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71. Psalm 71

1 In you, LORD, I have taken refuge;
   let me never be put to shame.

2 In your righteousness, rescue me and deliver me;
   turn your ear to me and save me.

3 Be my rock of refuge,
   to which I can always go;
give the command to save me,
   for you are my rock and my fortress.

4 Deliver me, my God, from the hand of the wicked,
   from the grasp of those who are evil and cruel.

    5 For you have been my hope, Sovereign LORD,
   my confidence since my youth.

6 From birth I have relied on you;
   you brought me forth from my mother’s womb.
   I will ever praise you.

7 I have become a sign to many;
   you are my strong refuge.

8 My mouth is filled with your praise,
   declaring your splendor all day long.

    9 Do not cast me away when I am old;
   do not forsake me when my strength is gone.

10 For my enemies speak against me;
   those who wait to kill me conspire together.

11 They say, “God has forsaken him;
   pursue him and seize him,
   for no one will rescue him.”

12 Do not be far from me, my God;
   come quickly, God, to help me.

13 May my accusers perish in shame;
   may those who want to harm me
   be covered with scorn and disgrace.

    14 As for me, I will always have hope;
   I will praise you more and more.

    15 My mouth will tell of your righteous deeds,
   of your saving acts all day long—
   though I know not how to relate them all.

16 I will come and proclaim your mighty acts, Sovereign LORD;
   I will proclaim your righteous deeds, yours alone.

17 Since my youth, God, you have taught me,
   and to this day I declare your marvelous deeds.

18 Even when I am old and gray,
   do not forsake me, my God,
till I declare your power to the next generation,
   your mighty acts to all who are to come.

    19 Your righteousness, God, reaches to the heavens,
   you who have done great things.
   Who is like you, God?

20 Though you have made me see troubles,
   many and bitter,
   you will restore my life again;
from the depths of the earth
   you will again bring me up.

21 You will increase my honor
   and comfort me once more.

    22 I will praise you with the harp
   for your faithfulness, my God;
I will sing praise to you with the lyre,
   Holy One of Israel.

23 My lips will shout for joy
   when I sing praise to you—
   I whom you have delivered.

24 My tongue will tell of your righteous acts
   all day long,
for those who wanted to harm me
   have been put to shame and confusion.


6. Upon thee have I been sustained from the womb. This verse corresponds with the preceding, except that David proceeds farther. He not only celebrates the goodness of God which he had experienced from his childhood, but also those proofs of it which he had received previous to his birth. An almost similar confession is contained in Psalm 22:9, 10, by which is magnified the wonderful power and inestimable goodness of God in the generation of men, the way and manner of which would be altogether incredible, were it not a fact with which we are quite familiar. If we are astonished at that part of the history of the flood, in which Moses declares (Genesis 8:13) that Noah and his household lived ten months amidst the offensive nuisance produced by so many living creatures, when he could not draw the breath of life, have we not equal reason to marvel that the infant, shut up within its mother’s womb, can live in such a condition as would suffocate the strongest man in half an hour? But we thus see how little account we make of the miracles which God works, in consequence of our familiarity with them. The Spirit, therefore, justly rebukes this ingratitude, by commending to our consideration this memorable instance of the grace of God, which is exhibited in our birth and generation. When we are born into the world, although the mother do her office, and the midwife may be present with her, and many others may lend their help, yet did not God, putting, so to speak, his hand under us, receive us into his bosom, what would become of us? and what hope would there be of the continuance of our life? Yea, rather, were it not for this, our very birth would be an entrance into a thousand deaths. God, therefore, is with the highest propriety said to take us out of our mother’s bowels To this corresponds the concluding part of the verse, My praise is continually of thee; by which the Psalmist means that he had been furnished with matter for praising God without intermission.


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