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18. Psalm 18

1 I love you, LORD, my strength.

    2 The LORD is my rock, my fortress and my deliverer;
   my God is my rock, in whom I take refuge,
   my shield Or sovereign and the horn Horn here symbolizes strength. of my salvation, my stronghold.

    3 I called to the LORD, who is worthy of praise,
   and I have been saved from my enemies.

4 The cords of death entangled me;
   the torrents of destruction overwhelmed me.

5 The cords of the grave coiled around me;
   the snares of death confronted me.

    6 In my distress I called to the LORD;
   I cried to my God for help.
From his temple he heard my voice;
   my cry came before him, into his ears.

7 The earth trembled and quaked,
   and the foundations of the mountains shook;
   they trembled because he was angry.

8 Smoke rose from his nostrils;
   consuming fire came from his mouth,
   burning coals blazed out of it.

9 He parted the heavens and came down;
   dark clouds were under his feet.

10 He mounted the cherubim and flew;
   he soared on the wings of the wind.

11 He made darkness his covering, his canopy around him—
   the dark rain clouds of the sky.

12 Out of the brightness of his presence clouds advanced,
   with hailstones and bolts of lightning.

13 The LORD thundered from heaven;
   the voice of the Most High resounded. Some Hebrew manuscripts and Septuagint (see also 2 Samuel 22:14); most Hebrew manuscripts resounded, / amid hailstones and bolts of lightning

14 He shot his arrows and scattered the enemy,
   with great bolts of lightning he routed them.

15 The valleys of the sea were exposed
   and the foundations of the earth laid bare
at your rebuke, LORD,
   at the blast of breath from your nostrils.

    16 He reached down from on high and took hold of me;
   he drew me out of deep waters.

17 He rescued me from my powerful enemy,
   from my foes, who were too strong for me.

18 They confronted me in the day of my disaster,
   but the LORD was my support.

19 He brought me out into a spacious place;
   he rescued me because he delighted in me.

    20 The LORD has dealt with me according to my righteousness;
   according to the cleanness of my hands he has rewarded me.

21 For I have kept the ways of the LORD;
   I am not guilty of turning from my God.

22 All his laws are before me;
   I have not turned away from his decrees.

23 I have been blameless before him
   and have kept myself from sin.

24 The LORD has rewarded me according to my righteousness,
   according to the cleanness of my hands in his sight.

    25 To the faithful you show yourself faithful,
   to the blameless you show yourself blameless,

26 to the pure you show yourself pure,
   but to the devious you show yourself shrewd.

27 You save the humble
   but bring low those whose eyes are haughty.

28 You, LORD, keep my lamp burning;
   my God turns my darkness into light.

29 With your help I can advance against a troop Or can run through a barricade;
   with my God I can scale a wall.

    30 As for God, his way is perfect:
   The LORD’s word is flawless;
   he shields all who take refuge in him.

31 For who is God besides the LORD?
   And who is the Rock except our God?

32 It is God who arms me with strength
   and keeps my way secure.

33 He makes my feet like the feet of a deer;
   he causes me to stand on the heights.

34 He trains my hands for battle;
   my arms can bend a bow of bronze.

35 You make your saving help my shield,
   and your right hand sustains me;
   your help has made me great.

36 You provide a broad path for my feet,
   so that my ankles do not give way.

    37 I pursued my enemies and overtook them;
   I did not turn back till they were destroyed.

38 I crushed them so that they could not rise;
   they fell beneath my feet.

39 You armed me with strength for battle;
   you humbled my adversaries before me.

40 You made my enemies turn their backs in flight,
   and I destroyed my foes.

41 They cried for help, but there was no one to save them—
   to the LORD, but he did not answer.

42 I beat them as fine as windblown dust;
   I trampled them Many Hebrew manuscripts, Septuagint, Syriac and Targum (see also 2 Samuel 22:43); Masoretic Text I poured them out like mud in the streets.

43 You have delivered me from the attacks of the people;
   you have made me the head of nations.
People I did not know now serve me,
   
44 foreigners cower before me;
   as soon as they hear of me, they obey me.

45 They all lose heart;
   they come trembling from their strongholds.

    46 The LORD lives! Praise be to my Rock!
   Exalted be God my Savior!

47 He is the God who avenges me,
   who subdues nations under me,
   
48 who saves me from my enemies.
You exalted me above my foes;
   from a violent man you rescued me.

49 Therefore I will praise you, LORD, among the nations;
   I will sing the praises of your name.

    50 He gives his king great victories;
   he shows unfailing love to his anointed,
   to David and to his descendants forever.


43. Thou shalt deliver me from the contentions of the people. David states, in a few words, that he had experienced the assistance of God in all variety of ways. He was in great danger from the tumults which sometimes arose among his own subjects, if God had not wonderfully allayed them, and subdued the fierceness of the people. It also happened, contrary to the general expectation, that David, as is stated in the second clause of the verse, was victorious far and wide, and overthrew the neighboring nations who had a little before discomfited all Israel by their forces. It was an astonishing renovation of things, when he not only suddenly restored to their former estate the people of Israel, who had been greatly reduced by defeat and slaughter, but also made his tributaries the neighboring nations, with whom before, on account of their hostility to the nation of Israel, it was impossible to live in peace. It would have been much to see the kingdom, after having sustained so grievous a calamity, still surviving, and after having again collected strength recovering its former state; but God, contrary to all expectation, conferred upon the people of Israel more than this; he enabled them even to subdue those who before had been their conquerors. David makes mention of both these; he tells us, in the first place, that when the people rose up in tumult against him, it was none other but God who stilled these commotions which took place within the kingdom; and, in the second place, that it was under the authority, and by the conduct and power of God, that powerful nations were subjected to him, and that the limits of the kingdom, which, in the time of Saul, had been weak and half broken, were greatly enlarged. Hence it is evident that David was assisted by God, not less with respect to his domestic affairs, that is to say, within his own kingdom, than against foreign enemies. As the kingdom of David was a type under which the Holy Spirit intended to shadow forth to us the kingdom of Christ, let us remember that, both in erecting and preserving it, it is necessary for God not only to stretch forth his arm and fight against avowed enemies, who from without rise up against him, but also to repress the tumults and strifes which may take place within the Church. This was clearly shown in the person of Christ from the beginning. In the first place, he met with much opposition from the infatuated obstinacy of those of his own nation. In the next place, the experience of all ages shows that the dissensions and strifes with which hypocrites rend and mangle the Church, are not less hurtful in undermining the kingdom of Christ, (if God do not interpose his hand to prevent their injurious effects,) than the violent efforts of his enemies. Accordingly God, to advance and maintain the kingdom of his own Son, not only overthrows before him external enemies, but also delivers him from domestic contentions; that is to say, from those within his kingdom, which is the Church. 436436     “C’est a dire au dedans de son royaume qui est l’Eglise.” — Fr. In the song in 2nd Samuel, instead of these words, Thou hast made me the head of the nations, the word employed is תשמרני, tishmereni, which signifies to keep or guard, and is therefore to be understood in this sense, that David will be securely, and for a long time, maintained in possession of the kingdom. He knew how difficult it is to keep under discipline and subjection those who have not been accustomed to the yoke; and, accordingly, nothing is of more frequent occurrence than for kingdoms which have been lately acquired by conquest to be shaken with fresh commotions. But David, in the song in Samuel, declares that God, having elevated him to such a high degree of power as to make him the head of the nations, will also maintain him in the possession of the sovereignty he had been pleased to confer upon him.

A people whom I have not known shall serve me. The whole of this passage strongly confirms what I have just now touched upon, that the statements here made are not to be restricted to the person of David, but contain a prophecy respecting the kingdom of Christ which was to come. David, it is true, might have boasted that nations, with whose manners and dispositions he was only very imperfectly acquainted, were subject to him; but it is nevertheless certain, that none of the nations which he conquered were altogether unknown to him, nor removed at so great a distance as to render it difficult for him to acquire some knowledge of them. The conquests of David, therefore, and the submission of the people to him, were only an obscure figure in which God has exhibited to us some faint representation of the boundless dominion of his own Son, whose kingdom extends

“from the rising of the sun, even unto the going down of the same,”
(Malachi 1:11,)

and comprehends the whole world.


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