
Text -- Psalms 64:1 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB: Psa 64:1 - -- A prayer for deliverance from cunning and malicious enemies, with a confident view of their overthrow, which will honor God and give joy to the righte...
A prayer for deliverance from cunning and malicious enemies, with a confident view of their overthrow, which will honor God and give joy to the righteous. (Psa 64:1-10)
Clarke -> Psa 64:1
Clarke: Psa 64:1 - -- Hear my voice - The psalmist feared for his life, and the lives of his fellow-captives; and he sought help of God. He prayed, and he lifted up his v...
Hear my voice - The psalmist feared for his life, and the lives of his fellow-captives; and he sought help of God. He prayed, and he lifted up his voice; and thus showed his earnestness.
Calvin -> Psa 64:1
Calvin: Psa 64:1 - -- 1.Hear my voice, O God! He begins by saying that he prayed earnestly, and with vehemence, stating, at the same time, what rendered this necessary. Th...
1.Hear my voice, O God! He begins by saying that he prayed earnestly, and with vehemence, stating, at the same time, what rendered this necessary. The voice is heard in prayer, proportionally to the earnestness and ardor which we feel. He condescends upon the circumstances of distress in which he was presently placed, and takes notice of the dangers to which his life was exposed from enemies, with other points fitted to excite the favorable consideration of God. His praying that God would protect his life, proves that it must have been in danger at this time. In the second verse, he intimates that his enemies were numerous; and that, without divine assistance, he would be unable to sustain their attacks. Some difficulty attaches to the words, from their being susceptible of two meanings. The Hebrew term
TSK -> Psa 64:1
TSK: Psa 64:1 - -- am 2943, bc 1061
Hear : Psa 27:7, Psa 55:1, Psa 55:2, Psa 130:1, Psa 130:2, Psa 141:1, Psa 143:1-3; Lam 3:55, Lam 3:56
preserve : Psa 17:8, Psa 17:9, ...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Psa 64:1
Barnes: Psa 64:1 - -- Hear my voice, O God, in my prayer - The use of the word voice here would seem to imply that this was audible prayer, or that, though alone, he...
Hear my voice, O God, in my prayer - The use of the word voice here would seem to imply that this was audible prayer, or that, though alone, he gave utterance to his petitions aloud. We have this same use of the word often in the Psalms, making it probable that even private prayers were uttered in an audible manner. In most cases, when there is no danger of being overheard, or of its being construed as ostentation or Pharisaism, this is favorable to the spirit of secret devotion. Compare the notes at Dan 6:10. The word here rendered prayer means properly speech, discourse; then, complaint; then, meditation. It is most commonly rendered complaint. See Job 7:13; Job 9:27; Job 10:1; Job 21:4; Psa 55:2 (notes); Ps. 102 (Title); Psa 142:2. It refers here to a state of mind caused by trouble and danger, when the deep meditation on his troubles and dangers found expression in audible words - whether those words were complaint or petition. As there are no indications in the psalm that David was disposed to complain in the sense of blaming God, the proper interpretation here is that his deep meditations took the form of prayer.
Preserve my life from fear of the enemy - Either Saul or Absalom. He prayed that his life might be made so secure that he would not have occasion to be afraid of his enemy.
Haydock: Psa 64:1 - -- God is to be praised in his Church, to which all nations shall be called.
Showers. This gives the sense, rather than the words of the Hebrew. (Ber...
God is to be praised in his Church, to which all nations shall be called.
Showers. This gives the sense, rather than the words of the Hebrew. (Berthier) ---
Pastors are still preserved to feed the faithful; and all the just receive the crown of justice, at the end of their life, 2 Timothy iv. (Worthington)

Haydock: Psa 64:1 - -- Of the captivity. That is, the people of the captivity of Babylon. This is not in the Hebrew, but is found in the ancient translation of the Septua...
Of the captivity. That is, the people of the captivity of Babylon. This is not in the Hebrew, but is found in the ancient translation of the Septuagint. (Challoner) ---
From the word canticle. (Haydock) ---
It is of little authority. Jeremias and Ezechiel were never together. (Calmet) (Berthier) ---
Perhaps the former might have put this psalm of David into the hands of the people, when they were going to Babylon, and Ezechiel might have exhorted them to recite it at their return. (Haydock) ---
It seems to have been composed by David, in thanksgiving for rain; (Psalm xxviii.; Muis) or some of the Levites wrote it, after God had removed the scourge of drought, with which he had afflicted the people, in consequence of their neglecting to finish the temple, Aggeus i. 4., and Malachias iii. 9. (Calmet) ---
David predicts the return from captivity, (Berthier) and the vocation of the Gentiles, (St. Hilary, &c.; Menochius) which the prophets Jeremias, &c., had insinuated, by the coming of the nations from Babylon, so as to forsake idolatry. (St. Augustine, &c.) (Worthington)
Gill -> Psa 64:1
Gill: Psa 64:1 - -- Hear my voice, O God, in my prayer,.... The prayer of the psalmist was vocal and expressed in a mournful manner, with groans and cries, as the word z ...
Hear my voice, O God, in my prayer,.... The prayer of the psalmist was vocal and expressed in a mournful manner, with groans and cries, as the word z used signifies, and with great ardour and fervency; his condition, by reason of his enemies, being very distressing, and therefore he is very eager and earnest that he might be heard;
preserve my life from fear of the enemy; David had his enemies. Saul and his courtiers, and was afraid of them; Christ had his enemies the wicked Jews, who sought his life before the time, and therefore he walked no more in Judea till near the time; and whose human nature was sometimes possessed of the fears of death, though they were sinless ones: the church and people of God have their enemies; as the men of the world, who revile, reproach, and persecute them; Satan their adversary, who goes about seeking to devour them; and their own corruptions and lusts which war against their souls; and death, the last enemy, which is so to human nature, though by the grace of Christ friendly to the saints. And the people of God have their fears of these enemies; they are afraid of men, their revilings and persecutions, though they have no reason since God is on their side; and of Satan, whose fiery darts and buffetings are very distressing, though if resisted he will flee; and of their own corruptions, lest they should one day perish by them; or, at least, lest they should break out, to the wounding of their souls, and the dishonour of God: and some of them, through fear of death, are all their lifetime subject to bondage: which fears, though they are not the saints' excellencies, but their infirmities, yet are consistent with the grace of God; and under the power and influence of these fears they apprehend sometimes their life to be in danger; and therefore pray to the God of their life, who has given them it, and is the preserver of it, that he would preserve their natural life, as he does; as also their spiritual life, which is preserved by him; is bound up in the bundle of life with the Lord their God, and is hid with Christ in God.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Psa 64:1 Heb “from the terror of [the] enemy.” “Terror” is used here metonymically for the enemy’s attacks that produce fear beca...
Geneva Bible -> Psa 64:1
Geneva Bible: Psa 64:1 "To the chief Musician, A Psalm of David." Hear my ( a ) voice, O God, in my prayer: preserve my life from fear of the enemy.
( a ) In that he calls ...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Psa 64:1-10
TSK Synopsis: Psa 64:1-10 - --1 David prays for deliverance, complaining of his enemies.7 He promises himself to see such an evident destruction of his enemies, as the righteous sh...
MHCC -> Psa 64:1-6
MHCC: Psa 64:1-6 - --The psalmist earnestly begs of God to preserve him from disquieting fear. The tongue is a little member, but it boasts great things. The upright man i...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 64:1-6
Matthew Henry: Psa 64:1-6 - -- David, in these verses, puts in before God a representation of his own danger and of his enemies' character, to enforce his petition that God would ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 64:1-4
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 64:1-4 - --
The Psalm opens with an octostich, and closes in the same way. The infinitive noun שׂיח signifies a complaint, expressed not by the tones of pai...
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...

Constable: Psa 64:1-10 - --Psalm 64
In this psalm David asked God to judge the enemies of the righteous. He requested divine protec...
