Study

a Bible passage

Click a verse to see commentary
Select a resource above

25. Psalm 25

1 In you, LORD my God,
   I put my trust.

    2 I trust in you;
   do not let me be put to shame,
   nor let my enemies triumph over me.

3 No one who hopes in you
   will ever be put to shame,
but shame will come on those
   who are treacherous without cause.

    4 Show me your ways, LORD,
   teach me your paths.

5 Guide me in your truth and teach me,
   for you are God my Savior,
   and my hope is in you all day long.

6 Remember, LORD, your great mercy and love,
   for they are from of old.

7 Do not remember the sins of my youth
   and my rebellious ways;
according to your love remember me,
   for you, LORD, are good.

    8 Good and upright is the LORD;
   therefore he instructs sinners in his ways.

9 He guides the humble in what is right
   and teaches them his way.

10 All the ways of the LORD are loving and faithful
   toward those who keep the demands of his covenant.

11 For the sake of your name, LORD,
   forgive my iniquity, though it is great.

    12 Who, then, are those who fear the LORD?
   He will instruct them in the ways they should choose. Or ways he chooses

13 They will spend their days in prosperity,
   and their descendants will inherit the land.

14 The LORD confides in those who fear him;
   he makes his covenant known to them.

15 My eyes are ever on the LORD,
   for only he will release my feet from the snare.

    16 Turn to me and be gracious to me,
   for I am lonely and afflicted.

17 Relieve the troubles of my heart
   and free me from my anguish.

18 Look on my affliction and my distress
   and take away all my sins.

19 See how numerous are my enemies
   and how fiercely they hate me!

    20 Guard my life and rescue me;
   do not let me be put to shame,
   for I take refuge in you.

21 May integrity and uprightness protect me,
   because my hope, LORD, Septuagint; Hebrew does not have LORD. is in you.

    22 Deliver Israel, O God,
   from all their troubles!


16. Have respect unto me. As the flesh is ever ready to suggest to our minds that God has forgotten us, when he ceases to manifest his power in aiding us, David here follows the order which nature dictates, in asking God to have respect unto him, as if he had altogether neglected him before. Now, it appears to me that the words might be explained thus: Have respect unto me, in order to pity me. He accounts it at once the cause and the source of his salvation to be regarded of God; and then he adds the effect of it: for as soon as God, of his own good pleasure, shall vouchsafe to regard us, his hand also will be ready to help us. Again, in order to excite the compassion of God, he sets forth his own misery, expressly stating that he is alone, that is to say, solitary; 564564     The Hebrew word here used is יחיד, yachid, unus, one, which is not infrequently put, as in this place, for a solitary and desolate person. David was now deserted, desolate, and destitute of all help. The word is used in the same sense in Psalm 22:20, and 35:17 and then he describes himself as poor. There can be no doubt that, in speaking thus, he alludes to the promises in which God declares that he will be always present with the afflicted and oppressed, to aid and help them.

17. The troubles of my heart are enlarged. In this verse he acknowledges not only that he had to contend outwardly with his enemies and the troubles which they occasioned him, but that he was also afflicted inwardly with sorrow and anguish of heart. It is also necessary to observe the manner of expression which he here employs, and by which he intimates that the weight and number of his trials had accumulated to such an extent that they filled his whole heart, even as a flood of waters bursting every barrier, and extending far and wide, covers a whole country. Now, when we see that the heart of David had sometimes been wholly filled with anguish, we need no longer wonder if at times the violence of temptation overwhelm us; but let us ask with David, that even whilst we are as it were at the point of despair, God would succor us.

18. Look upon mine affliction. By repeating these complaints so frequently, he plainly shows that the calamities with which he was assailed were not some slight and trivial evils. And this ought to be carefully marked by us, so that when trials and afflictions shall have been measured out to us after the same manner, we may be enabled to lift up our souls to God in prayer; for the Holy Spirit has set before our view this representation, that our minds may not fail us under the multitude or weight of afflictions. But in order to obtain an alleviation of these miseries, David again prays that his sins may be pardoned, recalling to his recollection what he had already stated, that he could not expect to enjoy the divine favor, unless he were first reconciled to God by receiving a free pardon. And, indeed, they are very insensible who, contented with deliverance from bodily affliction, do not search out the evils of their own hearts, that is to say, their sins, but as much as in them lies rather desire to have them buried in oblivion. To find a remedy, therefore, to his cares and sorrows, David begins by imploring the remission of his sins, because, so long as God is angry with us, it must necessarily follow, that all our affairs shall come to an unhappy termination; and he has always just ground of displeasure against us so long as our sins continue, that is to say, until he pardons them. 565565     “Cependant que nos pechez demeurent c’est a dire iusaues a ce qu’il les pardonne.” — Fr. And although the Lord has various ends in view in bringing his people under the cross, yet we ought to hold fast the principle, that as often as God afflicts us, we are called to examine our own hearts, and humbly to seek reconciliation with him.


VIEWNAME is study