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Text -- Psalms 58:1-6 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Psa 58:1 - -- The word seems to point at Saul's judges and counsellors; who met together to consult what they should do against David.
The word seems to point at Saul's judges and counsellors; who met together to consult what they should do against David.
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Wesley: Psa 58:1 - -- So he calls them; to mind them that they were men, and must give an account to God for all their hard speeches.
So he calls them; to mind them that they were men, and must give an account to God for all their hard speeches.
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Wesley: Psa 58:2 - -- He intimates that they did great wrong under the pretence of justice, and while they seemed exactly to weigh the true proportion between the actions a...
He intimates that they did great wrong under the pretence of justice, and while they seemed exactly to weigh the true proportion between the actions and the recompenses allotted to them, they turned the scale; and pronounced an unjust sentence.
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Wesley: Psa 58:2 - -- Or, in this land, where God is present, and where you have righteous laws to govern you.
Or, in this land, where God is present, and where you have righteous laws to govern you.
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Wesley: Psa 58:3 - -- From God, and from all goodness. Their very natures are corrupt, even from their birth: they are the wicked offspring of sinful parents.
From God, and from all goodness. Their very natures are corrupt, even from their birth: they are the wicked offspring of sinful parents.
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Wesley: Psa 58:3 - -- By actual sins, from their childhood, as soon as ever they were capable of the exercise of reason.
By actual sins, from their childhood, as soon as ever they were capable of the exercise of reason.
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Wesley: Psa 58:5 - -- As they commonly say of the adders, such really are these men: deaf to all my counsels, to their own consciences, and to God's law. Of the charming or...
As they commonly say of the adders, such really are these men: deaf to all my counsels, to their own consciences, and to God's law. Of the charming or enchanting of serpents, mention is made both in other places of scripture, and in all sorts of authors, ancient and modern, Hebrew and Arabick, and Greek and Latin. And particularly the Arabick writers (to whom these creatures were best known) name some sorts of serpents, among which the adder is one, which they call deaf, not because they are dull of hearing, but, as one of them expressly faith, because they will not be charmed.
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Their powerful instruments of doing mischief.
JFB: Psa 58:1 - -- David's critical condition in some period of the Sauline persecution probably occasioned this Psalm, in which the Psalmist teaches that the innate and...
David's critical condition in some period of the Sauline persecution probably occasioned this Psalm, in which the Psalmist teaches that the innate and actual sinfulness of men deserves, and shall receive, God's righteous vengeance, while the pious may be consoled by the evidence of His wise and holy government of men. (Psa 58:1-11)
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JFB: Psa 58:1 - -- Literally, "Oh, dumb"; the word used is never translated "congregation." "Are ye dumb? ye should speak righteousness," may be the translation. In any ...
Literally, "Oh, dumb"; the word used is never translated "congregation." "Are ye dumb? ye should speak righteousness," may be the translation. In any case, the writer remonstrates with them, perhaps a council, who were assembled to try his cause, and bound to give a right decision.
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Or give decisions of violence. Weigh is a figure to express the acts of judges.
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JFB: Psa 58:3-5 - -- Describe the wicked generally, who sin naturally, easily, malignantly, and stubbornly.
Describe the wicked generally, who sin naturally, easily, malignantly, and stubbornly.
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JFB: Psa 58:4 - -- That is, the wicked man (the singular used collectively), who thus becomes like the deaf adder which has no ear.
That is, the wicked man (the singular used collectively), who thus becomes like the deaf adder which has no ear.
Clarke: Psa 58:1 - -- Do ye indeed speak righteousness - Or, O cabinet seeing ye profess to act according to the principles of justice, why do ye not give righteous couns...
Do ye indeed speak righteousness - Or, O cabinet seeing ye profess to act according to the principles of justice, why do ye not give righteous counsels and just decisions, ye sons of men? Or, it may be an irony: What excellent judges you are! well do ye judge according to law and justice, when ye give decisions not founded on any law, nor supported by any principle of justice! To please your master, ye pervert judgment; and take part against the innocent, in order to retain your places and their emoluments. Saul’ s counsellors appear to have done so, though in their consciences they must have been satisfied of David’ s innocence.
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Clarke: Psa 58:2 - -- Yea, in heart ye work wickedness - With their tongues they had spoken maliciously, and given evil counsel. In their hearts they meditated nothing bu...
Yea, in heart ye work wickedness - With their tongues they had spoken maliciously, and given evil counsel. In their hearts they meditated nothing but wickedness. And though in their hands they held the scales of justice, yet in their use of them they were balances of injustice and violence. This is the fact to which the psalmist alludes, and the figure which he uses is that of justice with her scales or balances, which, though it might be the emblem of the court, yet it did not prevail in the practice of these magistrates and counsellors.
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Clarke: Psa 58:3 - -- The wicked are estranged from the womb - " This,"says Dr. Kennicott, "and the next two verses, I take to be the answer of Jehovah to the question in...
The wicked are estranged from the womb - " This,"says Dr. Kennicott, "and the next two verses, I take to be the answer of Jehovah to the question in the two first verses, as the Psa 58:6, Psa 58:7, and Psa 58:8, are the answer of the psalmist, and the remainder contains the decree of Jehovah."He calls these wicked men, men who had been always wicked, originally and naturally bad, and brought up in falsehood, flattery, and lying. The part they acted now was quite in character.
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Clarke: Psa 58:4 - -- Their poison is like the poison of a serpent - When they bite, they convey poison into the wound, as the serpent does. They not only injure you by o...
Their poison is like the poison of a serpent - When they bite, they convey poison into the wound, as the serpent does. They not only injure you by outward acts, but by their malevolence they poison your reputation. They do you as much evil as they can, and propagate the worst reports that others may have you in abhorrence, treat you as a bad and dangerous man; and thus, as the poison from the bite of the serpent is conveyed into the whole mass of blood, and circulates with it through all the system, carrying death every where; so they injurious speeches and vile insinuations circulate through society, and poison and blast your reputation in every place. Such is the slanderer, and such his influence in society. From such no reputation is safe; with such no character is sacred; and against such there is no defense. God alone can shield the innocent from the envenomed tongue and lying lips of such inward monsters in the shape of men
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Clarke: Psa 58:4 - -- Like the deaf adder that stoppeth her ear - It is a fact that cannot be disputed with any show of reason, that in ancient times there were persons t...
Like the deaf adder that stoppeth her ear - It is a fact that cannot be disputed with any show of reason, that in ancient times there were persons that charmed, lulled to inactivity, or professed to charm, serpents, so as to prevent them from biting. See Ecc 10:11; Jer 8:17. The prince of Roman poets states the fact, Virg. Ecl. viii., ver. 71
Frigidus in prati cantando rumpitur anguis
"In the meadows the cold snake is burst by incantation.
The same author, Aen. vii., ver. 750, gives us the following account of the skill of Umbro, a priest of the Marrubians: -
Quin et Marru bia venit de gente sacerdos
Fronde super galeam, et felici comptus oliva
Archippi regis missu, fortissimus Umbro
Vipereo generi et graviter spirantibus hydris
Spargere qui somnos cantuque manuque solebat
Mulcebatque iras, et morsus arte levabat
"Umbro, the brave Marubian priest, was there
Sent by the Marsian monarch to the war
The smiling olive with her verdant bough
Shades his bright helmet, and adorns his brows
His charms in peace the furious serpent keep
And lull the envenomed viper’ s race to sleep
His healing hand allayed the raging pain
And at his touch the poisons fled again.
Pitt
There is a particular sect of the Hindoos who profess to bring serpents into subjection, and deprive them of their poison, by incantation. See at the end of this Psalm.
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Clarke: Psa 58:5 - -- Which will not hearken to the voice of charmers - The old Psalter translates and paraphrases these two verses curiously: -
Vulg. Furor illis secundu...
Which will not hearken to the voice of charmers - The old Psalter translates and paraphrases these two verses curiously: -
Vulg. Furor illis secundum similitudinem serpentis; sicut aspidis surdae et obturantis aures suas: Quae non exaudiet vocem incantantium et venefici in cantantis sapienter.
Trans. Wodes (madness) til thaim aftir the liking of the neddir, as of the snake doumb and stoppand her eres.
Paraph. Right calles he tham wod, (mad), for that hafe na witte to se whider that ga: for that louke thair eghen, and rennys till the are thaire wodness til clumsthed that wil noght be turned as of the snake that festis (fastens) the ta ere til the erth, and the tother ere stoppis with hir taile: Sua do thai that thai here not Godis word; that stope thair eris with luf of erthli thing that thai delite thaim in; and with thair taile, that es with all synnes, that that will noght amend
Trans. The whith salle noght here the voyce of charmand, and of the venim in akare of charmand wisli.
Paraph. This snake stopis hir eres that she be noght broth to light; for if she herd it, she come forth sone, he charmes swa wysli in his craft. Swa the wikkid men wit noght here the voyce of Crist and his lufers that are wys charmes; for thi wild (would) bring them till light of heven. Wyt ye well (know) that he (i.e., Christ) lufes noght charmars and venim makers but be (by) vices of bestes, he takes lickening of vices of men
It seems as if there were a species of snake or adder that is nearly deaf; and as their instinct informs them that if they listen to the sounds which charmers use they shall become a prey; therefore they stop their ears to prevent the little hearing they have from being the means of their destruction. To this the Old Psalter refers. We have also an account of a species of snake, which, if it cast its eye on the charmer, feels itself obliged to come out of its hole; it therefore keeps close, and takes care neither to see nor be seen. To this also the Old Psalter alludes; and of this fact, if it be one, he makes a good use.
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Clarke: Psa 58:6 - -- Break their teeth - He still compares Saul, his captains, and his courtiers, to lions; and as a lion’ s power of doing mischief is greatly less...
Break their teeth - He still compares Saul, his captains, and his courtiers, to lions; and as a lion’ s power of doing mischief is greatly lessened if all his teeth be broken, so he prays that God may take away their power and means of pursuing their bloody purpose. But he may probably have the serpents in view of which he speaks in the preceding verse; break their teeth - destroy the fangs of these serpents, in which their poison is contained. This will amount to the same meaning as above. Save me from the adders - the sly and poisonous slanderers: save me also from the lions - the tyrannical and blood-thirsty men.
Calvin: Psa 58:1 - -- 1.Do ye indeed speak righteousness? In putting this question to his enemies, by way of challenge, David displays the boldness of conscious rectitude....
1.Do ye indeed speak righteousness? In putting this question to his enemies, by way of challenge, David displays the boldness of conscious rectitude. It argues that the justice of our cause is demonstratively evident when we venture to appeal to the opposite party himself; for were there any ground to question its justice, it would show an absurd degree of confidence to challenge the testimony of an adversary. David comes forward with the openness of one who was supported by a sense of his integrity, and repels, by a declaration forced from their own lips, the base charges with which they blackened his character in the estimation of such as were simple enough to believe them. “Ye yourselves,” as if he had said, “can attest my innocence, and yet persecute me with groundless calumnies. Are you not ashamed of such gross and gratuitous oppression?” It is necessary, however, to determine who they were whom David here accuses. He calls them a congregation, and again, sons of men The Hebrew word
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Calvin: Psa 58:2 - -- 2.Yea, rather, in heart ye plot wickedness In the former verse he complained of the gross shamelessness manifested in their conduct. Now he charges t...
2.Yea, rather, in heart ye plot wickedness In the former verse he complained of the gross shamelessness manifested in their conduct. Now he charges them both with entertaining wickedness in their thoughts, and practising it with their hands. I have accordingly translated the Hebrew article
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Calvin: Psa 58:3 - -- 3.They are estranged, being wicked from the womb He adduces, in aggravation of their character, the circumstance, that they were not sinners of recen...
3.They are estranged, being wicked from the womb He adduces, in aggravation of their character, the circumstance, that they were not sinners of recent date, but persons born to commit sin. We see some men, otherwise not so depraved in disposition, who are drawn into evil courses through levity of mind, or bad example, or the solicitation of appetite, or other occasions of a similar kind; but David accuses his enemies of being leavened with wickedness from the womb, alleging that their treachery and cruelty were born with them. We all come into the world stained with sin, possessed, as Adam’s posterity, of a nature essentially depraved, and incapable, in ourselves, of aiming at anything which is good; but there is a secret restraint upon most men which prevents them from proceeding all lengths in iniquity. The stain of original sin cleaves to the whole humanity without exception; but experience proves that some are characterised by modesty and decency of outward deportment; that others are wicked, yet, at the same time, within bounds of moderation; while a third class are so depraved in disposition as to be intolerable members of society. Now, it is this excessive wickedness — too marked to escape detestation even amidst the general corruption of mankind — which David ascribes to his enemies. He stigmatises them as monsters of iniquity.
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Calvin: Psa 58:4 - -- 4.Their poison is like the poison of a serpent: they are like the deaf adder 348 He prosecutes his description; and, though he might have insisted on...
4.Their poison is like the poison of a serpent: they are like the deaf adder 348 He prosecutes his description; and, though he might have insisted on the fierceness which characterised their opposition, he charges them more particularly, here as elsewhere, with the malicious virulence of their disposition. Some read, their fury; 349 but this does not suit the figure, by which they are here compared to serpents. No objection can be drawn to the translation we have adopted from the etymology of the word, which is derived from heat. It is well known, that while some poisons kill by cold, others consume the vital parts by a burning heat. David then asserts of his enemies, in this passage, that they were as full of deadly malice as serpents are full of poison. The more emphatically to express their consummate subtlety, he compares them to deaf serpents, which shut their ears against the voice of the charmer — not the common kind of serpents, but such as are famed for their cunning, and are upon their guard against every artifice of that description. But is there such a thing, it may be asked, as enchantment? If there were not, it might seem absurd and childish to draw a comparison from it, unless we suppose David to speak in mere accommodation to mistaken, though generally received opinion. 350 He would certainly seem, however, to insinuate that serpents can be fascinated by enchantment; and I can see no harm in granting it. The Marsi in Italy were believed by the ancients to excel in the art. Had there been no enchantments practiced, where was the necessity of their being forbidden and condemned under the Law? (Deu 18:11.) I do not mean to say that there is an actual method or art by which fascination can be effected. It was doubtless done by a mere sleight of Satan, 351 whom God has suffered to practice his delusions upon unbelieving and ignorant men, although he prevents him from deceiving those who have been enlightened by his word and Spirit. But we may avoid all occasion for such curious inquiry, by adopting the view already referred to, that David here borrows his comparison from a popular and prevailing error, and is to be merely supposed as saying, that no kind of serpent was imbued with greater craft than his enemies, not even the species (if such there were) which guards itself against enchantment.
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Calvin: Psa 58:6 - -- 6.Break their teeth, O God! in their mouth 354 From this part of the psalm he assumes the language of imprecation, and solicits the vengeance of God,...
6.Break their teeth, O God! in their mouth 354 From this part of the psalm he assumes the language of imprecation, and solicits the vengeance of God, whose peculiar prerogative it is to repel oppression and vindicate injured innocence. It is necessary, however, that we attend to the manner in which this is done. He does not claim the judgment or patronage of God to his cause, until he had, in the first place, asserted his integrity, and stated his complaint against the malicious conduct of his enemies; for God can never be expected to undertake a cause which is unworthy of defense. In the verse before us, he prays that God would crush the wicked, and restrain the violence of their rage. By their teeth, he would intimate that they resembled wild beasts in their desire to rend and destroy the victims of their oppression; and this is brought out more clearly in the latter part of the verse, where he likens them to lions The comparison denotes the fury with which they were bent upon his destruction.
In the next verse, and in the several succeeding verses, he prosecutes the same purpose, employing a variety of apt similitudes. He prays that God would make them flow away like waters, that is, swiftly. The expression indicates the greatness of his faith. His enemies were before his eyes in all the array of their numbers and resources; he saw that their power was deeply rooted and firmly established; the whole nation was against him, and seemed to rise up before him like a hopeless and formidable barrier of rocky mountains. To pray that this solid and prodigious opposition should melt down and disappear, evidenced no small degree of courage, and the event could only appear credible to one who had learnt to exalt the power of God above all intervening obstacles. In the comparison which immediately follows, he prays that the attempts of his adversaries might be frustrated, the meaning of the words being, that their arrows might fall powerless, as if broken, when they bent their bow. Actuated as they were by implacable cruelty, he requests that God would confound their enterprises, and in this we are again called to admire his unshaken courage, which could contemplate the formidable preparations of his enemies as completely at the disposal of God, and their whole power as lying at his feet. Let his example in this particular point be considered. Let us not cease to pray, even after the arrows of our enemies have been fitted to the string, and destruction might seem inevitable.
Defender -> Psa 58:6
TSK: Psa 58:1 - -- Do : Psa 72:1-4; Deu 16:18, Deu 16:19; 2Sa 23:3; 2Ch 19:6, 2Ch 19:7; Isa 11:3-5, Isa 32:1; Jer 23:5, Jer 23:6
O congregation : Psa 82:1, Psa 82:2; Num...
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TSK: Psa 58:2 - -- in heart : Psa 21:11; Ecc 3:16; Isa 59:4-6; Jer 22:16, Jer 22:17; Eze 22:12, Eze 22:27; Mic 3:1-3, Mic 3:9-12; Joh 11:47-53
weigh : Psa 94:20; Isa 10:...
in heart : Psa 21:11; Ecc 3:16; Isa 59:4-6; Jer 22:16, Jer 22:17; Eze 22:12, Eze 22:27; Mic 3:1-3, Mic 3:9-12; Joh 11:47-53
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TSK: Psa 58:3 - -- estranged : etc. Psa 51:5; Job 15:14; Pro 22:15; Isa 48:8; Eph 2:3
as soon : etc. Heb. from the belly, Psa 22:10; Isa 46:3
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TSK: Psa 58:4 - -- poison : Psa 140:3; Ecc 10:11; Rom 3:13; Jam 3:8
like : Heb. according to the likeness of
serpent : Mat 3:7, Mat 23:33
the deaf : Jer 8:17, adder or a...
poison : Psa 140:3; Ecc 10:11; Rom 3:13; Jam 3:8
like : Heb. according to the likeness of
the deaf : Jer 8:17, adder or asp,
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TSK: Psa 58:5 - -- Which : That serpents might be charmed or rendered harmless was well known to the ancients. Virgil, and many others state the fact - Frigidus in p...
Which : That serpents might be charmed or rendered harmless was well known to the ancients. Virgil, and many others state the fact - Frigidus in pratis cantando , rumpitur anguis . ""In the meadows the cold snake is burst by incantation."
charming never so wisely : or, be the charmer never so cunning, Deu 18:11; Isa 19:3
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TSK: Psa 58:6 - -- Break their : Psa 3:7, Psa 10:15; Job 4:10, Job 4:11, Job 29:17; Eze 30:21-26
young : Psa 17:12, Psa 91:13; Num 23:24; Isa 31:4; Hos 5:14; Mic 5:8
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Psa 58:1 - -- Do ye indeed speak righteousness, O congregation? - Luther renders this, "Are you then dumb, that you will not speak what is right, and judge w...
Do ye indeed speak righteousness, O congregation? - Luther renders this, "Are you then dumb, that you will not speak what is right, and judge what is proper, ye children of men?"The meaning of the verse is exceedingly obscure; but probably the whole sense of the psalm turns on it. The word rendered "congregation,"
The "fact"in the case on which the appeal is made seems to have been that they did "not"do this; that their conduct was wicked and perverse; that no reliance could be placed on their judicial decisions. Rosenmuller renders it, "There is, in fact, silence of justice;"that is, justice is not declared or spoken. Perhaps the meaning of the phrase may be thus expressed: "Is there truly a dumbness or silence of justice when ye speak? do you judge righteously, O ye sons of men?"That is, "You indeed speak; you do declare an opinion; you pronounce a sentence; but justice is, in fact, dumb or silent when you do it. There is no correct or just judgment in the matter. The opinion which is declared is based on error, and has its origin in a wicked heart."There is no expression in the original to correspond to the words "O congregation"in our translation, unless it is the word
It is not so rendered in any of the versions. It is not easy to determine "who"is referred to by this question. It cannot be, as is implied in our common version, that it is to any "congregation,"any people gathered together for the purpose of pronouncing judgment. Yet it is evidently a reference to some persons, or classes of persons, who were expected to "judge,"or to whom it pertained to pass judgment; and the most natural supposition is that the reference is to the rulers of the nation - to Saul, and the heads of the government. If the supposition is correct that the psalm was composed, like Psa 56:1-13; Psa 57:1-11; 59, in the time of the Sauline persecutions, and that it belongs to the same "group"of psalms, then it would have reference to Saul and to those who were associated with him in persecuting David. The subject of the psalm would then be the unjust judgments which they passed on him in treating him as an enemy of the commonwealth; in regarding him as an outlaw, and in driving him from his places of refuge as if hunting him down like a wild beast. The contents of the psalm well accord with this explanation.
Do ye judge uprightly? - Do you judge right things? are your judgments in accordance with truth and justice?
O ye sons of men - Perhaps referring to the fact that in their judgments they showed that they were people - influenced by the common passions of people; in other words, they showed that they could not, in forming their judgments, rise above the corrupt passions and prejudices which usually influence and sway mankind.
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Barnes: Psa 58:2 - -- Yea, in heart ye work wickedness - Whatever might be the outward appearances, whatever pretences they might make to just judgment, yet in fact ...
Yea, in heart ye work wickedness - Whatever might be the outward appearances, whatever pretences they might make to just judgment, yet in fact their hearts were set on wickedness, and they were conscious of doing wrong.
Ye weigh the violence of your hands in the earth - It is difficult to attach any meaning to this language; the translators evidently felt that they could not express the meaning of the original; and they, therefore, gave what seems to be a literal translation of the Hebrew. The Septuagint renders it, "In heart you work iniquity in the land; your hands weave together iniquity."The Latin Vulgate: "In heart you work iniquity; in the land your hands prepare injustice."Luther: "Yea, willingly do you work iniquity in the land, and go straight through to work evil with your hands."Professor Alexander: "In the land, the violence of your hands ye weigh."Perhaps the true translation of the whole verse would be, "Yea, in heart ye work iniquity in the land; ye weigh (weigh out) the violence of your hands;"that is, the deeds of violence or wickedness which your hands commit. The idea of "weighing"them, or "weighing them out,"is derived from the administration of justice. In all lands people are accustomed to speak of "weighing out"justice; to symbolize its administration by scales and balances; and to express the doing of it as holding an even balance. Compare Job 31:6, note; Dan 5:27, note; Rev 6:5, note. Thus interpreted, this verse refers, as Psa 58:1, to the act of pronouncing judgment; and the idea is that instead of pronouncing a just judgment - of holding an equal balance - they determined in favor of violence - of acts of oppression and wrong to be committed by their own hands. That which they weighed out, or dispensed, was not a just sentence, but violence, wrong, injustice, crime.
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Barnes: Psa 58:3 - -- The wicked are estranged from the womb - The allusion here undoubtedly is to the persons principally referred to in the psalm - the enemies of ...
The wicked are estranged from the womb - The allusion here undoubtedly is to the persons principally referred to in the psalm - the enemies of David. But their conduct toward him suggests a more general reflection in regard to "all"the wicked as having the same characteristics. The psalmist, therefore, instead of confining his remarks to them, makes his observations general, on the principle that all wicked men have essentially the same character, and especially in respect to the thing here affirmed, that they go astray early; that they are apostate and alienated from God from their very birth. The words, "the wicked,"here do not necessarily refer to the whole human family (though what is thus affirmed is true of all the human race), but to people who in their lives develop a wicked character; and the affirmation in regard to them is that they go astray early in life - from their very infancy.
Strictly speaking, therefore, it cannot be shown that the psalmist in this declaration had reference to the whole human race, or that he meant to make a universal declaration in regard to man as being early estranged or alienated from God; and the passage, therefore, cannot directly, and with exact propriety, be adduced to prove the doctrine that "original sin"pertains to all the race - whatever may be true on that point. If, however, it is demonstrated from "other"passages, and from facts, that all men "are""wicked"or depraved, then the assertion here becomes a proof that this is from the womb - from their very birth - that they begin life with a propensity to evil - and that all their subsequent acts are but developments of the depravity or corruption with which they are born. It is only, therefore, after it is proved that people "are"depraved or "wicked,"that this passage can be cited in favor of the doctrine of original sin.
The word rendered are "estranged"-
They go astray - The Hebrew word used here means to go astray, to wander, to err. It is used in reference to drunken persons who reel, Isa 28:7; and to the soul, as erring or wandering from the paths of truth and piety, Eze 48:11; Psa 95:10; Psa 119:110; Pro 21:16. The "manner"in which the persons here referred to did this, is indicated here by their "speaking lies."
As soon as they be born - Margin, as in Hebrew, "from the belly."The meaning is, not that they speak lies "as soon as"they are born, which could not be literally true, but that this is the "first act."The first thing "done"is not an act of holiness, but an act of sin - showing what is in the heart.
Speaking lies - They are false in their statements; false in their promises; false in their general character. This is one of the forms of sin, indicating original depravity; and it is undoubtedly selected here because this was particularly manifested by the enemies of David. They were false, perfidious, and could not be trusted. If it be proved, therefore, that all people are wicked, then "this"passage becomes a proper and an important text to demonstrate that this wickedness is not the result of temptation or example, but that it is the expression of the depravity of the heart by nature; that the tendency of man by nature is not to goodness, but to sin; that the first developments of character are sinful; that there is something lying of sinful acts in people which makes it certain that they will act as they do; and that this always manifests itself in the first acts which they perform.
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Barnes: Psa 58:4 - -- Their poison - Their malignity; their bad spirit; that which they utter or throw out of their mouth. The reference here is to what they speak o...
Their poison - Their malignity; their bad spirit; that which they utter or throw out of their mouth. The reference here is to what they speak or utter Psa 58:3, and the idea is, that it is penetrating and deadly.
Like the poison of a serpent - Margin, as in Hebrew, "according to the likeness."In this expression no particular class of serpents is referred to except those which are "poisonous."
Like the deaf adder - Margin, "asp."The word may refer either to the viper, the asp, or the adder. See the notes at Isa 11:8. The "particular"idea here is, that the serpent referred to was as it were "deaf;"it could not be tamed or charmed; it seemed to stop its own ears, so that there was no means of rendering it a safe thing to approach it. The supposition is that there "were"serpents which, though deadly in their poison, "might"be charmed or tamed, but that "this"species of serpent could "not."The sense, as applied to the wicked, is, that there was no way of overcoming their evil propensities - of preventing them from giving utterance to words that were like poison, or from doing mischief to all with whom they came in contact. They were malignant, and there was no power of checking their malignity. Their poison was deadly, and there was no possibility of restraining them from doing evil.
That stoppeth her ear - Which "seems"to stop her ear; which refuses to hear the words and incantations by which other serpents are subdued and tamed. Others, however, refer this to the man himself, meaning, "like the deaf adder he stops his ear;"that is, he voluntarily makes himself like the adder that does not hear, and that will not be tamed. The former interpretation, however, is to be preferred.
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Barnes: Psa 58:5 - -- Which will not hearken to the voice of charmers - The word rendered "charmers"- לחשׁ lachash - means properly "whisperers, mutterers,...
Which will not hearken to the voice of charmers - The word rendered "charmers"-
Charming never so wisely - Margin, "Be the charmer never so cunning."The word rendered here "charming"-
It cannot be charmed down; it cannot be removed by any skill or power of man, however great. The following remarks from Dr. Thomson, who has spent twenty years in Palestine (land and the Book, vol. i. pp. 221-223), will illustrate this passage: "I have seen many serpent-charmers who do really exercise some extraordinary power over these reptiles. They carry enormous snakes, generally black, about them, allow them to crawl all over their persons and into their bosoms; always, however, with certain precautions, either necessary, or pretended to be so. They repeatedly breathe strongly into the face of the serpent, and occasionally blow spittle, or some medicated composition upon them. It is needless to describe the mountebank tricks which they perform. That which I am least able to account for is the power of detecting the presence of serpents in a house, and of enticing or ‘ charming’ them out of it. The thing is far too common to be made a matter of scepticism. The following account, by Mr. Lane, is a fair statement of this matter: ‘ The charmer professes to discover, without ocular perception (but perhaps he does so by a unique smell), whether there be any serpents in the house, and if there be, to attract them to him, as the fowler, by the fascination of his voice, allures the bird into his net.
As the serpent seeks the darkest place in which to hide himself, the charmer has, in most eases, to exercise his skill in an obscure chamber, where he might easily take a serpent from his bosom, bring it to the people without the door, and affirm that he had found it in the apartment, for no one would venture to enter with him, after having been assured of the presence of one of these reptiles within. But he is often required to perform in the full light of day, surrounded by spectators; and incredulous persons have searched him beforehand, and even stripped him naked, yet his success has been complete. He assumes an air of mystery, strikes the walls with a short palm-stick, whistles, makes a clucking noise with his tongue, and spits upon the ground, and generally says - I adjure you, by God, if ye be above or if ye be below, that ye come forth; I adjure you by the most great name, if ye be obedient, come forth, and if ye be disobedient, die! die! die!’ The serpent is generally dislodged by his stick from a fissure in the wall or from the ceiling of the room.
I have heard it asserted that a serpent-charmer, before he enters a house in which he is to try his skill, always employs a servant of that house to introduce one or more serpents; but I have known instances in which this could not be the case, and am inclined to believe that the dervishes above mentioned are generally acquainted with some physical means of discovering the presence of serpents without seeing them, and of attracting them from their lurking-places. What these ‘ physical means’ may be is yet a secret, as also the ‘ means’ by which persons can handle live scorpions, and can put them into their bosom without fear or injury. I have seen this done again and again, even by small boys. This has always excited my curiosity and astonishment, for scorpions are the most malignant and irascible of all insects. The Hindoos, and after them the Egyptians, are the most famous snake-charmers, scorpion-eaters, etc., etc., although gipsies, Arabs, and others are occasionally found, who gain a vagabond livelihood by strolling round the country, and confounding the ignorant with these feats."
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Barnes: Psa 58:6 - -- Break their teeth, O God, in their mouth - The word here rendered "break"means properly "to tear out."The allusion is to his enemies, represent...
Break their teeth, O God, in their mouth - The word here rendered "break"means properly "to tear out."The allusion is to his enemies, represented as wild beasts; and the prayer is, that God would deprive them of the means of doing harm - as wild animals are rendered harmless when their teeth are broken out.
Break out the great teeth of the young lions, O Lord - The word used here means properly "biters"or "grinders:"Job 29:17; Pro 30:14; Joe 1:6. Compare the notes at Psa 3:7. The word rendered "young lions"here does not refer to mere whelps, but to full-grown though young lions in their vigor and strength, as contrasted with old lions, or those which are enfeebled by age. The meaning is, that his enemies were of the most fierce and violent kind.
Poole: Psa 58:2 - -- In heart or, with your heart ; with free choice and consent, and not only by constraint, and out of compliance with Saul.
Ye weigh the violence of ...
In heart or, with your heart ; with free choice and consent, and not only by constraint, and out of compliance with Saul.
Ye weigh the violence of your hands or, you weigh violence or injustice with your hands. The phrase of weighing hath respect to their office, which was to administer justice, which is usually expressed by a pair of balances. So he intimates that they did great wrong under the pretence and with the formalities of justice; and whilst they scented exactly to weigh and consider the true and fit proportion between the actions and the recompences allotted to them, they turned the scale; and partly to curry favour with Saul, and partly from their own malice against David, pronounced an unjust sentence against him. In the earth; or, in this land, where God is present, and where you have righteous laws to govern you, and you profess better things.
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Poole: Psa 58:3 - -- Estranged to wit, from God, Eph 4:18 , and from all goodness.
From the womb either,
1. Hyperbolically; even from their tender years. Or,
2. Stric...
Estranged to wit, from God, Eph 4:18 , and from all goodness.
From the womb either,
1. Hyperbolically; even from their tender years. Or,
2. Strictly and properly. So the sense is, No wonder they act so unrighteously, for their very natures and principles are corrupt, even from their birth; they are the wicked offspring of sinful parents. And this hereditary and native corruption, though too common to all men, he particularly ascribes to these men; either because their immediate parents were such as did not only convey a corrupt nature to them, but greatly improved it by wicked counsel and example; or because they themselves had improved that stock of original corruption, and instead of mortifying it, had made it their great design and constant business to gratify and obey it.
They go astray by actual sins, the fruit of their original sin, as soon as they be born; from their childhood, as soon as ever they were capable of the exercise of reason, and the practice of sinning.
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Poole: Psa 58:4 - -- Their poison their virulent and malicious disposition, is like the poison of a serpent; partly in itself, being natural, and inveterate, and incurabl...
Their poison their virulent and malicious disposition, is like the poison of a serpent; partly in itself, being natural, and inveterate, and incurable; and partly in its most pernicious effects.
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Poole: Psa 58:5 - -- This similitude doth neither justify the practice of charming, which, in the very word here used, is condemned, Deu 18:11 , no more than those which...
This similitude doth neither justify the practice of charming, which, in the very word here used, is condemned, Deu 18:11 , no more than those which are drawn from the unjust steward, Luk 16:1 , &c.; Luk 18:2 , &c., and from a thief , Rev 16:15 ; nor yet affirm the truth of what is reported concerning the asps or adders, which are said to lay one ear close to the ground, and to cover the other with their tail, that so they may avoid the danger of enchantment; but only was taken from the common opinion, which he poetically mentions to this purpose: As they commonly say of the asps or adders, &c., such really are these men; deaf to all my counsels, and to the dictates of their own consciences, and to the voice of God’ s law. And yet of the
charming or enchanting of serpents, mention is made both in other places of Scripture, as Ecc 10:11 Jer 8:17 , and in all sorts of authors, ancient and modern, Hebrew, and Arabic, and Greek, and Latin of which see my Latin Synopsis . And particularly the Arabic writers (to whom these creatures were best known) name some sorts of serpents, among which the adder is one, which they call deaf , not because they are dull of hearing, but, as one of them expressly saith, because they will not be charmed.
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Poole: Psa 58:6 - -- Their teeth their power and instruments of doing mischief. He mentions teeth, partly because the adder’ s poison lies in its teeth; and partly t...
Their teeth their power and instruments of doing mischief. He mentions teeth, partly because the adder’ s poison lies in its teeth; and partly to make way for the following metaphor.
The great teeth called the grinders ; which are more sharp and strong than the rest, and more used in breaking and tearing what they are about to eat.
Haydock: Psa 58:1 - -- A prayer to be delivered from the wicked, with confidence in God's help and protection. It agrees to Christ and his enemies, the Jews.
Over. St. J...
A prayer to be delivered from the wicked, with confidence in God's help and protection. It agrees to Christ and his enemies, the Jews.
Over. St. Jerome, "my spies." (Haydock) ---
Forget. Let them suffer a long time, (Menochius) that their punishment may be a greater warning. The ancients read, "thy law," instead of people, and apply this to the Jews, (Calmet) who still preserve the law, and bear witness throughout the world that the prophecies were not a fabrication of Christians. (Haydock) ---
Their exemplary chastisement and continuance, may serve to caution all not to follow their example. Judæi testes iniquitatis suæ et veritatis nostræ. (St. Augustine) (Eusebius) ---
"If all the Jews had been converted, we should have had only suspicious witnesses; and if all had been exterminated, we hould have had none." God permits our spiritual adversaries to remain for our trial, (Tertullian) that we may not forget ourselves in prosperity. (Worthington) ---
We may also translate Al, "O God, (as well as not ) slay them, that they may attack my people no more;" (see 2 Esdras iv. 4.) for what reason could Nehemias have to beg that they might be spared? (Calmet) ---
God might have some. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Psa 58:1 - -- Watched. Hebrew, "they (the guards) watched." The psalm relates also to the resurrection of Christ, and vocation of the Gentiles, (Berthier) as wel...
Watched. Hebrew, "they (the guards) watched." The psalm relates also to the resurrection of Christ, and vocation of the Gentiles, (Berthier) as well as to the reprobation, and future conversion of the Jews. It seems to be most applicable to the times of Esdras and Nehemias: (2 Esdras iv. 1., and vi. 1.) one of whom may have composed it. (Calmet) ---
But this is only a conjecture, (Berthier) and Saul's emissaries may be styled Gentiles, (Menochius) because they imitated their manners. (Haydock) ---
Saul sent repeatedly, and went himself to attack David. He gave him Michol with the same design. (Worthington) ---
But God turned her heart another way. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Psa 58:4 - -- Caught. Hebrew, "laid snares for." Septuagint, "hunted." The enemy wished eagerly to take David, or Nehemias, (Haydock; Calmet) and they seemed to...
Caught. Hebrew, "laid snares for." Septuagint, "hunted." The enemy wished eagerly to take David, or Nehemias, (Haydock; Calmet) and they seemed to have so surrounded the former, as to be sure of him. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Psa 58:5 - -- I ran. Hebrew, "they," &c. But the Septuagint would not have made such a mistake, (Berthier) and the Hebrew appears to be incorrect, though we may ...
I ran. Hebrew, "they," &c. But the Septuagint would not have made such a mistake, (Berthier) and the Hebrew appears to be incorrect, though we may understand "without iniquity in me, they have run." (Calmet) ---
I gave them no offence. (Worthington) ---
All this may be well explained of Jesus Christ, who alone could use these expressions with propriety, being without sin.
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Haydock: Psa 58:6 - -- No mercy. Nehemias uses the like prophetic threats, 2 Esdras iv. 5. (Calmet) ---
"Every sin must be punished, either by the penitent, or by an ave...
No mercy. Nehemias uses the like prophetic threats, 2 Esdras iv. 5. (Calmet) ---
"Every sin must be punished, either by the penitent, or by an avenging God." The prophet supposes that his enemies died impenitent. (St. Augustine) ---
When the gospel was first preached, God visited the world with various afflictions, to make people enter into themselves. (Eusebius) ---
The prophet prays that God would visit all nations with peace, and punish obstinate persecutors of the Catholic Church. (Worthington)
Gill: Psa 58:1 - -- Do ye indeed speak righteousness, O congregation?.... Of the mighty, as in Psa 82:1; the judges of the land, who were many, and therefore called a con...
Do ye indeed speak righteousness, O congregation?.... Of the mighty, as in Psa 82:1; the judges of the land, who were many, and therefore called a congregation, as it is necessary they should; for, being many, they are not so easily bribed; and besides, one may see that in a cause which another does not. The word signifies a "sheaf" t; and so it is by some rendered, to which a bench or assembly of judges may be compared; because consisting of many, and a select body, who should unite together in a sentence or decree, and act uprightly, like a sheaf of wheat standing upright; see Gen 37:7; some think the word has the signification of dumbness, or silence; so Jarchi and R. Moses u; as "elem" in Psa 56:1, title, and render it, "do ye indeed speak dumb justice?" or "the dumbness of justice" w; or are you dumb, or your mouth silent, when ye should speak righteousness? and so the psalmist accuses them for their criminal silence, in not contradicting Saul and his courtiers when they spake against him; and for not advising him to another kind of conduct towards him. All men ought to speak that which is right and truth; but especially judges on the bench, who are to judge the people with just judgment, Deu 16:18; but here this is doubted of, and called in question; at least their sincerity in giving judgment: yea, it is denied; for this interrogation carries in it a strong denial; and the meaning is, that they did not speak righteousness, or that which was just and right in the cause of David, when before them;
do ye judge uprightly, O ye sons of men? no, they did not; they were unjust judges. The psalmist calls them "the sons of men", as in 1Sa 26:19, in distinction from God the Judge of all, and to put them in mind of their frailty and mortality; for though they were gods by office, they were but men, and should die like men, and be accountable to the supreme Judge for all their proceedings in judgment here, Psa 82:1.
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Gill: Psa 58:2 - -- Yea, in heart ye work wickedness,.... So far were they from speaking righteousness, and judging uprightly. The heart of man is wickedness itself; it i...
Yea, in heart ye work wickedness,.... So far were they from speaking righteousness, and judging uprightly. The heart of man is wickedness itself; it is desperately wicked, and is the shop in which all wickedness is wrought; for sinful acts are committed there as well as by the tongue and hand, as follows. This phrase also denotes their sinning; not with precipitancy, and through surprise; but with premeditation and deliberation; and their doing it heartily, with good will, and with allowance, and their continuance and constant persisting in it;
ye weigh the violence of your hands in the earth; they were guilty of acts of violence and oppression, which, of all men, judges should not be guilty of; whose business it is to plead the cause of the injured and oppressed, to right their wrongs, and to protect and defend them: these they pretended to weigh in the balance of justice and equity, and committed them under a show of righteousness; they decreed unrighteous decrees, and framed mischief by a law; and this they did openly, and everywhere, throughout the whole land.
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Gill: Psa 58:3 - -- The wicked are estranged from the womb,.... Which original corruption of nature accounts for all the wickedness done by men: they are conceived in sin...
The wicked are estranged from the womb,.... Which original corruption of nature accounts for all the wickedness done by men: they are conceived in sin, shapen in iniquity, and are transgressors from the womb; they are alienated from God, and from that godly life which is agreeable to him, and he requires; and from the knowledge and fear of him, and love to him; and they desire not the knowledge of him nor his ways; they are far from his law, and averse to it; and still more so to the Gospel of Christ; the doctrines of which, as well as the great things written in the law, are strange things to them; and they are aliens from the commonwealth of Israel, estranged from the people of God, know nothing of them, neither of their joys, nor of their sorrows;
they go astray as soon as they be born, speaking lies; they are wicked from their infancy, from their youth upward; and sin, which is meant by "going astray", as soon as they are capable of it, and which is very early. Sin soon appears in the temper and actions of then; they go out of God's way, and turn everyone to their own way, and walk in the broad road which leads to destruction: and particularly they are very early guilty of lying; as soon as they can speak, and before they can speak plain, they lisp out lies, which they learn from their father the devil, who is the father of lies; and so they continue all their days strangers to divine things, going astray from God, the God of truth, continually doing abominations and speaking lies; which continuance in these things makes the difference between reprobate men and God's elect; for though the latter are the same by nature as the former, yet their natures are restrained, before conversion, from going into all the sins they are inclined to; and if not, yet at conversion a stop is put to their progress in iniquity.
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Gill: Psa 58:4 - -- Their poison is like the poison of a serpent,.... Either their "wrath" and fury, as the word x may be rendered, against God, his people, and even one...
Their poison is like the poison of a serpent,.... Either their "wrath" and fury, as the word x may be rendered, against God, his people, and even one another, is like that of a serpent when irritated and provoked; or their mischievous and devouring words are like the poison of asps under their lips, Rom 3:13; or the malignity of sin in them is here meant, which, like the poison of a serpent, is latent, hid, and lurking in them; is very infectious to all the powers and faculties of the soul, and members of the body; and is deadly and incurable, without the grace of God and blood of Christ;
they are like the deaf adder that stoppeth her ear; the adder is a kind of serpent, in Hebrew called "pethen"; hence the serpent "Python". This is not, deaf naturally, otherwise it would have no need to stop its ear, but of choice; and naturalists y observe, that it is quicker of hearing than of sight. Jarchi indeed says, when it grows old it becomes deaf in one of its ears, and it stops its other ear with dust, that it may not hear the voice of the charmer; though others say z it stops one ear with its tail, and lays the other to the ground; but these seem fabulous. David speaks of it figuratively, that it acts as if it was deaf, regarding no enchantments, but bites notwithstanding; these having no influence on it, which, if they had any, could not be hindered by its deafness; and he compares wicked men to it, who are wilfully deaf to all good counsel and advice given them a.
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Gill: Psa 58:5 - -- Which will not hearken to the voice of charmers,.... Or "that use enchantments", to enchant serpents, by muttering certain words, or by magical songs;...
Which will not hearken to the voice of charmers,.... Or "that use enchantments", to enchant serpents, by muttering certain words, or by magical songs; by which means it is said that they have been drawn out of their holes, or caused to fly, or have become stupefied, and have lost their poison, and even burst asunder; as Bochart b relates from Pliny, Aelianus, Lucan, Isidore, Virgil, Ovid, Horace, and others: but an "asp" is unmoved by enchantments, and they are of no avail against its bites and poison c. Nor do these words suppose that the psalmist approved of enchantments, or affirms the virtue of them to be real, but rather suggests the contrary; he only takes his similitude from the seeming deafness and disregard of serpents to enchantments, to set forth the obstinacy of wicked men: and their resolution to continue in their wicked ways; like the serpent that disregards men:
charming never so wisely; being "wise, skilful" d, or made wise in enchanting enchantments; one very learned and expert in the art; or in "associating associations, skilful" e: who makes a consort of magical words to obtain his point, as some think; or because by his enchantments he associates and gathers many serpents together, and tames them; or because he does this by society and fellowship with the devil; methods no ways approved of by the psalmist, only alluded to. It may perhaps better be rendered, "which will not hearken to the voice of the eloquent, putting things together ever so wisely": the word is used for an eloquent orator, Isa 3:3. Such Gospel ministers are, who are mighty in the Scriptures. The voice of the Gospel is a charming voice; it publishes good news and glad tidings; it is a voice of love, grace, and mercy, of peace, pardon, righteousness, and salvation by Christ; and is wisely charmed when it gives no uncertain sound, is all of a piece, and is faithfully preached, as it was by the apostles of Christ; who, as wise men, laid him as the foundation of eternal life and salvation; and especially as it was preached by Christ himself, who spake as never man did: and yet, such were the hardness and obstinacy of the wicked Jews, that they stopped their ears to his ministry, nor would they suffer others to attend upon it; and so it is now: which shows the insufficiency of the best means of themselves, and the necessity of powerful and efficacious grace, to work upon the hearts of men.
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Gill: Psa 58:6 - -- Break their teeth, O God, in their mouth,.... From the description of the wicked, the psalmist passes to imprecations on his enemies; whom he represen...
Break their teeth, O God, in their mouth,.... From the description of the wicked, the psalmist passes to imprecations on his enemies; whom he represents as cruel and bloodthirsty, and as being stronger than he; and therefore he applies to God, who could, as he sometimes did, smite his enemies on the cheekbone, and break the teeth of the ungodly; which is done by taking the power and instruments of hurting from them: and it may be by "their teeth in their mouth" may be meant their malicious words, calumnies, and detractions; teeth being the instrument of speech; and by "breaking" them, preventing the mischief designed by them;
break out the great teeth of the young lions, O Lord: Saul was the old lion; his princes, nobles, and courtiers, the young ones; whose jaw teeth were as knives to devour David and his men, unless plucked out; or God in his providence should interpose, and hinder the performance of their mischievous and cruel designs; and who could easily destroy them by his blast, and by the breath of his nostrils, Job 4:9.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Psa 58:1 Heb “the sons of mankind.” The translation assumes the phrase is the object of the verb “to judge.” Some take it as a vocative...
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NET Notes: Psa 58:2 Heb “in the earth the violence of your hands you weigh out.” The imagery is from the economic realm. The addressees measure out violence, ...
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NET Notes: Psa 58:4 Heb “[that] stops up its ear.” The apparent Hiphil jussive verbal form should be understood as a Qal imperfect with “i” theme ...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 58:1 "To the chief Musician, Altaschith, Michtam of David." Do ye indeed speak righteousness, O ( a ) congregation? do ye judge uprightly, O ye sons of men...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 58:2 Yea, in heart ye work wickedness; ye weigh the violence of ( b ) your hands in the earth.
( b ) You are not ashamed to execute that cruelty publicly,...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 58:3 The wicked ( c ) are estranged from the womb: they go astray as soon as they be born, speaking lies.
( c ) That is, enemies to the people of God even...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 58:4 Their poison [is] like the poison of a serpent: [they are] like the deaf ( d ) adder [that] stoppeth her ear;
( d ) They pass in malice and subtilty ...
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Geneva Bible: Psa 58:6 Break their ( e ) teeth, O God, in their mouth: break out the great teeth of the young lions, O LORD.
( e ) Take away all opportunity and means by wh...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 58:1-11
TSK Synopsis: Psa 58:1-11 - --1 David reproves wicked judges;3 describes the nature of the wicked;6 devotes them to God's judgments;10 whereat the righteous shall rejoice.
MHCC -> Psa 58:1-5; Psa 58:6-11
MHCC: Psa 58:1-5 - --When wrong is done under the form of law, it is worse than any other; especially it is grievous to behold those who profess to be children of God, joi...
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MHCC: Psa 58:6-11 - --David prayed that the enemies of God's church and people might be disabled to do further mischief. We may, in faith, pray against the designs of the e...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 58:1-5; Psa 58:6-11
Matthew Henry: Psa 58:1-5 - -- We have reason to think that this psalm refers to the malice of Saul and his janizaries against David, because it bears the same inscription ( Al-ta...
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Matthew Henry: Psa 58:6-11 - -- In these verses we have, I. David's prayers against his enemies, and all the enemies of God's church and people; for it is as such that he looks upo...
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 58:1-2 - --
The text of Psa 58:2 runs: Do ye really dictate the silence of righteousness? i.e., that before which righteousness must become silent, as the col...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 58:3-5 - --
After this bold beginning the boldest figures follow one another rapidly; and the first of these is that of the serpent, which is kept up longer tha...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 58:6-9 - --
The verb הרס is used much in the same way in Psa 58:7 as ἀράσσειν (e.g., Iliad , xiii. 577, ἀπὸ δὲ τρυφάλε...
Constable: Psa 42:1--72:20 - --II. Book 2: chs. 42--72
In Book 1 we saw that all the psalms except 1, 2, 10, and 33 claimed David as their writ...
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Constable: Psa 58:1-11 - --Psalm 58
In this psalm David called on God to judge corrupt judges so the righteous would continue to tr...
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Constable: Psa 58:1-4 - --1. The marks of crooked judges 58:1-5
58:1 The psalmist introduced his condemnation of certain unjust judges with two questions. He questioned the int...
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Constable: Psa 58:5-8 - --2. The punishment of crooked judges 58:6-9
58:6-8 David called on God to deal with these unjust men. Breaking the teeth symbolizes painfully removing ...
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