Verse 1
Psalms 58:1. Do ye indeed speak
righteousness? — No: you are far
from it. You censure me freely
without any regard to truth or
justice; O congregation — The
word אלם, eelem, thus rendered,
signifies a band, or company of
men; and seems to point at
Saul’s judges and counsellors,
who met together to consult what
they should do against David;
and probably passed a sentence
upon him as guilty of treason
and rebellion. O ye sons of men
— So he calls them, to remind
them that they also were men,
and must give an account to God
for all their hard speeches and
unrighteous decrees against him.
Verse 2
Psalms 58:2. Yea, in heart ye
work wickedness — Or, with your
heart, that is, with free choice
and consent; with premeditation
and design, and with a strong
inclination to it, and
resolution in it, and not merely
by constraint, and out of
compliance with Saul, or through
surprise and inadvertence. The
more there is of the heart in
any act of wickedness, the worse
it is. Ye weigh the violence of
your hands — Or, you weigh
violence, or injustice, with
your hands. The phrase of
weighing hath respect to their
office, which was to administer
justice, which is usually
expressed by a pair of balances.
So he intimates that they did
great wrong under the pretence
and with the formalities of
justice; and while they seemed
exactly to weigh the true
proportion between men’s actions
and the recompenses allotted to
them, they turned the scale, and
pronounced an unjust sentence.
In the earth — Or, in this land,
where God is present, and where
you have righteous laws to
govern you, and you profess
better things.
Verse 3
Psalms 58:3. The wicked are
estranged — From God, and from
all goodness; from the womb —
From their tender years, or,
rather, strictly and properly,
from their birth: their very
natures and principles are
corrupt even from their infancy:
they are the wicked offspring of
sinful parents. They go astray
by actual sins, the fruit of
their original corruption; as
soon as they are born — As soon
as ever they are capable of the
exercise of reason, and the
practice of sinning.
Verse 4-5
Psalms 58:4-5. Their poison —
Their malicious disposition; is
like the poison of a serpent —
Both in itself, being natural,
inveterate, and incurable; and
also in its effects, which are
most pernicious. They are like
the deaf adder that stoppeth her
ear, &c. — They are like that
particular species of serpents
which suffer not themselves to
be charmed from their mischief
by any methods whatever: for no
arguments, persuasions, or
efforts that can be used, can
mollify the envenomed malice, or
change the disposition of these
men. They are deaf to all my
counsels, to the dictates of
their own consciences, and to
the voice of God’s law: nor will
they hearken to any
instructions, remonstrances,
cautions, or advices, however
reasonable and proper, excellent
or necessary they may be. The
psalmist here alludes to a
prevailing notion in those
countries, that all serpents,
except one particular species,
might be so influenced by some
sort of music or verse as to be
disarmed of their rage and power
of doing mischief, and rendered
gentle and innocent. As to what
Dr. Hammond observes from
Schindler, that the deaf adder,
or viper, here mentioned, is so
called, because, being deaf of
one ear, it uses to stop the
other with dust, or with its
tail, to avoid the force of
charms or incantations wherewith
some species of them were wont
to be caught; it seems so
improbable as to be hardly worth
noticing. For why should the God
of nature give any species of
creatures two ears, and yet
design one of them to be always
deaf? To say, as some have done,
that it lays one ear upon the
ground, and stops the other with
dust, or with its tail, would
appear more credible. But it
seems much more reasonable to
suppose, with Dr. Horne, that
either a serpent deaf by
accident is here intended by the
deaf adder, or one of a species
naturally deaf; for several such
kinds are mentioned by Avicenne,
as quoted by Bochart: and a
modern writer on the Psalms,
cited by Dr. Dodd, asserts that
the common adder, or viper here
in England, the bite of which is
very venomous, is either wholly
deaf, or has the sense of
hearing very imperfectly; and
gives good reasons for his
assertion. But, “for my part,”
adds Dr. Dodd, “I cannot help
conceiving, that the psalmist
does not allude to any natural
deafness of the adder, (which
appears to be a very disputable
point,) but to an artificial
deafness, arising from its fury;
its unwillingness to hear, and
to regard any of the usual
methods of taming it, when
irritated, and in a rage: and,
indeed, this seems to be most
applicable to the point in
comparison.” Certainly, in any
of these cases, “the adder might
be said, in the language of
poetry, to stop her ear from
being proof to all the efforts
of the charmer.” “Of the
charming of serpents,” says
Poole, “mention is made both in
other places of Scripture, and
in all sorts of authors, ancient
and modern, Hebrew and Arabic,
and Greek and Latin. And
particularly the Arabic writers
(to whom these creatures were
best known) name some sorts of
serpents, among which the adder
is one which they call deaf, not
because they are dull of
hearing, but, as one of them
expressly says, because they
will not be charmed.” The
version of the Seventy here is,
which will not hear, φονην
επαδοντων, the voice of those
that sing. And certainly musical
sounds were anciently supposed
to have the effect of charming
or disarming the rage of some
kinds of serpents. Bochart
quotes several authors to this
purpose, and, among the rest,
Virgil, (see Æneid, 7. 5:753,)
and the elder Scaliger. And Mr.
Boyle gives us the following
passage from Sir H. Blunt’s
Voyage to the Levant: “Many
rarities of living creatures I
saw in Grand Cairo; but the most
ingenious was a nest of four-
legged serpents, of two feet
long, black and ugly, kept by a
Frenchman, which, when he came
to handle them, would not endure
him, but ran and hid themselves
in their hole; but, when he took
out his cittern and played upon
it, they, hearing his music,
came all crawling to his feet,
and began to climb up to him,
till he gave over playing, then
away they ran.”
Verse 6
Psalms 58:6. Break their teeth,
O God — Their power and
instruments of doing mischief.
“The mention of teeth here, with
the relative their, most
probably first refers to those
of the adder or serpent,
immediately foregoing, whose
poison and noxious power are in
their teeth; and the way to
disarm serpents is to deprive
them of their teeth. They who
keep serpents tame usually do
this by putting to them a piece
of red cloth, in which they love
to fix their teeth, and so draw
them out. This mention of teeth
fairly introduces that which
follows concerning the lions,
whose power of doing mischief
with them is more violent; and
so signifies the open and
riotous offender; as the
serpent’s teeth may imply the
more secret and indiscernible
wounds of the whisperer or
backbiter: which yet are as
dangerous and destructive as the
former; by the smallest prick
killing him on whom they
fasten.” — Dodd.
Verse 7
Psalms 58:7. Let them melt away
as waters, &c. — As waters
arising from melted snow, or
great showers, or some other
extraordinary cause, which at
first run with great force and
noise, and throw down all that
stands in their way, but are
suddenly gone, and run away, and
vanish, and return no more. When
he — Saul, or any, or every one
of mine enemies, as appears from
the foregoing or following
words; bendeth his bow to shoot
his arrows — Taking his aim at
the upright in heart; let them —
That is, his arrows, be cut in
pieces — Let them be like arrows
broken, while a man is shooting
them. Let them fall at his feet,
and never come near the mark.
Verse 8
Psalms 58:8. As a snail melteth
— Which thrusts forth itself,
and seems to threaten with its
horns, but is quickly dissolved.
For it wastes by its own
motions, in every stretch it
makes, leaving some of its
moisture behind, which, by
degrees, must needs consume it,
though it makes a path to shine
after it. Like the untimely
birth of a woman — Which dies as
soon as it begins to live, and
never sees the sun.
Verse 9
Psalms 58:9. Before your pots
can feel the thorns — That is,
the heat of a fire of thorns
made under them, which they soon
do, as it is a quick fire, and
burns violently while it lasts;
he shall take them away —
Namely, mine enemies; so
speedily, with such a hasty and
destructive flame; as with a
whirlwind — That is, violently
and irresistibly; both living,
and in his wrath — Hebrew, כמו
חי כמו חרון, chemo chi, chemo
charon, as living, as wrath, or,
as it were alive, as it were
with fury. “The intention of the
psalmist is to express both the
quickness and terribleness of
the destruction of the wicked.
They were to be taken away
suddenly, or rapidly, before the
pots could feel the soon
kindling and vehement fire of
thorns. They were to be taken
off by some terrible
catastrophe, like the furious
burning of thorns, to which the
wrath of God is frequently
compared.”
Verse 10
Psalms 58:10. The righteous
shall rejoice when he seeth the
vengeance — The vengeance of God
upon the enemies of his church.
That is, he shall rejoice when
he sees the blessed effects of
it; the vindication of God’s
honour, and the deliverance of
himself, and all good men. The
pomp and power, the prosperity
and success of the wicked, are
often a discouragement to the
righteous. It weakens their
hands, and is sometimes a strong
temptation to them to call in
question the wisdom and equity
of the dispensations of divine
providence; but when they see
the judgments of God taking away
the wicked, and just vengeance
taken on them, although but in
part, for the mischief they have
done to the people and cause of
God, they rejoice in the
satisfaction thereby given to
their faith in God’s providence,
and in his justice and
righteousness in governing the
world. He shall wash his feet in
the blood of the wicked — There
shall be so great a slaughter of
his enemies, that he might, if
he pleased, wash his feet in
their blood. It is an allusion
to a great conqueror, who, upon
“returning with a complete
victory from the slaughter of
his enemies, dips his feet in
their blood as he passes over
their carcasses.” — Bishop
Patrick.
Verse 11
Psalms 58:11. So that a man
shall say, &c. — These
administrations of Divine
Providence shall be so evident
and convincing, that not only
good men shall be sensible
thereof, but any man that sees
them; yea, even such as were apt
to doubt of God’s providence
shall, upon this eminent
occasion, be ready to exclaim,
Now I see that religion is not a
vain and unprofitable thing, and
that there is a God who at
present observes and governs,
and, when he sees fit judges the
inhabitants of the earth; and
will hereafter judge the whole
world in righteousness, and
recompense every man according
to his works. |