Verse 1
Psalms 62:1. Truly my soul
waiteth upon God — Or,
Nevertheless, as some render the
Hebrew particle אךְ, ach, or,
however it be, whatever
difficulties or dangers I may
meet with; though God frown upon
me, and I meet with
discouragements in my attendance
on him, yet still my soul
waiteth upon God, דומיה, dumijah,
is silent toward him, does not
object to what he doth, and
expects what he will do,
silently, quietly, and patiently
looking up to him for
deliverance, and that in his own
time and way, without murmuring
or despair, or using indirect or
sinful practices. Observe,
reader, we are in the way both
of duty and comfort, when our
souls are waiting upon God; that
is, when we cheerfully refer
ourselves, and the disposal of
all our affairs, to his wisdom;
when we acquiesce in, and
accommodate ourselves to, all
the dispensations of his
providence, and patiently expect
a doubtful event, with an entire
satisfaction in his
righteousness and goodness,
however it be. The LXX. render
this clause, ουχι τω θεω
υποταγησεται η ψυχη μου; shall
not my soul be subject to God?
Certainly it ought so to be;
for, from him cometh my
salvation —
I have no hope of deliverance or
safety but from and by him.
Verse 2
Psalms 62:2. He only is my rock
— He hath been so often; in him
I have found shelter, and
strength, and succour; he hath,
by his grace, supported me
under, and delivered me out of
my troubles, and by his
providence he has defended me
from my enemies, and therefore I
trust he will still support,
deliver, and defend me. I shall
not be greatly moved — Though I
may be shaken, I shall not be
overthrown.
Verse 3
Psalms 62:3. How long will ye —
Mine enemies, (to whom he now
turns his speech,) imagine
mischief against a man — Against
me, a man like yourselves, whom
common humanity obliges you to
pity; a single man, who is no
fit match for you? Ye shall be
slain all of you — The mischief
which ye design for me shall
fall upon your own heads. And
accordingly Saul, and the
generality of these men, were
slain, 1 Samuel 31. As a bowing
wall shall ye be — As suddenly
and easily overthrown; as a
tottering fence — The word
fence, or hedge, does not fully
express the sense of the
original word, גדר, gadeer,
“which means such a sort of
partition, or wall, as, when it
is decayed, is liable to fall
and crush a man to death. In
this view the similitude is, not
that they should be in a ruinous
condition, like a decayed wall,
but that they should threaten
destruction to all who came near
them, as a falling wall does to
all those who come within the
reach of it; and as Isaiah
expresses it, Like a breach
ready to fall, swelling out in a
high wall, whose breaking cometh
suddenly in an instant, Isaiah
30:13.” — See Green.
Verse 4
Psalms 62:4. They only consult
to cast him down — Namely, the
man mentioned Psalms 62:3. He
means himself, of whom he
continues to speak in the third
person. From his excellency —
From the hopes and attainment of
that royal dignity to which God
hath designed and anointed me.
They delight in lies, &c. — In
secret slanders and execrations,
covered with flatteries and fair
speeches, as it here follows.
Verse 8
Psalms 62:8. Trust in him at all
times, ye people — By my example
be encouraged, and learn to
trust in God. Pour out your
heart before him — Make known to
him all the desires, cares, and
griefs of your hearts freely and
frequently, with confident
expectation of obtaining what
you want or desire from him. God
is a refuge for us — Not only,
my refuge, Psalms 62:7, but a
refuge for us all, even as many
as will flee to him, and take
shelter in him.
Verse 9
Psalms 62:9. Surely men of low
degree are vanity — Are most
vain, impotent, and helpless
creatures in themselves. This he
delivers as a reason, or
argument, to enforce his
foregoing exhortation to trust
in God, because there was no
other person or thing to which
they could safely trust. Men of
high degree are a lie — That is,
deceitful; because unable to
perform what by their power and
dignity they seem to promise.
They raise men’s expectations,
and afterward disappoint them,
and so deceive those that trust
in them. In which sense lying is
ascribed to a fountain, Jeremiah
15:18; to wine, Hosea 9:2; and
to the olive, Hebrews 3:17, (see
the Hebrew,) when they do not
give what they promise. Or, a
lie may signify, a mere nothing;
for a lie has no reality in it.
Verse 10
Psalms 62:10. Trust not in
oppression — That is, in riches
gotten by fraud and violence; or
in the arts of acquiring them.
As you must not trust in any
other men, so neither must you
trust to yourselves, nor to your
own wit, or industry, or
courage, by which you may
oppress others, and so think to
secure and enrich yourselves.
And become not vain in robbery —
Lifting up and feeding
yourselves with vain hopes of
safety and felicity from those
riches which you take from
others by robbery and violence.
If riches increase, set not your
heart on them — So as to esteem
and inordinately love them, to
place your hope, and trust, and
chief joy in them, or so as to
grow proud and insolent because
of them.
Verse 11
Psalms 62:11. God hath spoken
once; twice, &c. — That is, God
hath spoken it, and I have heard
it once, yea, twice; that is,
frequently, as Job 33:14. He
hath declared, and I have
understood it, by the light of
reason, which easily infers it
from the nature of the
infinitely perfect Jehovah, and
from his works of creation and
providence: he hath shown, and I
have learned it by the events
which have taken place
concerning myself in particular:
and the light of revelation,
communicated in dreams and
visions, and various other ways,
hath manifested it, and
especially at Sinai, and by his
holy prophets from time to time;
that power belongeth unto God —
That power is his prerogative;
and, consequently, that all
creatures, either against him or
without him, are poor, impotent
things, in which no man can
trust without certain
disappointment; but that he is
almighty, and can do every
thing; and that with him nothing
is impossible; and therefore
that he, and he alone, is fit to
be trusted.
Verse 12
Psalms 62:12. Also unto thee, O
Lord, belongeth mercy — Hebrew,
חסד, chesed, benignity,
beneficence, compassion.
“Significat id boni, quod
gratuito fit:” It signifies that
good which is done gratuitously.
— Buxtorf. He is no less willing
than able to defend, preserve,
and do good to those that trust
in him. For he is as truly the
best, as he is the greatest of
beings, merciful and gracious,
yea, the Father of mercies, and
the God of all consolation and
good hope. This is a further
reason why we should trust in
him, and answers the objections
of our sinfulness and
unworthiness; though we deserve
nothing but his wrath, yet we
may hope for all good from his
mercy, which is over all his
works. For, or therefore, thou
renderest, &c. — For the
following words seem to be
added, either as a proof of, or
an inference from, the two
foregoing properties of God,
power and mercy. God is
almighty, therefore he can
easily destroy all his enemies:
he is merciful, and therefore
will pardon good men’s failings,
and graciously reward their
integrity; according to his work
— Which, as he is obliged to do,
by his own holy nature, so he is
able to do it, being omnipotent,
and willing to do it to the
godly, notwithstanding their
manifold infirmities and
miscarriages, because he is
merciful and gracious. Though
God doth not always do this
visibly in this world, yet he
will do it in the day of final
recompense. No service done to
him shall go unrewarded; nor any
affront given him unpunished,
unless repented of. Thus it
appears that power and mercy
belong to him. If he were not a
God of power, there are sinners
that would be too high to be
punished; and if he were not a
God of mercy, there are services
too worthless to be rewarded. |