Verse 1
Psalms 63:1. O God — O thou who
art God, and the only living and
true God, the author and end of
all things, the Governor and
Judge of men and angels, and the
sole object of their worship;
thou art my God — Mine by
creation, and therefore my
rightful owner and ruler; mine
by covenant and my own consent,
and therefore the object of my
highest esteem, most fervent
desire, and most entire trust
and confidence. Early will I
seek thee — Which clause is all
expressed in one word in the
Hebrew, אשׁחרךְ, ashacherecha,
(a most significant term, from
שׁחר, shachar, aurora, vel
diluculum, the dawn of day, or
morning twilight,) a phrase
which no translation can very
happily express. Buxtorf
interprets it thus, Quasi
aurorare, vel diluculare dicas,
words which will not admit of
being rendered into our
language. The sense of them,
however, is, I will prevent, or
be as early as the first
approach of light in seeking
thee. Perhaps no version can
better express the precise
meaning and force of the
original term than that of the
Seventy, namely, προς σε ορθριζω,
but it is equally difficult, if
not impossible, to be literally
translated into English. We find
the same Hebrew phrase Isaiah
26:9, which our translators
interpret in the same manner,
namely, “With my spirit within
me will I seek thee early.” The
primary meaning of the word
early, in both passages, is
early in the morning, or before,
or with the dawn of day; which
implies the doing it (namely,
seeking God) with the greatest
speed and diligence, taking the
first and best time for it. And
to seek him, the reader will
observe, is to covet his favour
as our chief good, and to
consult his glory as our highest
end: it is to seek an
acquaintance with him by his
word, and mercy from him by
prayer: it is to seek union with
him, and a conformity to him by
his Spirit. My soul thirsteth
for thee — Eagerly desires to
approach thee, to have access to
thee, and to enjoy communion
with thee. Thirsting, in all
languages, is frequently used
for earnestly longing after, or
passionately desiring any thing.
My flesh longeth for thee — Or,
languisheth, or pineth away, as
כמה, chamah, the word here used,
seems properly to signify. R.
Sal. renders it, arescit, it is
dried up, withered, or wasted.
In some approved lexicons it is
interpreted of the eye growing
dim, the colour changing, and
the mind being weakened. As used
here by the psalmist, the word
implies the utmost intenseness
and fervency of desire; as
though it impaired his sight,
altered the very hue of his
body, and even injured his
understanding; effects
oftentimes produced by eager and
unsatisfied desires. In a dry
and thirsty land where no water
is — Where I have not the
refreshing waters of the
sanctuary, and where I thirst
not so much for water to refresh
my body, although I also greatly
want that, as for thy presence,
and the communications of thy
grace to refresh my soul. He
experienced the vehemence of
natural thirst in a wilderness,
where he could get no supply of
water; and by that sensation he
expresses the vehemence of his
spiritual thirst, of his desire
after God, and the ordinances of
his worship.
Verse 2
Psalms 63:2. To see — To enjoy,
as seeing often means; thy power
and glory — The powerful and
glorious effects and evidences
of thy gracious presence: to see
them here in this wilderness, as
I have seen them in the
tabernacle; to see them in
secret, as I have seen them in
the solemn assembly: or, to see
them again in the sanctuary, as
I have formerly seen them there.
He longs to be brought out of
this wilderness, not that he
might see his friends again, and
be restored to the pleasures and
gayeties of the court, but that
he might have access to the
sanctuary; not to see the
priests there, and the
ceremonies of the worship, but
to see the power and glory, that
is, the glorious power, or
powerful glory, of God, which is
put for all his attributes and
perfections: that he might
increase in his acquaintance
with them, and have the suitable
impressions of them made upon
his heart: in other words, so to
behold the glory of the Lord as
to be changed into the same
image, 2 Corinthians 3:18. The
phraseology of the psalmist
should be observed here; he does
not say, to see thy power and
glory as I have seen them, but
as I have seen thee. We cannot,
indeed, see the essence of God,
but we see him, in the sense
meant by the psalmist, in seeing
by faith his gracious and
glorious perfections. With the
remembrance of these sights
David here pleaseth himself:
those were precious minutes
which he spent in communion with
God: he loved to recollect and
dwell upon them: of these he
lamented the loss, and to these
he longed to be restored.
Reader, are thy views and
feelings of this kind? Dost thou
thus esteem, desire, and delight
in God’s ordinances? Art thou
thus pained when deprived of
them, and thus delighted when
privileged with the enjoyment of
them? And dost thou thus desire,
and expect, and seek, and find
the presence of God in them?
“The true Christian,” says Dr.
Horne, “dedicates to God ‘the
sweet hour of prime,’ he opens
the eyes of his understanding,
together with those of his body,
and awakes each morning to
righteousness. He arises with an
inextinguishable thirst after
those comforts which the world
cannot give, and has immediate
recourse, by prayer, to the
fountain of the water of life;
ever longing to behold the
divine power and glory in the
sanctuary above, of which he has
been favoured with some glimpse
in the services of the church
below.”
Verse 3
Psalms 63:3. Because, &c. — Here
we see the reason of the
psalmist’s thirst after God, as
is expressed in the two
preceding verses; thy
loving-kindness is better than
life — That is, the discoveries
and influences of thy grace and
favour, which thou usually
impartest to thy people in thy
sanctuary, are more durable, and
comfortable, and satisfactory
than the present life, with all
the imaginary advantages
belonging to it. Mark well this
declaration of the psalmist,
reader. God’s loving-kindness is
in itself, and in the account of
all the saints, better than
life, and all the comforts of
life; life in its best estate;
long life and prosperity. It is
our spiritual and eternal life,
and that is better than our
natural and temporal life. It is
better, a thousand times, to die
in God’s favour, than to live
under his wrath, under which we
should of course be if we were
deprived of his loving-kindness.
My lips shall praise thee — Both
for my former tastes and
experiences of this truth, which
I have just expressed, and for
the assurance I have of being
restored to the same blessed
enjoyments which I have formerly
had. Observe again, reader,
those that have their hearts
refreshed with the tokens of
God’s favour, ought to have them
enlarged in his praises. Great
reason indeed have such to bless
God, for they have better
provisions and better
possessions than the wealth of
this world could afford them;
and in the service of God, and
in communion with him, have
better employments and better
enjoyments than they could have
in the business and converse of
this life.
Verse 4
Psalms 63:4. Thus will I bless
thee — That is, so as I have
done, and have now said. As I
have begun, I will go on: the
present devout affections shall
not pass away like the morning
cloud, but shine more and more
like the morning sun. Or, for
this reason, being so sensible
of the sweetness of thy favour;
or, certainly, as the particle
כן, cheen, is sometimes used.
While I live — I will persevere
in this work of blessing and
praising thee: it shall be an
important part of the business
of my whole life. Through thy
grace I will retain a sense of
thy former favours, and repeat
my thanksgivings for them; and
every day give thanks for the
benefits with which I am daily
loaded. I will lift up my hands
— Toward thee, in heaven, in
prayers and praises, to my duty,
and against my enemies; in thy
name — According to thy command,
with confidence in thy name, or
thy nature and attributes, and
in the strength of thy Spirit
and grace.
Verse 5-6
Psalms 63:5-6. My soul shall be
satisfied — Not only as with
bread, which is nourishing; but
as with marrow and fatness —
Which are pleasant and
delicious; namely, when thou
shalt fulfil my desire, and
bring me to enjoy thee in the
sanctuary; though now in my
exile I groan and pine away for
want of that mercy; and my mouth
shall praise thee with joyful
lips — I will praise thee
openly: I will confess with my
mouth as well as believe in my
heart: and I will praise thee
cheerfully, from a principle of
gratitude and holy joy. When I
remember thee upon my bed —
During the solitude and
stillness of the night; a fit
season for meditation on the
daily repeated and
long-continued mercies of God.
David was so full of business
all day, shifting for his own
safety, that he had scarcely
leisure to apply himself
solemnly to religious exercises;
and therefore rather than want
time for them he denied himself
his necessary sleep. Hebrew,
upon my beds, implying that he
was frequently obliged to change
his bed and lodging, being
driven from place to place. In
the night watches — In the
several seasons of the night,
which were divided into three or
four watches. When others sleep
securely, my sleep is
interrupted by perplexity and
grief, but my thoughts are fixed
on thee. David was now in
continual peril of his life, so
that we may suppose care and
fear often held his eyes waking,
and gave him wearisome nights;
but then he entertained and
comforted himself with thoughts
of God and things divine. So
ought we to do when sleep
departs from our eyes, through
pain or sickness of body, or any
disturbance of mind.
Verse 7
Psalms 63:7. Because thou hast
been my help — When other helps
and helpers failed me; because I
have known by experience both
thy power and will to save those
that trust in thee; therefore,
in the shadow of thy wings will
I rejoice — Hebrew, ארנן,
aranneen, will I sing: I will
confide in thee for the future,
and will do it with delight and
comfort: I will rest securely
and joyfully, and will sing thy
praises under thy protection. He
alludes either to the wings of
the cherubim stretched out over
the mercy-seat, between which
God was said to dwell; or to the
wings of a fowl, under which her
helpless young ones have
shelter. Thus the recollection
of past mercies inclines the
true believer still to have
recourse, in all his dangers and
difficulties, to his strong
helper, and to put himself and
all his affairs under the wings
of an overshadowing providence.
Verse 8
Psalms 63:8. My soul followeth
hard after thee — Pursues
communion with thee, and a
conformity to thee, with
earnest, increasing, and
restless desire, lively
expectation, and unwearied
diligence: follows thee
resolvedly, and, as it were,
step by step, when thou seemest
to depart, and withdraw thyself
from me, as the Hebrew phrase
here used implies. My soul and
spirit cleave, or adhere to
thee, (as the word דבקה, dabekah,
is rendered, Genesis 2:24;
Jeremiah 13:11, and elsewhere,)
even when my body is absent from
thy sanctuary. Thy right hand
upholdeth me — Supports and
preserves me from sinking under
the many trials and troubles
which have lain, and still lie,
heavy upon me; and upholds me in
my devotions, maintaining holy
desires in my heart, and
preventing my being weary in thy
service: so that I do not lose
my labour in following hard
after thee. Let us always
remember we should fail and be
weary of following the Lord, and
certainly should not follow him
fully, if his right hand did not
uphold us. It is he that
strengthens us in the pursuit of
himself, that raises and
supports good affections in us,
and encourages and comforts us,
while we are labouring after
what we have not yet attained.
It is by his power that we are
kept from falling, and enabled
to persevere in his ways. Let
him therefore have the praise
and glory!
Verse 9-10
Psalms 63:9-10. But those that
seek my soul, &c. — That seek to
take away my life; shall go into
the lower parts of the earth —
Into the grave; and, if they
repent not, into hell. God shall
cut them off, and send them to
their own place. Their enmity to
David, and opposition to the
counsel of God respecting him,
he foresaw would be their death
and their damnation, their ruin
and their eternal ruin. They
shall fall by the sword — Shall
die in battle, as he foretold 1
Samuel 26:10, and as was
accomplished in Saul and his
followers, who were David’s
greatest enemies. They shall be
a portion for foxes — The
carcasses of some of them shall
lie unburied upon the earth, and
thereby shall become a prey to
wild and ravenous beasts, and
especially to foxes, which
abounded in those parts.
Verse 11
Psalms 63:11. But the king shall
rejoice in God — I, who am
anointed to be king, and who
shall actually be king when
these my enemies are fallen by
the sword. Every one that
sweareth by him — By the name of
God, namely, in truth, and
judgment, and righteousness, as
it is expressed Jeremiah 4:2,
that is, every sincere servant
and worshipper of God that
invokes his name, and makes him
the object of his religious
reverence and fear: all which is
implied in swearing by him, as
an oath taken, as in the
presence of God, is an immediate
appeal and solemn act of worship
to him. Accordingly, swearing is
often put for the whole worship
of God, and swearers by him, for
worshippers of him. See Isaiah
45:23, compared with Romans
14:16; Isaiah 65:16. Shall glory
— Shall rejoice in my
deliverance and exaltation, both
for their respect for the honour
and service of God, which I
shall advance, and for the
benefits which all good men and
the whole kingdom shall receive
by my government: whereas, in
Saul’s time, the vilest men were
exalted, good men oppressed and
persecuted, and the whole
kingdom groaned under his
tyranny. But the mouth of them
that speak lies — That now make
it their business to invent or
spread slanderous reports
concerning me and others of
God’s people; shall be stopped —
They shall be so silenced that
they shall not have a word to
say for themselves. He may mean
also, that when he should be in
power, he would severely
restrain and punish such wicked
practices. Apply this to
Christ’s enemies. Those that
speak lies against him, who
pervert the right ways of the
Lord, and speak ill of his holy
religion, their mouths will be
stopped too, when the Lord shall
come to reckon for all the hard
speeches which ungodly sinners
have spoken against him.
Christ’s second coming will be
the everlasting triumph of all
his faithful friends and
followers, who may therefore now
triumph in the believing hopes
of it. |