pleasure — That is,
thy free and rich mercy, and thy
gracious purpose and promise,
made to and concerning thy
church and people, here termed
Zion. Build the walls of
Jerusalem — Perfect the walls
and buildings of that city, and
especially let the temple be
built and established in it,
notwithstanding my great sins
whereby I have polluted it,
which I pray thee to purge away.
But he may also be understood as
speaking figuratively in these
words, and praying for the
enlargement and establishment of
God’s church, often meant by
Jerusalem.
Verse 19
Psalms 51:19. Then — When thou
hast granted my humble requests,
expressed in the former verses;
when thou hast renewed, and
pardoned, and comforted me, and
restored thy favour unto thy
people and this city; shalt thou
be pleased with the sacrifices
of righteousness — Which I and
my people, being justified and
reconciled to thee, shall offer
with sincere and penitent
hearts. These are opposed to the
sacrifices of the wicked, which
God abhors, Proverbs 15:8;
Isaiah 1:11; and, withal, by
thus speaking, he intimates that
God, for their sins, might
justly now reject their
sacrifices as not being,
properly speaking, sacrifices of
righteousness, because they who
offered them were not righteous.
Then shall they, &c. — That is,
they who, by thy appointment,
are to do that work, namely, the
priests in the name and on the
behalf of thy people. Offer
bullocks upon thine altar — The
best and most costly sacrifices,
and that in great numbers, in
testimony of their gratitude for
thy great favour, in pardoning
mine and their sins, and
preventing that total ruin which
we had reason to expect and fear
upon that account. |