
Text -- Psalms 7:5 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
This is the consequence, if such has been his conduct.
Clarke -> Psa 7:5
Clarke: Psa 7:5 - -- Let the enemy persecute my soul - If I have been guilty of the things laid to my charge, let the worst evils fall upon me.
Let the enemy persecute my soul - If I have been guilty of the things laid to my charge, let the worst evils fall upon me.
Calvin -> Psa 7:5
Calvin: Psa 7:5 - -- 5.Let mine enemy pursue It is a striking proof of the great confidence which David had in his own integrity, when he is willing to endure any kind of...
5.Let mine enemy pursue It is a striking proof of the great confidence which David had in his own integrity, when he is willing to endure any kind of punishment, however dreadful, provided he should be found guilty of any crime. If we could bring a good conscience like this before God, his hand would be more quickly stretched forth to afford us immediate assistance. But as it often happens that those who molest us have been provoked by us, or that we burn with the desire of revenge when offended, we are unworthy of receiving succour from God; yea, our own impatience shuts the gate against our prayers. In the first place, David is prepared to be given over to the will of his enemies, that they may seize his life, and throw it down to the ground; and then to be publicly exhibited as an object of their mockery, so that, even after he is dead, he may lie under eternal disgrace. Some think that the
TSK -> Psa 7:5
TSK: Psa 7:5 - -- Let : Job 31:5-10, Job 31:38-40
tread : Psa 44:5, Psa 60:12; Job 40:12; Isa 10:6, Isa 63:3; Zec 10:5; Mal 4:3
lay : Psa 49:12; Job 16:15, Job 40:13; J...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 7:5
Barnes: Psa 7:5 - -- Let the enemy persecute my soul - Persecute my "life,"for so the word rendered "soul," נפשׁ nephesh , is evidently used here. He was wi...
Let the enemy persecute my soul - Persecute my "life,"for so the word rendered "soul,"
And take it - Take my life; put me to death.
Yea, let him tread down my life upon the earth - The allusion here is to the manner in which the vanquished were often treated in battle, when they were rode over by horses, or trampled by men into the dust. The idea of David is, that if he was guilty he would be willing that his enemy should triumph over him, should subdue him, should treat him with the utmost indignity and scorn.
And lay mine honor in the dust - All the tokens or marks of my honor or distinction in life. That is, I am willing to be utterly degraded and humbled, if I have been guilty of this conduct toward him who is my enemy. The idea in all this is, that David did not wish to screen himself from the treatment which he deserved if he had done wrong. His own principles were such that he would have felt that the treatment here referred to would have been right and proper as a recompense for such base conduct; and he would not have had a word to say against it. His desire for the interposition of God, therefore, arose solely from the fact of his feeling that, in these respects, he was entirely innocent, and that the conduct of his enemy was unjust and cruel.
Selah - A musical pause, not affecting the sense, but introduced here, perhaps, because the sense of the psalm now demanded a change in the style of the music. See the notes at Psa 3:2.
Poole -> Psa 7:5
Poole: Psa 7:5 - -- I am contented, and wish that Saul may so persecute my life as to overtake it, and take it away. Mine honour ; either,
1. That honourable and roya...
I am contented, and wish that Saul may so persecute my life as to overtake it, and take it away. Mine honour ; either,
1. That honourable and royal estate to which I am chosen and designed. Or,
2. My reputation and memory. Or rather,
3. The same thing which he called his
soul and his life in the former branch of the verse, and here his honour ; it being very frequent to express one thing in several words or phrases in one verse. And so here may be observed a gradation. Let him,
1. Persist to persecute it ;
2. Take it ;
3. Tread it down, or destroy it; and,
4. Lay it in the dust , or bury it, to prevent all hopes of restitution.
Haydock -> Psa 7:5
Haydock: Psa 7:5 - -- That repaid. This seems better than "my peaceable one," as some translate the Hebrew, for it would be but a small commendation not to injure a frien...
That repaid. This seems better than "my peaceable one," as some translate the Hebrew, for it would be but a small commendation not to injure a friend: the pagans do as much. Duport therefore agrees with the Vulgate, and St. Jerome has, "If I have rendered evil to those who did me any, and sent my enemies empty away;" or, as the Hebrew is in the future, "I will let my enemies depart without fighting;" which is equivalent to, I will gain no advantage over them. (Berthier) ---
The man who takes revenge, injures himself, and becomes the devil's slave. (St. Augustine) ---
David had been so far from giving way to ingratitude, that he would not even hurt his enemy. (Haydock) ---
He let Saul escape, when he might easily have slain him. [1 Samuel xxvi.] (Calmet)
Gill -> Psa 7:5
Gill: Psa 7:5 - -- Let the enemy persecute my soul, and take it,.... That is, if the above things he was charged with could be proved against him; then he was content t...
Let the enemy persecute my soul, and take it,.... That is, if the above things he was charged with could be proved against him; then he was content that Saul his enemy should pursue after him, and apprehend him, and bring him to justice, by taking away his life from him;
yea, let him tread down my life upon the earth; with the utmost indignation and contempt, without showing any mercy; as the lion treads down his prey, and tears it to pieces, Mic 5:8; or as the potter treads his clay under foot, Isa 41:25;
and lay mine honour in the dust; meaning either his life and soul, as before; denominating himself from his better part, and which he elsewhere calls his glory, Psa 16:9; see Gen 49:6; or else his body, as R. Judah Ben Balaam, who is blamed for it by Jarchi; or rather his fame, credit, and reputation, that he had gained, both by his courage and valour in the field, and by his wise and prudent behaviour at court, 1Sa 18:7. Should he appear to be guilty of the crimes he was accused of, he is willing to have his glorious name buried in the dust of oblivion, and his memory perish for ever. The words are to be considered as a strong assertion of his innocence, in an appeal to God, the searcher of hearts, and the trier of the reins of men; and as imprecating on himself the worst of evils, should it not appear; see Job 31:21.
Selah; Aben Ezra renders "selah", "in truth", "let it be so"; and the Targum renders it, as usual, "for ever"; See Gill on Psa 3:2.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Psa 7:5 Heb “and my honor in the dust may he cause to dwell.” The prefixed verbal form is distinctly jussive. Some emend כְב...
Geneva Bible -> Psa 7:5
Geneva Bible: Psa 7:5 Let the enemy persecute my soul, and take [it]; yea, let him tread down my life upon the earth, and lay mine ( d ) honour in the dust. Selah.
( d ) L...

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 7:5-8
Constable: Psa 7:1-17 - --Psalm 7
In the title, "shiggaion" probably means a poem with intense feeling.36 Cush, the Benjamite, rec...
