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109. Psalm 109

1 My God, whom I praise,
   do not remain silent,

2 for people who are wicked and deceitful
   have opened their mouths against me;
   they have spoken against me with lying tongues.

3 With words of hatred they surround me;
   they attack me without cause.

4 In return for my friendship they accuse me,
   but I am a man of prayer.

5 They repay me evil for good,
   and hatred for my friendship.

    6 Appoint someone evil to oppose my enemy;
   let an accuser stand at his right hand.

7 When he is tried, let him be found guilty,
   and may his prayers condemn him.

8 May his days be few;
   may another take his place of leadership.

9 May his children be fatherless
   and his wife a widow.

10 May his children be wandering beggars;
   may they be driven Septuagint; Hebrew sought from their ruined homes.

11 May a creditor seize all he has;
   may strangers plunder the fruits of his labor.

12 May no one extend kindness to him
   or take pity on his fatherless children.

13 May his descendants be cut off,
   their names blotted out from the next generation.

14 May the iniquity of his fathers be remembered before the LORD;
   may the sin of his mother never be blotted out.

15 May their sins always remain before the LORD,
   that he may blot out their name from the earth.

    16 For he never thought of doing a kindness,
   but hounded to death the poor
   and the needy and the brokenhearted.

17 He loved to pronounce a curse—
   may it come back on him.
He found no pleasure in blessing—
   may it be far from him.

18 He wore cursing as his garment;
   it entered into his body like water,
   into his bones like oil.

19 May it be like a cloak wrapped about him,
   like a belt tied forever around him.

20 May this be the LORD’s payment to my accusers,
   to those who speak evil of me.

    21 But you, Sovereign LORD,
   help me for your name’s sake;
   out of the goodness of your love, deliver me.

22 For I am poor and needy,
   and my heart is wounded within me.

23 I fade away like an evening shadow;
   I am shaken off like a locust.

24 My knees give way from fasting;
   my body is thin and gaunt.

25 I am an object of scorn to my accusers;
   when they see me, they shake their heads.

    26 Help me, LORD my God;
   save me according to your unfailing love.

27 Let them know that it is your hand,
   that you, LORD, have done it.

28 While they curse, may you bless;
   may those who attack me be put to shame,
   but may your servant rejoice.

29 May my accusers be clothed with disgrace
   and wrapped in shame as in a cloak.

    30 With my mouth I will greatly extol the LORD;
   in the great throng of worshipers I will praise him.

31 For he stands at the right hand of the needy,
   to save their lives from those who would condemn them.


13. Let his posterity be cut off. This is a continuation of the same subject, upon the consideration of which the prophet had just now entered, that God would visit the iniquities of the fathers upon their children. And as he had to deal with the whole court of Saul, and not with any single individual, he here employs the plural number. But as in deeds of wickedness, there are always some who are the prime movers, and act as the ringleaders of others, we need not be surprised that having spoken of one person, he next addresses the many, and then returns to the same person. The more natural and simple mode of explanation is to refer it to his offspring, for the Hebrew term which signifies posterity is collective, implying a multitude, and not a single individual only. This is a heavier imprecation than the former. It sometimes happens, that a family, overthrown by an unexpected disaster, rises up again at a subsequent period; here, however, it is the wish of the prophet, that the wicked may be so completely ruined, as never to be able to regain their former state; for thus much is implied in their name being effaced in the next generation, or after the lapse of ages.

And as the destruction which he denounces against the houses and families of the wicked is so extensive, that God punishes them in the person of their posterity, so he desires that God may remember the iniquities of their fathers and mothers, in order that their condemnation may be complete; and this is a principle in perfect accordance with the commonly received doctrine of Scripture. God, out of regard to his covenant, which is in force to a thousand generations, extends and continues his mercy towards posterity; but he also punishes iniquity unto the third and fourth generation. In doing this he does not involve the guiltless with the wicked indiscriminately, but by withholding from the reprobate the grace and illumination of his Spirit, he prepares the vessels of wrath for destruction, even before they are born, Romans 9:21. To the common sense of mankind, the thought of such severity is horrifying: but then we must recollect, that if we attempt to measure the secret and inscrutable judgments of God by our finite minds, we do him wrong. Struck with horror at the severity of this threatening, let us improve it as the means of filling us with reverence and godly fear. In reference to the language of Ezekiel,

“The son shall not bear the iniquity of the father, but the soul that sinneth, it shall die;” Ezekiel 18:20

we know that in these words he disproves the groundless complaints of the people, who, boasting that they were guiltless, imagined that they were punished wrongfully. When, however, God continues his vengeance from the father to the children, he leaves them no room for palliation or complaint, because they are all equally guilty. We have already said, that vengeance commences when God in withdrawing his Spirit, both from the children and the fathers, delivers them over to Satan. Some may inquire how it comes to pass, that the prophet, in desiring that their sin may be continually before God’s eyes, does not likewise add, let their name be blotted out from heaven, but merely wishes them to be cut off, and to perish in the world? My reply is, that he spoke agreeably to the custom of the age in which he lived, when the nature of spiritual punishments was not so well understood as in our times, because the period had not yet arrived, when the revelation of God’s will was to be full and complete. Besides, it is the design of David, that the vengeance of God may be so manifest, that the whole world may acquiesce in his equity as a judge.


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