
Text -- Psalms 7:3 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Which Cush and others falsely lay to my charge.
JFB -> Psa 7:3
Clarke -> Psa 7:3
Clarke: Psa 7:3 - -- If I have done this - David was accused by Saul of affecting the kingdom; and of waiting for an opportunity to take away the life of his king, his p...
If I have done this - David was accused by Saul of affecting the kingdom; and of waiting for an opportunity to take away the life of his king, his patron, and his friend. In his application to God he refers to these charges; meets them with indignation; and clears himself of them by a strong appeal to his Judge; and an imprecation that, if he had meditated or designed any such thing, he might meet with nothing but curse and calamity either from God or man.
Calvin -> Psa 7:3
Calvin: Psa 7:3 - -- 3.O Jehovah my God Here David, to induce God to show him favour, protests that he is molested unjustly, and without being guilty of any crime. To giv...
3.O Jehovah my God Here David, to induce God to show him favour, protests that he is molested unjustly, and without being guilty of any crime. To give his protestation the greater weight, he uses an imprecation. If he has done any wrong, he declares his readiness to bear the blame; yea, he offers to endure the severest punishment, if he is not altogether innocent of the crime of which all men thought him almost convicted. And by entreating God to succour him upon no other condition than this, that his integrity should upon trial be found to be untarnished, he teaches us, by his example, that as often as we have recourse to God, we must make it our first care to be well assured in our own consciences with respect to the righteousness of our cause; for we do him great wrong if we wish to engage him as the advocate and defender of a bad cause. The pronoun this shows that he speaks of a thing which was generally known; whence we may conclude, that the slander which had been raised by Cush was spread far and wide. And as David was condemned, by the false reports and unrighteous judgments which men advanced against him, and saw no remedy on earth, he betakes himself to the judgment-seat of God, and contents himself with maintaining his innocence before the heavenly Judge; an example which all the godly should imitate, in order that, in opposition to the slanderous reports which are spread against them, they may rest satisfied with the judgment of God alone. He next declares more distinctly, that he had committed no crime. And in the fourth verse, he mentions two particulars in self-vindication; first, That he had done no wrong to any one; and, secondly, That he had rather endeavoured to do good to his enemies, by whom notwithstanding he had been injured without any just cause. I, therefore, explain the fourth verse thus: If I have wronged any man that was at peace with me, and have not rather succoured the unworthy, who persecuted me without a cause, etc. Since David was hated of almost all men, as if ambition to reign had impelled him perfidiously to rise up in rebellion against Saul, and to lay snares for the monarch to whom he was bound by the oath of allegiances 101 in the first part of the verse, he clears himself of such a foul slander. The reason, perhaps, why he calls Saul him that was at peace with him is, that on account of his royal dignity his person ought to be sacred, and secure from danger, 102 so that it should be unlawful to make any hostile attempt against him. This phrase, however, may be understood generally, as if he had said, No one who has meekly restrained himself from injuring me, and has conducted himself kindly towards me, can with truth complain that I have ever injured him in a single instance. And yet it was the general persuasion, that David, in the midst of peace, had stirred up great confusion, and caused war. From this it is just so much the more manifest, that David, provided he enjoyed the approbation of God, was contented with the consolation arising from this, though he should have comfort from no other source.
TSK -> Psa 7:3
TSK: Psa 7:3 - -- if I : Psa 59:3; Jos 22:22; 1Sa 20:8, 1Sa 22:8, 1Sa 22:13, 1Sa 24:9, 1Sa 26:18, 1Sa 26:19; 2Sa 16:7, 2Sa 16:8; Job 16:17-19
if there : Psa 66:18; 1Sa ...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 7:3
Barnes: Psa 7:3 - -- O Lord my God - A solemn appeal to God as to the sincerity and truth of what he was about to say. If I have done this - This thing charge...
O Lord my God - A solemn appeal to God as to the sincerity and truth of what he was about to say.
If I have done this - This thing charged upon me, for it is evident that "Cush,"whoever he was, had accused him of some wrong thing - some wicked action. What that was can only be learned from what follows, and even this is not very specific. So far as appears, however, it would seem to be that he accused David of bringing evil, in some way, upon one who was at peace with him; that is, of wantonly and without provocation doing him wrong, and of so doing wrong that he had the avails of it in his own possession - some spoil, or plunder, or property, that he had taken from him. The charge would seem to be, that he had made a wanton and unprovoked attack on one who had not injured him, and that he had taken, and had still in his possession, something of value that properly belonged to another. Whether the accuser (Cush) in this referred to himself or to some other person, does not appear clear from the psalm; but as he was filled with rage, and as the life of David was endangered by him, it would seem most probable that the reference was to himself, and that he felt he had been personally wronged. The design of David, in the passage now before us, is to deny this charge altogether. This he does in the most explicit manner, by saying that this was so far from being true, that he had, on the contrary, delivered the life of him that was his enemy, and by adding that, if this were so, he would be willing that the injured man should persecute and oppose him, and even trample his life down to the earth.
If there be iniquity in my hands - That is, if there is the iniquity referred to; or, in other words, if he had in his possession what had been wrongfully taken from another, to wit, as appears, from this "Cush"who now accused him. The word "iniquity"here denotes an "unjust possession"- a property that had been unjustly taken from another; and, as remarked above, the slanderous charge would seem to have been, that he had taken that property from some one who was at peace with him, and that he retained it contrary to justice. This charge David means peremptorily to deny.
Poole -> Psa 7:3
Poole: Psa 7:3 - -- If I have done this i.e. that which Cush and others falsely lay to my charge. If I design or have endeavoured to take away Saul’ s crown and lif...
If I have done this i.e. that which Cush and others falsely lay to my charge. If I design or have endeavoured to take away Saul’ s crown and life by violence, as Saul’ s courtiers maliciously reported, 1Sa 24:9,10 26:19 .
In my hands i.e. in my actions or carriage towards Saul. The hand is oft put for actions , whereof the hand is a great and common instrument, as Psa 78:42 109:27 Jon 3:8 . If I design or have attempted to lay violent hands upon Saul.
Haydock -> Psa 7:3
Haydock: Psa 7:3 - -- Lion. In a spiritual sense this is the devil, 1 Peter v. 8. (St. Augustine) ---
"Let him only see the sign of the cross, or the lamp continually b...
Lion. In a spiritual sense this is the devil, 1 Peter v. 8. (St. Augustine) ---
"Let him only see the sign of the cross, or the lamp continually burning before the altar, he will flee away. Should we wonder at this? the garments alone of Paul drove him from possessed person." [Acts xix. 12.] (St. Chrysostom) ---
Will modern sectaries still ridicule these things? ---
While. Hebrew, "tearing, and not snatching away." But there is a similar construction, (Lamentations v. 8.) which shews that we ought to follow the Vulgate. (Berthier) ---
Absalom, or any other enemy, may be this lion. (Worthington) ---
They threatened David with utter ruin, which he could never have escaped, without God's visible protection.
Gill -> Psa 7:3
Gill: Psa 7:3 - -- O Lord my God, if I have done this. The crime which Saul and his courtiers charged him with, and which was made so public that every body knew it; and...
O Lord my God, if I have done this. The crime which Saul and his courtiers charged him with, and which was made so public that every body knew it; and therefore it was needless particularly to mention it; namely, that he lay in wait for Saul, and sought his life to take it away, 1Sa 24:9. The Targum interprets it of this psalm, paraphrasing it, "if I have made this song with an evil intention"; to give an ill character of any, and lead them with false charges;
if there be iniquity in my hands; not that he was without sin, he had it in his heart; nor that he lived without the actual commission of sin: but his sense is, that there was no iniquity, as not in his heart, purpose, and design, so not in his hand, nor attempted by him, of the kind he was accused of, 1Sa 24:11. Otherwise, we often hear him complaining of the depravity of his nature, and acknowledging his sins and transgressions, Psa 32:5.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 7:1-17
TSK Synopsis: Psa 7:1-17 - --1 David prays against the malice of his enemies, professing his innocency.10 By faith he sees his defence, and the destruction of his enemies.
MHCC -> Psa 7:1-9
MHCC: Psa 7:1-9 - --David flees to God for succour. But Christ alone could call on Heaven to attest his uprightness in all things. All His works were wrought in righteous...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 7:1-9
Matthew Henry: Psa 7:1-9 - -- Shiggaion is a song or psalm (the word is used so only here and Hab 3:1) - a wandering song (so some), the matter and composition of the sev...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 7:3-5
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 7:3-5 - --
(Heb.: 7:4-6) According to the inscription זאת points to the substance of those slanderous sayings of the Benjamite. With בּכפּי אם־י...
Constable -> Psa 7:1-17; Psa 7:2-4
Constable: Psa 7:1-17 - --Psalm 7
In the title, "shiggaion" probably means a poem with intense feeling.36 Cush, the Benjamite, rec...
