Study

a Bible passage

Click a verse to see commentary
Select a resource above

63. Psalm 63

1 You, God, are my God,
   earnestly I seek you;
I thirst for you,
   my whole being longs for you,
in a dry and parched land
   where there is no water.

    2 I have seen you in the sanctuary
   and beheld your power and your glory.

3 Because your love is better than life,
   my lips will glorify you.

4 I will praise you as long as I live,
   and in your name I will lift up my hands.

5 I will be fully satisfied as with the richest of foods;
   with singing lips my mouth will praise you.

    6 On my bed I remember you;
   I think of you through the watches of the night.

7 Because you are my help,
   I sing in the shadow of your wings.

8 I cling to you;
   your right hand upholds me.

    9 Those who want to kill me will be destroyed;
   they will go down to the depths of the earth.

10 They will be given over to the sword
   and become food for jackals.

    11 But the king will rejoice in God;
   all who swear by God will glory in him,
   while the mouths of liars will be silenced.


8 My soul has cleaved hard after thee The Hebrew verb means also to apprehend, or follow, especially when in construction with the preposition which is here joined to it, and therefore we might very properly render the words, — My soul shall press or follow after thee. 434434     Dr Adam Clarke renders, “My soul cleaves, or is glued after thee.” “This phrase,” says he, “not only shows the diligence of the pursuit, and the nearness of the attainment, but also the fast hold he had got of the mercy of his God.” But even should the other translation be retained, the sense is, that David’s heart was devoted to God with steadfast perseverance. The phrase, after thee, is emphatical, and denotes that he would follow with unwearied constancy, long as the way might be, and full of hardships, and beset with obstacles, and however sovereignly God might himself seem to withdraw his presence. The latter clause of the verse may be taken as referring simply to the deliverance which he had previously mentioned as having been received. He had good reason to persevere, without fainting, in following after God, when he considered that he had been preserved in safety, up to this time, by the divine hand. But I would understand the words as having a more extensive application, and consider that David here speaks of the grace of perseverance, which would be bestowed upon him by the Spirit. To say that he would cleave to God, with an unwavering purpose, at all hazards, might have sounded like the language of vain boasting, had he not qualified the assertion by adding, that he would do this in so far as he was sustained by the hand of God.


VIEWNAME is study