Resource > Expository Notes on the Bible (Constable) >  Psalms >  Exposition >  I. Book 1 chs 1--41 > 
Psalm 32 
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In this psalm David urged those who sin against the Lord to seek His pardon with the encouragement that He is gracious with the penitent. He will, however, chasten the unrepentant.

Students of this penitential psalm have often linked it with David's adultery with Bathsheba and his murder of her husband Uriah (2 Sam. 11).80While that identification seems probable in view of the content of the psalm, the connection is not indisputable. Psalm 51 was David's prayer for pardon for having committed those acts. If Psalm 32 looks back on the same sins, David probably composed it later. It stresses God's forgiveness and the lesson David learned from not confessing his sin quickly.

Thirteen psalms contain the word "Maskil"in their titles (Pss. 32, 42, 44-45, 52-55, 74, 78, 88-89, and 142). The meaning of this term is still uncertain.

 1. The blessing of forgiveness 32:1-2
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This psalm begins like Psalm 1. "Blessed"means having received blessings from the Lord one of which is joy. David described divine forgiveness in several ways in these verses. Under the Mosaic economy an innocent animal that suffered death, the punishment for sin, took the guilt of the sinner in his or her place. This provision was only temporary, however, until God would provide a perfect human being whose substitute death would atone for sin fully (Heb. 9:11-14).

 2. The chastening of the unrepentant 32:3-5
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32:3-4 David's failure to confess his sin immediately resulted in internal grief and external weakness for him. God oppressed him severely with discipline (cf. Heb. 12:6). Consequently David felt drained of energy. Evidently this is a description of how he felt in every aspect of his being--physically, emotionally, and spiritually.

32:5 Finally David confessed his sin to God rather than refusing to admit it. Confessing involves acknowledging that what one has done violates the will of God (cf. 1 John 1:9). The Old Testament saint had the same responsibility to confess his sins to God that we do, and he also enjoyed the same promise of forgiveness we do (cf. Lev. 5:5; 16:21; 26:40). However, God punished more sins with execution under the Old Covenant than He does under the New. If the background of this psalm is David's sins against Bathsheba and Uriah, he evidently refused to acknowledge these sins for about a year after he had committed them (2 Sam. 12:13-15).

 3. The counsel of the forgiven 32:6-11
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32:6 Initially David advised the godly to confess their sins quickly so God would not remove Himself from them because of their sin and seem harder to find later. If one keeps short accounts with God, calamities that God sometimes uses to bring people to repentance will not overwhelm him.

32:7 David paused to praise God for being a refuge for him when such a flood of trouble had overwhelmed him. The Lord not only sustained him but also gave him occasion to praise His name.81

32:8-9 The psalmist instructed the godly further as a teacher who carefully watched over their welfare. His counsel was to yield to the Lord quickly rather than resisting Him. It is better for the godly to walk in the moral will of God willingly than for God to put pressure on them to do so.

32:10-11 The wicked can count on having much sorrow in life. On the other hand those who trust in the Lord will experience His loyal love and will be able to praise Him.

Believers who sin are wise to confess their sins to God as soon after we commit them as possible. This will minimize the discipline God sends to bring us to repentance.82



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