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Psalms 35

Constable

Psalms 35:1-3

David appealed to the Lord for defense, as to a champion who goes out in battle for another (cf. Joshua 5:13-15).

Psalms 35:4-6

He asked God to rout his enemies and humiliate them. He wished God would blow them away like chaff and remove their stability so they would fall. The Angel of the Lord is the leader of God’s heavenly army, the pre-incarnate Christ (cf. Psalms 34:7). David wanted Him to do to his enemies what they intended to do to him. This is in keeping with how God usually deals with the wicked.

Psalms 35:7-8

The reason for David’s request was his enemies’ unwarranted attempts to kill him. He prayed that they might experience the fate they hoped would be his.

Psalms 35:9-10

If God granted deliverance, David promised to rejoice in the Lord and to praise Him.

“My soul (9) and my bones (10) are two emphatic ways of saying ‘I’ or ‘myself,’ as in Psalms 6:2-3; cf. our own expression ‘I know it in my bones’.” [Note: Ibid., p. 143.

Psalms 35:11-12

The psalmist’s malicious enemies were repaying him evil for the good he had done them. They were evidently also charging him falsely.

Psalms 35:13-14

When they were sick, David prayed for their recovery and mourned over their condition. He even fasted, which shows the extent to which he sacrificed so they would recover. [Note: On the practice of fasting, see Kent D. Berghuis, “A Biblical Perspective on Fasting,” Bibliotheca Sacra 158:629 (January-March 2001):86-103.

Psalms 35:15-16

Conversely when David experienced trouble, rather than showing concern for him, they mocked and really made his condition worse.

Psalms 35:17-18

David called on God to stop waiting and to act for him. When He would, David would give Him public praise.

Psalms 35:19-21

Winking at one another, David’s enemies communicated their sneaky intention to trap the psalmist in their plot. They were lying to turn others against him. They were also giving false testimony concerning his actions.

Psalms 35:22-26

Their claims of having seen David do something bad were groundless, but God had seen their evil actions. David called God to end His silence and act for him. By vindicating David, God would frustrate the attempts of the wicked to triumph over the upright.

Psalms 35:27-28

In closing, David asked God to cause his supporters to give glory to the Lord for vindicating His righteous servant. When deliverance came, David too would praise God for His righteous dealings. The people of God can appeal for vindication when others falsely accuse them of doing evil, and can count on God’s deliverance in the future because He is just.

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