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64. Psalm 64

1 Hear me, my God, as I voice my complaint;
   protect my life from the threat of the enemy.

    2 Hide me from the conspiracy of the wicked,
   from the plots of evildoers.

3 They sharpen their tongues like swords
   and aim cruel words like deadly arrows.

4 They shoot from ambush at the innocent;
   they shoot suddenly, without fear.

    5 They encourage each other in evil plans,
   they talk about hiding their snares;
   they say, “Who will see it Or us?”

6 They plot injustice and say,
   “We have devised a perfect plan!”
   Surely the human mind and heart are cunning.

    7 But God will shoot them with his arrows;
   they will suddenly be struck down.

8 He will turn their own tongues against them
   and bring them to ruin;
   all who see them will shake their heads in scorn.

9 All people will fear;
   they will proclaim the works of God
   and ponder what he has done.

    10 The righteous will rejoice in the LORD
   and take refuge in him;
   all the upright in heart will glory in him!


9 And all men shall see, and shall declare the work of God. He insists more fully upon the good effects which would result from the judgment executed in leading such as had formerly overlooked a Divine Providence altogether, to catch a spirit of inquiry from the singularity of the spectacle; and acquaint themselves with, and speak one to another of a subject hitherto entirely new to them. He intimates, that the knowledge of what God had so signally wrought would extend far and wide — for he says, all men, etc. The Hebrew verb שכל, shachal, employed, admits either of the neuter signification, they shall understand, or of the active, they shall cause others to understand. But as it is usual with David to repeat the same thing twice, perhaps the latter or transitive sense is preferable. Another desirable consequence which would flow from the deliverance granted is mentioned in the last verse, that it would afford matter of joy, hope, and holy triumph to the saints, who would be confirmed in expecting the same help from God which he had extended to his servant David. Those formerly called the righteous are now styled the upright in heart, to teach us, that the only righteousness which proves acceptable is that which proceeds from inward sincerity. This truth I have insisted upon at large elsewhere.


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