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												Verse 1Psalms 59:1. Deliver me from 
												mine enemies, O my God — Thou 
												art God, and canst deliver me; 
												my God, under whose protection I 
												have put myself; and thou hast 
												promised me to be a God 
												all-sufficient, and therefore in 
												honour and faithfulness thou 
												wilt deliver me. He chiefly 
												means Saul by his enemies; but 
												speaks in the plural number, out 
												of reverence to his king, and 
												that he might, as far as he 
												could with truth, lay the blame 
												of these odious practices on 
												those that were about him.
 
 Verse 3
 Psalms 59:3. They lie in wait 
												for my soul — For my life, to 
												take it away. The mighty are 
												gathered against me — They are 
												all mighty, men of honour and 
												estates, and interest in the 
												court and country. They are in a 
												confederacy, united by a league; 
												and actually gathered together 
												against me; combined both in 
												consultation and action. Not for 
												my transgression, nor for my sin 
												— Without any provocation or 
												cause given by me. I am a sinner 
												before thee, O Lord, but I have 
												done them no injury. It was a 
												noble vindication of David’s 
												innocence, in that he could, in 
												the most private retirement, and 
												upon the most serious and 
												deliberate reflection, thus 
												solemnly appeal to God, that he 
												was not chargeable with the 
												least perfidy, wickedness, or 
												crime, which could excite the 
												hatred of his enemies, and give 
												occasion to Saul to pursue him 
												with such eagerness and malice, 
												to his destruction.
 
 Verse 4
 Psalms 59:4. They run — To and 
												fro, first to receive Saul’s 
												commands, and then to execute 
												them with all diligence; and 
												prepare themselves — With the 
												utmost speed and fury, to do me 
												a mischief; or, they dispose 
												themselves, as יכוננו, jeconanu, 
												may be properly rendered. They 
												place themselves here and there 
												about my house, that they may 
												catch me when I go out of it. 
												Awake to my help — Hebrew, 
												לקראתי, likraati, to meet me, as 
												I come abroad, and to conduct me 
												away with safety. And behold — 
												With an eye of pity; take 
												cognizance of my case, and exert 
												thy power for my relief.
 
 Verse 5
 Psalms 59:5. O Lord, &c., the 
												God of Israel — In covenant with 
												all true Israelites, whom thou 
												promisest to protect and bless. 
												Awake to visit all the heathen — 
												Or, these heathen, who, though 
												they are Israelites by birth, 
												yet in truth, and in their 
												dispositions and manners, are 
												mere heathen. Be not merciful — 
												Hebrew, אל תחן, al tachon, Thou 
												wilt not be merciful, that is, 
												Thou canst not with honour, nor 
												according to thy word, be 
												merciful, to any wicked 
												transgressors — Hebrew, כל בגדי 
												און, cal bogedee aven, 
												perfidious transgressors, or, 
												more literally, prevaricators of 
												wickedness; that is, such as are 
												guilty of great treachery and 
												perfidiousness, meaning such as, 
												with pretences of friendship, 
												persecuted him and other good 
												men, out of malice, and against 
												their own consciences. But 
												neither can God, in consistency 
												with the perfections of his 
												nature, and the truths of his 
												word, show mercy to any 
												incorrigible offenders.
 
 Verse 6-7
 Psalms 59:6-7. They return at 
												evening — Saul sent once to 
												destroy him, and the messengers 
												went back to inform him that he 
												was ill; but they returned in 
												the evening to bring him even in 
												his bed. They make a noise like 
												a dog — The Hebrew יהמו, jehemu, 
												signifies the confused hum and 
												noise of an assembled crowd. 
												“The psalmist here compares the 
												muttered threats of his enemies 
												to the growlings or snarlings of 
												a dog, ready to bite and tear 
												any person; and the comparison 
												is just and natural.” — Dodd. 
												And go round about the city — 
												When they did not find him in 
												his own house, they sought for 
												him in other parts of the city. 
												They belch out with their mouths 
												— Hebrew, יביעון, jabignun, they 
												pour forth, namely, words, even 
												sharp and bitter words, as the 
												next clause explains it, such as 
												threatenings, calumnies, and 
												imprecations, and that 
												abundantly and vehemently, as a 
												fountain doth waters, as the 
												word signifies. Swords are in 
												their lips — Their expressions 
												are as keen and mischievous as 
												swords; their threats and 
												reproaches are cruel and deadly. 
												For who, they say, doth hear? — 
												David doth not hear us, and God 
												either does not hear, or not 
												regard what we say. They vented 
												their calumnies more freely and 
												dangerously, because privately; 
												so that none could refute them.
 
 
 Verse 8-9
 Psalms 59:8-9. But thou, O Lord, 
												shalt laugh at them — Shalt 
												disappoint their high confidence 
												and hopeful designs, and then 
												deride them, and make them 
												ridiculous and contemptible to 
												others. Because of his strength 
												— That is, Saul’s strength, 
												because he is too strong for me: 
												or, as to his strength; will I 
												wait on thee — Hebrew, אליךְ 
												אשׁמרה, eeleicha eshmorah, I 
												will observe, or look, to thee. 
												“Saul’s soldiers give me no 
												concern; mine eyes are toward 
												thee;” for God is my defence — 
												Hebrew, משׁגבי, mishgabbi, my 
												high place, my refuge.
 
 Verse 10
 Psalms 59:10. The God of my 
												mercy — The giver of all that 
												mercy and comfort which I have 
												or hope for; shall prevent me — 
												With the blessings of his 
												goodness, Psalms 21:3. Thou 
												shalt help me seasonably, before 
												it be too late, and sooner than 
												I expect. God shall let me see 
												my desire upon mine enemies — 
												Namely, in their disappointment 
												and overthrow, as it follows; 
												which was very desirable to 
												David, no less for the public 
												good than for his own safety and 
												happiness. Dr. Waterland renders 
												the clause, God shall make me 
												look upon mine enemies. “The 
												word rendered enemies,” שׁוררי, 
												shorerai, “properly signifies 
												insidious men, who craftily 
												observed and lay in wait for 
												him. David says, God will cause 
												me to see them, or, see among 
												them; that is, to discover their 
												plots and contrivances to ruin 
												me, that they may not prove 
												fatal to me; or to see them fall 
												by the destruction which they 
												intend me.”
 
 Verse 11
 Psalms 59:11. Slay them not — 
												Hebrew, אל תהרגם, al tahargeem, 
												Thou wilt not slay them, namely, 
												suddenly, or at once; lest my 
												people — My countrymen, those 
												over whom thou hast appointed me 
												to be governor in due time; 
												forget — Their former danger, 
												thy glorious mercy in delivering 
												them, and their own duty to thee 
												for it. Hereby it plainly 
												appears that David, in his 
												prayers against, and predictions 
												concerning his enemies, was not 
												moved by private malice or 
												desire of revenge, but by the 
												respect which he had to God’s 
												honour, and the general good of 
												his people. Scatter them by thy 
												power — הניעמו, hanigneemo, Make 
												them to wander. As they have 
												wandered about the city and 
												country to do me mischief, so 
												let their punishment be 
												agreeable to their sin; let them 
												wander from place to place for 
												meat, (as it is expressed Psalms 
												59:15,) that they may carry the 
												tokens of thy justice, and their 
												own shame, to all places where 
												they come. And bring them down — 
												From that power and dignity in 
												which thou hadst set them, which 
												they so wickedly abused; and 
												from the height of their carnal 
												hopes of success against me.
 
 
 Verse 12
 Psalms 59:12. For the sin of 
												their mouth, &c. — For their 
												ungodly, injurious, and 
												pernicious speeches, of which he 
												spoke Psalms 59:7. Let them even 
												be taken — Hebrew, וילכדו, 
												vejillachedu, they shall be 
												taken as in a snare, namely, in 
												order to their ruin; in their 
												pride — For their proud and 
												insolent speeches against thee; 
												and for cursing and lying — For 
												their execrations, and lying 
												reports, which they have raised 
												or spread abroad; which they 
												speak — Which they are ready to 
												utter upon all occasions.
 
 Verse 13
 Psalms 59:13. Consume them in 
												wrath — By degrees, and after 
												thou hast made them to wander 
												about, Psalms 59:11. That they 
												may not be — Namely, any more in 
												the land of the living; and let 
												them know — Experimentally, and 
												to their cost; that God ruleth — 
												Over and above them; that though 
												Saul be king, yet God is his 
												superior in power and authority, 
												and all things shall be ordered 
												among us, not as Saul pleases, 
												but as God pleases; and 
												therefore I shall be preserved, 
												and at the proper time crowned, 
												in spite of all that Saul or his 
												forces can do against me. In 
												Jacob unto the ends of the earth 
												— In the land, and over the 
												people of Israel, whose king and 
												governor he is in a peculiar 
												manner, and throughout the 
												world. The sense is, that by 
												those eminent and extraordinary 
												discoveries of thy power, 
												wisdom, and justice, it may be 
												evident, both to them, and to 
												all that hear of it, that thou 
												art no inferior or local deity, 
												like the gods of the heathen, 
												but the high and mighty Jehovah, 
												the Creator, Upholder, Governor, 
												and Judge of the whole world.
 
 Verse 14-15
 Psalms 59:14-15. And at evening 
												let them return, &c. — This is a 
												repetition of the sixth verse, 
												but is to be understood in a 
												different sense. The sixth verse 
												is a real complaint of their 
												fury and diligence in pursuing 
												him; here he speaks of them with 
												a kind of indifference and 
												contempt; and as free from any 
												apprehension of danger from 
												them. “Let them, if they please, 
												return in the evening, growl at 
												me like dogs, and watch all the 
												avenues of the city, to take me; 
												yet, like greedy dogs, they 
												shall want their food, and 
												wander about, as those shivering 
												for hunger; for they shall not 
												be satisfied, but murmur on 
												account of their 
												disappointment.” The Hebrew 
												verbs of these verses are in the 
												future tense, and ought to have 
												been rendered, “They shall 
												return, &c. They shall make a 
												noise, and go round about the 
												city. They shall wander about, 
												shivering for hunger, and, 
												because not satisfied, they 
												shall murmur.” — Chandler and 
												Houbigant.
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