Verse 1-2
Psalms 69:1-2. Save me, O God —
O most mighty God, in whom alone
I trust for safety, deliver me
from these distresses; for the
waters — Of tribulation; are
come unto my soul — Have reached
my vital parts, so that I am
ready to expire, and my soul is
exceeding sorrowful even unto
death. I sink in deep mire —
Hebrew, ביון מצולה, in the mud
of the deep. I am not in the
shallows, or nigh the bank, but
in the middle and deepest parts,
and sinking in the very mire
which is at the bottom of the
waters. Where there is no
standing — No firm and sure
footing, but I sink deeper and
deeper, and without thy speedy
and almighty help I shall be
overwhelmed and perish.
Verse 3-4
Psalms 69:3-4. I am weary of my
crying — I have prayed and cried
to God long and fervently, and
yet God seems to neglect and
forsake me. My throat is dried —
With loud and frequent cries.
Mine eyes fail — With looking to
God for that aid and deliverance
which he hath promised, and
which I confidently expected,
but hitherto in vain. They that
hate me without a cause —
Without any injury or occasion
given them by me; are more than
the hairs of my head — Are grown
more formidable, both for their
number, which is exceeding
great, and for their power, for
they are mighty — So that, if
thou do not interpose for my
deliverance, they are well able
to destroy me, to which they do
not want the will, having
conceived an implacable and
undeserved hatred against me.
Though “I have been so far from
provoking their malice, that I
restored that which I took not
away — For I was content, rather
than quarrel with them, to part
with my own right, and make them
satisfaction for a wrong which I
never did them.” — Bishop
Patrick. Under this one kind of
ill usage he comprehends all
those injuries and violences
which they had practised against
him.
Verse 5
Psalms 69:5. O God, thou knowest
my foolishness — Hebrew, אולתי,
ivalti, rendered in the Liturgy
version, my simpleness. As if he
had said, Thou knowest the
simplicity and uprightness of my
heart, that I have never
intentionally injured those that
thus cruelly hate and persecute
me, but have always designed and
endeavoured to act right toward
them. And my sins are not hid
from thee — But, O Lord,
although I have been innocent
toward mine enemies, yet I must
confess I am guilty of many sins
and follies against thee, and
have given thee just cause to
punish me by giving me up into
their hands, and by denying or
delaying to help me.
Verse 6
Psalms 69:6. Let not them that
wait on thee — The truly pious,
who believe thy promises, and
look to thee for the fulfilment
of them; who are conscious of
their own weakness, and of the
insufficiency of all human aid,
and therefore apply to thee, and
trust in thee for the help they
want; be ashamed — That is,
frustrated of their just and
reasonable expectations, which
would make them ashamed of their
past confidence in thee, and
either to look up to thee in
future, or to look upon their
enemies with assurance, when
they shall reproach them for
their trust in thee; for my sake
— Because of my sad
disappointments. For, if they
see me forsaken, they will be
discouraged by this example; or,
let them not hang down their
heads for shame to see me, who
am thy worshipper, deserted of
thee. He was afraid, if God did
not appear for him, it would be
a discouragement to other pious
people, and give their enemies
cause to triumph over them; and
it was his earnest desire,
whatever became of himself, that
all the true people of God might
retain their confidence and hope
in God, and their boldness in
his cause, and neither be
discouraged in themselves, nor
exposed to contempt from others.
Verses 7-9
Psalms 69:7-9. Because for thy
sake — For my trust in thy
promises, obedience to thy
commands, and zeal for thy
glory; “because I adhere to
thee, and will use no unlawful
means to right myself;” I have
borne reproach — For they turn
all these things into matter of
contempt and derision. I am
become a stranger to my
brethren, &c. — They behave
themselves toward me as if I
were a perfect stranger, or a
man of another country and
religion. For the zeal of thy
house — That fervent love which
I have for thy house and
service, and glory, and people;
hath eaten me up — Exhausted my
spirits. And this is the reason
of that alienation of my
brethren and others from me,
because there is a great
difference and contrariety in
our dispositions, desires, and
designs. For they regard not thy
service and glory, nor the
concerns of religion; but are
wholly taken up with the world,
and the cares and pursuits of
it. And the reproaches of them
that reproached thee — That
spoke contemptuously or wickedly
of thy name, or providence, or
truth, or worship, and service;
are fallen upon me — I have been
as deeply affected with thy
reproaches as with my own. This
whole verse, though truly
belonging to David, yet was also
directed by the Spirit of God in
him to a higher use, to
represent the disposition and
condition of Christ, in whom
this was more truly and fully
accomplished than in David; and
to whom, therefore, it is
applied in the New Testament,
the first part of it, John 2:17,
and the latter, Romans 15:3.
Verses 10-12
Psalms 69:10-12. When I wept —
For their impiety, and the
reproaches they cast upon God
and godliness; and chastened my
soul with fasting — That is,
either my body or myself; that
was my reproach — They derided
me for my piety and devotion,
and for my faith in God’s
promises and hopes of assistance
from him. I made sackcloth also
my garment — In token of my
humiliation and hearty sorrow,
as the manner then was in days
of fasting. I became a proverb
to them — They used my name
proverbially of any person whom
they thought to be vainly and
foolishly religious. They that
sit in the gate — That is, as it
is generally interpreted, the
judges and magistrates, the
gates of cities being the places
of judicature. But it seems
better to agree with the design
of the psalmist, and to suit
with the next clause, to suppose
that he rather meant vain and
idle persons, that spent their
time in the gates and markets;
or such as begged at the gates
of the city, as St. Hilary
interprets it. And I was the
song of the drunkards — Of the
scum of the people; of all lewd
and debauched persons.
Verse 13
Psalms 69:13. But my prayer is
unto thee — While they scoff, I
will pray, and not be driven
from thee, nor from prayer and
other duties, by all their
reproaches, or any other
discouragements. In an
acceptable time — Hebrew, עת
רצון, gneet ratzon, in a time of
grace, of good will, or good
pleasure. These words may be
joined, either, 1st, With the
following, by way of limitation,
thus: Hear me in thy accepted
time, that is, I do not limit
thee to any time; but when thou
seest it will be best, hear and
help me. Or rather, with the
foregoing, as an argument to
enforce his prayer: as if he had
said, I pray in a time of grace,
or acceptance; I seek thee when
thou mayest be found, (see
Psalms 32:6; Isaiah 55:6,) in a
good day, as they said, 1 Samuel
25:8, in the day of grace and
mercy: or, in a time of great
trouble, which is the proper
season for prayer, Psalms 50:15;
and while I have thee engaged to
me by promises, which thy honour
and truth oblige thee to
perform. I come not too late,
and therefore do thou hear me.
In the truth of thy salvation —
That is, for, or according to,
thy saving truth, or
faithfulness; whereby thou hast
promised to deliver those who
trust in thee.
Verses 14-18
Psalms 69:14-18. Let me be
delivered from them that hate me
— By thus speaking, he explains
his meaning in the metaphors
here used of mire, waters, deep,
and pit. For thy loving-kindness
is good — Is eminently and
unspeakably good; is gracious,
or bountiful; the positive
degree being put for the
superlative: it is most ready to
communicate itself to miserable
and indigent creatures: the
Hebrew word חסד, chesed, here
used, signifying abundance of
goodness, or mercifulness. Draw
nigh unto my soul — To support
and relieve it, O thou who
seemest to be departed far away
from me. Deliver me because of
mine enemies — Because they are
enemies to thee as well as to
me, and if they succeed, will
triumph, not only over me, but
in some sort over thee and over
religion.
Verse 19-20
Psalms 69:19-20. Thou hast known
my reproach, &c. — Thou seest
how much of it I suffer, and
that for thy sake. Mine
adversaries are all before thee
— Thou knowest them thoroughly,
and all their injurious and
wicked devices, and implacable
malice against me. None of them,
nor of their secret plots and
subtle lies, whereby they seek
to defame and undo me: are
hidden from thy all-seeing view:
nor art thou unacquainted with
their impiety and contempt of
thee and thy truth. Reproach
hath broken my heart — Reproach
is the most grievous to those
whose spirits are the most
generous and noble; and this was
the highest degree and the worst
kind of reproach, being cast
upon him for God’s sake, and
upon God also for his sake. I
looked for some to take pity,
but there was none — That is,
few or none; for whether it be
understood of David or of
Christ, there were some who
pitied both of them. Dr.
Delaney, who considers the
distress which David was now in
as being occasioned by his fall,
observes, “There were two
circumstances of it which,
though they are beyond all
question the greatest and
severest which human nature, can
suffer, are not sufficiently
considered. The first is, the
distress he endured on account
of the obloquy and reproach
brought upon the true religion
and the truly religious by his
guilt; and the second, the
reproach and endless insults
brought upon himself, even by
his repentance and humiliation
before God and the world. Let
any ingenuous man, who feels for
virtue and is not seared to
shame, put the question to
himself: I appeal to his own
heart, whether he would not
infinitely rather die than
endure the state now described
one day; forsaken by his
friends, scorned by his enemies,
insulted by his inferiors, the
scoff of libertines, and the
song of sots? What then must we
think of the fortitude and
magnanimity of that man who
could endure all this for a
series of years? Or rather, how
shall we adore that unfailing
mercy and all- sufficient
goodness which could support him
thus, under the quickest sense
of shame and infamy, and deepest
compunctions of conscience;
which could enable him to bear
up steadily against guilt,
infamy, and the evil world
united; from a principle of true
religion! and, in the end, even
rejoice in his sad estate; as he
plainly perceived it must
finally tend to promote the true
interest of virtue, and the
glory of God; that is, must
finally tend to promote that
interest, which was the great
governing principle and main
purpose of his life.” — Life of
David, b. 3. vol. 3. pp. 30-33.
Verse 21
Psalms 69:21. They gave me gall
for my meat — Instead of
affording me that pity and
comfort which my condition
required, they barbarously added
to my affliction. These words
were only metaphorically
fulfilled in David, but were
properly and literally
accomplished in Christ; the
description of whose sufferings,
it seems, was principally
intended here by the Holy Ghost,
who therefore directed David’s
pen to these words. And hence
what follows may as truly, and
perhaps more properly, be
considered as predictions of the
punishment which should be
inflicted on the persecutors of
our Lord, than as imprecations
of David against his enemies.
Verse 22
Psalms 69:22. Let their table,
&c. — Dr. Waterland renders the
verse, Their table shall be for
a snare before them, and their
peace-offerings for a trap.
“This and the following verses
are to be read in the future
tense, and considered as
predictions rather than as
imprecations. The meaning of the
whole verse seems to be, The
oblations and prayers of those
who have dealt thus barbarously
with me, shall be so far from
pacifying God, or being accepted
of him, that, like the offerings
made to false gods, styled the
preparing a table, Isaiah 65:11,
they shall provoke God, and turn
to their mischief: see Romans
11:9.” — Dodd. The sacrifices,
peace- offerings, and other
oblations of the Jews, were, in
a remarkable manner, a snare to
them, in that their dependence
on them, and their conceit of
the everlastingness of the
Mosaic dispensation, was one
chief cause of their rejection
of Christ.
Verse 23
Psalms 69:23. Let their eyes,
&c. — Their eyes shall be
darkened — Not the eyes of their
bodies, (for, in that sense, the
prediction was neither
accomplished in David’s nor in
Christ’s enemies,) but of their
minds, that they will not
discern God’s truth, nor their
own duty, nor the way of peace
and salvation. As they shut
their eyes and will not see, so
they shall be judicially
blinded. This was most solemnly
threatened, or rather foretold,
Isaiah 6:9-12, and most awfully
fulfilled: see the margin. “They
who loved darkness rather than
light,” says Dr. Horne, “were
permitted by the righteous
judgment of God to go on in
darkness, while the blind led
the blind. And such still
continues to be the state of the
Jews, notwithstanding that
intolerable weight of wo which
made their loins to shake, and
bowed down their backs to the
earth. The veil remaineth yet
upon their hearts, in the
reading of the Old Testament,
nor can they see therein the
things which belong to their
peace.”
Verse 24
Psalms 69:24. Pour out — Thou
wilt pour out thine indignation
upon them, &c. — Thou wilt, on a
sudden, bring so many evils upon
them, that they shall not be
able to escape; but will feel
that they suffer the most dismal
effects of thy severest and
lasting displeasure. How
terribly and awfully has God
fulfilled this threatening also!
“Never was indignation so poured
out, never did wrath so take
hold on any nation, as on that
which once was, beyond every
other, beloved and favoured. The
wrath, says St. Paul, 1
Thessalonians 2:16, is come upon
them to the uttermost, εις τελος,
to the end, to the very last
dregs of the cup of fury. Let
every church, which boasts of
favours bestowed, and privileges
conferred upon her, remember the
consequences of their being
abused by Jerusalem; let every
individual do the same.”
Verse 25
Psalms 69:25. Let their
habitation — Hebrew, שׂירתם,
tiratham, their palace, as the
same word is rendered Song of
Solomon 8:9, or castle, as
Genesis 25:16, and Numbers
31:10. It is meant either of
their temple, in which they
placed their glory and their
confidence for safety, or more
generally of their strong and
magnificent buildings and houses
in which they dwelt, as it
follows in the next clause. And
let none dwell in their tents —
None of their posterity, or none
at all. Let the places be
accounted execrable and
dreadful. Bishop Patrick’s
paraphrase is, “Let their most
magnificent structures be laid
waste; and root them out so
entirely, that there may not be
a man left to dwell in their
poorest cottages.” This verse
had a most eminent completion in
the final destruction of
Jerusalem, and of the Jewish
state and nation, according to
the predictions of the Lord
Jesus, Matthew 23:36-38; Luke
21:6, &c. Jerusalem has indeed
been again partly rebuilt, and
inhabited by Gentiles, by
Christians, and by Saracens, but
no more by the Jewish people.
Verse 26
Psalms 69:26. For they persecute
him whom thou hast smitten —
Christ was he whom God had
smitten, for it pleased the Lord
to bruise him, and he was
esteemed stricken, smitten of
God, and afflicted, Isaiah
53:4-5; and him the Jews
persecuted with a rage which
reached up to heaven, crying,
Away with him; crucify him,
crucify him. And the psalmist is
here assigning the cause of the
forementioned calamities
inflicted on them; namely, that,
instead of mourning and
sympathizing with him, when the
Lord laid on him the iniquity of
us all, they, by reproaches and
blasphemies, aggravated his
sufferings to the uttermost; and
afterward continued to persecute
his disciples in the same
manner.
Verse 27
Psalms 69:27. Add iniquity to
their iniquity — Or, give or
permit, as תנה, tenah, may be
properly rendered. The old
version expresses the psalmist’s
meaning accurately, Let, or
permit, them to fall from one
wickedness to another. It is not
unusual with God, as a
punishment of some great sin or
sins, though not to infuse into
men any evil, yet, by
withdrawing his grace, and
leaving them to themselves, to
suffer them to commit more sins,
and to be so far from being
reformed, as daily to grow worse
and worse, and at last to become
quite obdurate and
irreclaimable. The words,
however, may be rendered, Add
punishment to their punishment,
(for the word עוןis often put
for the punishment of iniquity.)
Send one judgment upon them
after another, without ceasing.
And let them not come into thy
righteousness — Into that way of
obedience which thou requirest,
and which thou wilt accept, the
obedience of faith in the
Messiah and his gospel,
producing love, and universal
holiness and righteousness; or,
to thy mercy, thy pardoning
mercy, as the original word
frequently signifies, so as to
be made partakers of it. Let
them not obtain an interest in
the everlasting righteousness
which the Messiah shall bring
into the world, Daniel 9:24; the
righteousness of God by faith,
revealed in the gospel, and
witnessed by the law and the
prophets, Philippians 3:9;
Romans 1:17; and Romans 3:9,
&c., according to which God
justifies the ungodly, and
accepts them as righteous in his
sight. For this was the
righteousness which the Jews
rejected, Romans 10:3, according
to this prediction. Thus, as the
first branch of this verse
foretels their being guilty of
many sins, and adding iniquity
to iniquity, so this predicts
their rejection of, and
therefore their exclusion from,
an interest in the only remedy,
the remission of sins through
faith in the Mediator, and the
holiness and happiness
consequent thereon.
Verse 28
Psalms 69:28. Let them be
blotted out of the book of the
living — “Let them be cut off
before their time, and enjoy
none of the blessings which thou
hast promised to the righteous.”
— Bishop Patrick. The psalmist
is thought to allude to
registers or catalogues, in
which the names of living men
used anciently to be recorded,
and out of which the names of
those who died were blotted.
This was awfully fulfilled with
respect to the unbelieving Jews,
vast multitudes of whom fell by
the sword and famine, while none
of those who embraced the
Christian faith perished among
them. The nation, as a nation,
was blotted out of the list of
nations, and became not a
people. The words may also be
understood, as they are by many
commentators, of their rejection
from God’s covenant, and the
privileges of it, which is the
book of the truly living, or the
book of life. “Let the
commonwealth of Israel itself,
Israel according to the flesh,
now become alienated from that
covenant of promise, of which it
has hitherto had the monopoly.”
—
Henry. This has long been the
case with the degenerate and
apostate Jews, who are no longer
the peculiar people of God, nor
have they any part or portion in
the inheritance of his children.
Thus Ezekiel, speaking of the
false prophets, They shall not
be in the assembly of my people,
nor shall they be written in the
writing of the house of Israel,
Ezekiel 13:9. This accords well
with the next clause, Let them
not be written with the
righteous — Let them not have,
or, they shall not have, a place
in the congregation of the
saints, when they shall all be
gathered in the general assembly
of those whose names are written
in heaven.
Verses 29-31
Psalms 69:29-31. But I am poor,
&c. — Bishop Hare reads it, “But
as for me, though I am low and
full of pain,” (Hebrew, כואב,
choeeb; rendered, in the plural,
they were sore, Genesis 34:25,)
“thy salvation, O God, shall
protect me.” I will praise, &c.
— I will not be unmindful of the
benefit, but praise thy power
and goodness in joyful hymns.
This shall please the Lord
better than an ox, &c. — This
sincere and hearty sacrifice of
praise is, and shall be, more
acceptable to God than the most
costly legal sacrifices. So such
moral and spiritual services
ever were, (1 Samuel 15:22;
Hosea 6:6,) and such were to be
offered, and would be accepted,
when those ritual ones should be
abolished. That hath horns and
hoofs — “These are mentioned as
being conspicuous in an ox going
to be sacrificed; being probably
gilded and adorned with flowers,
as among the Romans and other
people.” — Dodd.
Verse 32-33
Psalms 69:32-33. The humble
shall see this — Shall see, in
my case, how ready God is to
hear the poor and distressed
when they cry to him, and to
grant their petitions, and how
far he is from despising his
prisoners, namely, those who are
in prison or affliction for his
sake, though men despise them;
and be glad — Not only because,
when one member is honoured, all
the members rejoice with it, but
because it would be an
encouragement to them in their
straits and difficulties to
trust in God. It will revive the
hearts of those who seek God to
see more seals to this truth,
that God never said to any of
the seed of Jacob, Seek ye me in
vain.
Verses 34-36
Psalms 69:34-36. Let the heaven
and earth praise him — Let
angels and men, the visible and
invisible world, and all
creatures contained therein,
join together to celebrate him
with their highest praises; for
“the mercies of God in Christ
are such, that they cannot
worthily be praised by any thing
less than a universal chorus of
the whole old and new creation;
and what should such a chorus
celebrate but those mercies by
which all things have been made,
preserved, and redeemed.” —
Horne. For God will save Zion —
The city of Zion, or Jerusalem;
and his church and people, which
are frequently expressed by that
title, and the salvation and
edification of which were the
consequence of the sufferings
and resurrection of Christ. He
will save Zion, the holy
mountain, where his ordinances
are administered, and his
service performed. He will save
all that are sanctified and set
apart for him, all that employ
themselves in his worship, and
all those over whom the once
suffering, but now exalted,
Saviour reigns, for he is the
king set upon the holy hill of
Zion. He will do great things
for the gospel-church; in which
let all, who wish well to it,
rejoice. For, 1st, It shall be
peopled and inhabited. There
shall be added to it such as
shall be saved. The cities of
Judah shall be built — Which is
to be understood figuratively,
as well as literally; particular
churches shall be formed, and
incorporated according to the
gospel model, that there may be
a remnant to dwell there, and
have it in possession — To enjoy
the privileges conferred upon
it, and to pay the tributes and
services required from it. 2d,
It shall be perpetuated and
inherited. Christianity was not
to be res unius ætatis, an
affair of one age; no, the seed
of his servants shall inherit it
— God will secure and raise up
for himself a seed to serve him,
and they shall inherit the
privileges of their fathers. The
land of promise shall never be
lost for want of heirs; for God
can out of stones raise up
children to Abraham, and will do
it rather than the entail shall
be cut off. David shall never
want a man to stand before him.
The Redeemer shall see his seed,
and prolong his days in them,
till the mystery of God shall be
finished and Christ’s mystical
body be completed. |