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9. Psalm 9

1 I will give thanks to you, LORD, with all my heart;
   I will tell of all your wonderful deeds.

2 I will be glad and rejoice in you;
   I will sing the praises of your name, O Most High.

    3 My enemies turn back;
   they stumble and perish before you.

4 For you have upheld my right and my cause,
   sitting enthroned as the righteous judge.

5 You have rebuked the nations and destroyed the wicked;
   you have blotted out their name for ever and ever.

6 Endless ruin has overtaken my enemies,
   you have uprooted their cities;
   even the memory of them has perished.

    7 The LORD reigns forever;
   he has established his throne for judgment.

8 He rules the world in righteousness
   and judges the peoples with equity.

9 The LORD is a refuge for the oppressed,
   a stronghold in times of trouble.

10 Those who know your name trust in you,
   for you, LORD, have never forsaken those who seek you.

    11 Sing the praises of the LORD, enthroned in Zion;
   proclaim among the nations what he has done.

12 For he who avenges blood remembers;
   he does not ignore the cries of the afflicted.

    13 LORD, see how my enemies persecute me!
   Have mercy and lift me up from the gates of death,

14 that I may declare your praises
   in the gates of Daughter Zion,
   and there rejoice in your salvation.

    15 The nations have fallen into the pit they have dug;
   their feet are caught in the net they have hidden.

16 The LORD is known by his acts of justice;
   the wicked are ensnared by the work of their hands. The Hebrew has Higgaion and Selah (words of uncertain meaning) here; Selah occurs also at the end of verse 20.

17 The wicked go down to the realm of the dead,
   all the nations that forget God.

18 But God will never forget the needy;
   the hope of the afflicted will never perish.

    19 Arise, LORD, do not let mortals triumph;
   let the nations be judged in your presence.

20 Strike them with terror, LORD;
   let the nations know they are only mortal.


17. The wicked shall be turned into hell. Many translate the verb in the optative mood, Let the wicked be turned into hell, as if it were an imprecation. But, in my judgment, David here rather confirms himself and all the godly with respect to the future, declaring that whatever the wicked may attempt, it will have a termination disastrous to themselves. By the word turn he means that the issue will be far otherwise than what they imagine; for there is implied in it a tacit contrast between the height of their presumption and the depth of their fall. As they have no fear of God, they exalt themselves above the clouds; and then, as if they had “made a covenant with death,” according to the language of Isaiah, (Isaiah 28:15) they become so much the more arrogant and presumptuous. But when we see them raging without apprehension of danger, the prophet warns us that their madness carries them headlong, so that, at length, they fall into the grave, from which they thought themselves to be a great way off. Here, then, is described to us the sudden and unexpected change, by which God, when he pleases, restores to order things which were in confusion. When, therefore, we see the wicked flying aloft devoid of all fear, let us, by the eyes of faith, behold the grave which is prepared for them; and rest assured that the hand of God, although it is unseen, is very near, which can turn them back in the midst of their course in which they aim at reaching heaven, and make them tumble into hell in a moment. The meaning of the Hebrew word שאולה, sheolah, is doubtful, but I have not hesitated to translate it hell 180180     “Le mot Hebreu, pour lequel nous avons traduit Enfer signifie aussi Sepulchre; mais j’ay mieux aime retenir ceste signification. — Fr. “The Hebrew word which we have translated hell also signifies the grave; but I have preferred to retain the former meaning of the word.” I do not find fault with those who translate it the grave, but it is certain that the prophet means something more than common death, otherwise he would here say nothing else with respect to the wicked than what would also happen to all the faithful in common with them. Though then, he does not speak in express terms of eternal destruction, but only says, They shall be turned into the grave, yet, under the metaphor of the grave, he intimates that all the ungodly shall perish, and that the presumption with which, by every unlawful means, they raise themselves on high to trample righteousness under foot, and to oppress the innocent, shall bring upon them ruin and perdition. The faithful, also, it is true, descend into the grave, but not with such fearful violence as plunges them into it without hope of coming out again. So far is this from being the case, that even when shut up in the grave, they dwell already in heaven by hope.


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