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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Psa 7:15-16; Psa 7:17
JFB: Psa 7:15-16 - -- 1Sa 18:17; 1Sa 31:2 illustrate the statement whether alluded to or not. These verses are expository of Psa 7:14, showing how the devices of the wicked...
Clarke: Psa 7:16 - -- Shall come down upon his own pate - Upon his scalp, קדקד kodkod , the top of the head. It may refer to knocking the criminal on the head, in or...
Shall come down upon his own pate - Upon his scalp,

Clarke: Psa 7:17 - -- I will praise the Lord according to his righteousness - I shall celebrate both his justice and his mercy. I will sing praise to the name of the Lord...
I will praise the Lord according to his righteousness - I shall celebrate both his justice and his mercy. I will sing praise to the name of the Lord Most High. The name of God is often put for his perfections. So here,
Calvin -> Psa 7:17
Calvin: Psa 7:17 - -- 17.I will praise Jehovah according to his righteousness; and I will sing to the name of Jehovah, Most High As the design of God in the deliverances w...
17.I will praise Jehovah according to his righteousness; and I will sing to the name of Jehovah, Most High As the design of God in the deliverances which he vouchsafes to his servants is, that they may render to him in return the sacrifices of praise, David here promises that he will gratefully acknowledge the deliverance which he had received, and at the same time affirms that his preservation from death was the undoubted and manifest work of God. He could not, with truth, and from the heart, have ascribed to God the praise of his deliverance, if he had not been fully persuaded that he had been preserved otherwise than by the power of man. He, therefore, not only promises to exercise the gratitude which was due to his deliverer, but he confirms in one word what he has rehearsed throughout the psalm, that he is indebted for his life to the grace of God, who had not suffered Saul to take it from him. The righteousness of God is here to be understood of his faithfulness which he makes good to his servants in defending and preserving their lives. God does not shut up or conceal his righteousness from our view in the secret recesses of his own mind, but manifests it for our advantage when he defends us against all wrongful violence, delivers us from oppression, and preserves us in safety although wicked men make war upon us and persecute us.
TSK: Psa 7:16 - -- Psa 36:4, Psa 36:12, Psa 37:12, Psa 37:13; 1Sa 23:9, 1Sa 24:12, 1Sa 24:13, 1Sa 26:10, 1Sa 28:19, 1Sa 31:3, 1Sa 31:4; 1Ki 2:32; Est 9:25; Mal 2:3-5

TSK: Psa 7:17 - -- according : Psa 35:28, Psa 51:14, Psa 71:15, Psa 71:16, Psa 98:2, Psa 111:3, Psa 145:7
most : Psa 9:2, Psa 92:1, Psa 92:8; Dan 4:17, Dan 4:25, Dan 4:3...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Psa 7:16 - -- His mischief - The mischief which he had designed for others. Shall return upon his own head - Shall come upon himself. The blow which he...
His mischief - The mischief which he had designed for others.
Shall return upon his own head - Shall come upon himself. The blow which he aimed at others shall recoil on himself. This is but stating in another form the sentiment which had been expressed in the two previous verses. The language used here has something of a proverbial cast, and perhaps was common in the time of the writer to express this idea.
And his violent dealing - Which he shows to others. The word rendered violent dealing means violence, injustice, oppression, wrong.
Shall all come down upon his own pate - The word here rendered "pate"means properly vertex, top, or crown - as of the head. The idea is that it would come upon himself. He would be treated as he had designed to treat others. The sentiment here expressed is found also in Psa 9:15; Psa 35:8; Psa 37:15. Compare Eurip. Med. 409, and Lucretius v. 1151.

Barnes: Psa 7:17 - -- I will praise the Lord according to his righteousness - That is, particularly as manifested in the treatment of the righteous and the wicked, p...
I will praise the Lord according to his righteousness - That is, particularly as manifested in the treatment of the righteous and the wicked, protecting the one, and bringing deeserved punishment upon the other. The purpose of the psalm is to show this. In the course of the psalm the author had declared his full conviction that this was the character of God, and now, in view of this, he says that he will render to him the praise and glory which such a character deserves. He will acknowledge him by public acts of praise as such a God; and will at all times ascribe these attributes to him.
And will sing praise to the name of the Lord - To the name of Jehovah; that is, to Yahweh himself, the "name"being often used to designate a person, or that by which he is known; and also, in many cases, as in this, being significant, or designating the essential nature of him to whom it is applied.
Most high - Exalted above all other beings; exalted above all worlds. The purpose here declared of praising God may refer either to the act which he was then performing in the composition of the psalm, or it may be a purpose in respect to the future, declaring his intention to be to retain in future life the memory of those characteristics of the divine nature now disclosed to him, and to celebrate them in all time to come. The great truth taught is, that God is to be adored for what he is, and that his holy character, manifested alike in the treatment of the righteous and the wicked, lays the foundation for exalted praise.
Poole: Psa 7:16 - -- Which phrase may note whence this retribution should come, even from heaven, or from the righteous and remarkable judgment of God.
Which phrase may note whence this retribution should come, even from heaven, or from the righteous and remarkable judgment of God.

Poole: Psa 7:17 - -- According to his righteousness declared and asserted by him in their exemplary punishment, and my seasonable and wonderful deliverance.
According to his righteousness declared and asserted by him in their exemplary punishment, and my seasonable and wonderful deliverance.
Haydock -> Psa 7:17
Haydock: Psa 7:17 - -- Sorrow. The evil which he designed for me (Menochius) will fall on him, like an arrow shot upwards. (Calmet) ---
Crown. Protestants, "pate." (H...
Sorrow. The evil which he designed for me (Menochius) will fall on him, like an arrow shot upwards. (Calmet) ---
Crown. Protestants, "pate." (Haydock)
Gill: Psa 7:16 - -- His mischief shall return upon his own head,.... That which he conceived and devised in his mind, and attempted to bring upon others, shall fall upon ...
His mischief shall return upon his own head,.... That which he conceived and devised in his mind, and attempted to bring upon others, shall fall upon himself, as a just judgment from heaven upon him;
and his violent dealing shall come down upon his own pate; referring to the violence with which Saul pursued David, which would be requited to him, and of which he prophesied, 1Sa 26:10.

Gill: Psa 7:17 - -- I will praise the Lord according to his righteousness,.... Or on account of it, as it was displayed in vindicating the innocent, and punishing the wic...
I will praise the Lord according to his righteousness,.... Or on account of it, as it was displayed in vindicating the innocent, and punishing the wicked; so Pharaoh having ordered male infants of the Hebrews to be drowned, and he himself and his host in righteous judgment being drowned in the Red sea; Moses and the children of Israel sung a song, as the psalmist here;
and will sing praise to the name of the Lord most high; whose name is Jehovah, and is the most High over all the earth; and who had now, according to the psalmist's request, Psa 7:6; arose and lifted up himself, and returned on high, and had shown himself to be above all David's enemies, and had sat on the throne judging right.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Psa 7:16 Heb “and on his forehead his violence [i.e., the violence he intended to do to others] comes down.”

NET Notes: Psa 7:17 Heb “[to] the name of the Lord Most High.” God’s “name” refers metonymically to his divine characteristics as suggested ...
Geneva Bible -> Psa 7:17
Geneva Bible: Psa 7:17 I will praise the LORD according to his ( l ) righteousness: and will sing praise to the name of the LORD most high.
( l ) In faithfully keeping his ...

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 7:10-17
MHCC: Psa 7:10-17 - --David is confident that he shall find God his powerful Saviour. The destruction of sinners may be prevented by their conversion; for it is threatened,...
Matthew Henry -> Psa 7:10-17
Matthew Henry: Psa 7:10-17 - -- David having lodged his appeal with God by prayer and a solemn profession of his integrity, in the former part of the psalm, in this latter part doe...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Psa 7:14-17
Keil-Delitzsch: Psa 7:14-17 - --
(Heb.: 7:15-18) This closing strophe foretells to the enemy of God, as if dictated by the judge, what awaits him; and concludes with a prospect of ...
Constable: Psa 7:1-17 - --Psalm 7
In the title, "shiggaion" probably means a poem with intense feeling.36 Cush, the Benjamite, rec...

Constable: Psa 7:9-16 - --4. Description of justice 7:10-17
7:10-11 David counted on God to defend him as a shield since God saves the upright in heart, and David was upright. ...
