Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 7:10
My defense [is] of God, which saveth the upright in heart.
10. My defence is of God ] R.V., my shield is with God. Lit. my shield is upon God; it rests with God to defend me. Cp. Psa 62:7.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
My defense is of God – The meaning here is, that God was his protector, and that in his troubles he confided in him. The original word here, as in Psa 3:3, note; Psa 5:12, note; is shield. See the notes at thoses verses.
Which saveth the upright in heart – whom he that searches the heart Psa 7:9 sees to be upright; or to be sincere, truthful, just. The writer says that it is a characteristic of God that he saves or protects all such; and, conscious of his innocence of the charges against himself, he here appeals to him on that ground, and confides in his protection because he sees that in this respect he was blameless.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Psa 7:10
My defence is of God, which sayeth the upright in heart.
God, the shield bearer of the upright
Lit.: God is my shield bearer. Fig.: I hang my shield upon God. The idea is that of going to war, and having God as the carrier, the bearer, of our shield, so that before we can be struck down, God Himself must be wounded and overpowered. My defence is of God. There are times when we need great defences. There arise m life crises, points of agony, when we can only be silent, having first said to God, Undertake for me. There are times when it seems to us but a small thing, or a course quite natural, to claim all heaven as our defence. These are supreme moments. The bulk of life is commonplace, lived on an ordinary level, requiring the discharge of common duties. There are times when the whole heaven is no longer a defence, but an accusation. These are the terrible moments of life. Where, then, is mans defence? Let man in such moments look within; let him trace the course of his own spirit and action; and if he can find in that action reasons for self-condemnation, then let him be penitent and broken-hearted; let him find God through his tears. The tears must not be selfish: no man must make an investment of his broken-heartedness. Repentance must be perfect, vital, sincere, all-inclusive. He does not repent who cries simply because the consequences are painful. Contrition has nothing to do with consequences. God may be both accuser and defender. He prefers the accusation with the reluctance of wounded love; through the accusation He causes to shine the light of the prepared defence: His mercy endureth forever. He is the defender of the sinner, when the offender falls down in contrition and self-examination. The Psalmist falls back upon the vital element of character. Saveth the upright in heart. Is God, then, only the defender of the righteous, who have never sinned? No such meaning is here. The upright in heart may not always be the upright in conduct. Men cannot go beyond conduct; God goes into motive, purpose, secret thought. May there, then, be broken conduct and yet a heart truly upright before God? There may be, and that is our hope. God does not look upon us as we are, but upon what we would be if we could. Where there is this integrity or uprightness of heart, all the rest will be well. When you have the upright heart all needful consistency will be guaranteed. A growing life is never a literally consistent one. Many a man is mechanically consistent who is spiritually self-contradictory. Do we want to be upright in heart? There is but one gospel way. The grace of God alone can make the heart true and new and beautiful. We cannot give ourselves uprightness of heart. It is not in man to make himself clean. (Joseph Parker, D. D.)
The upright in heart
I. A character described. The upright in heart. Now it includes inward principle as the wheel which puts the whole machine in action; and outward conduct is the result of it. Take as example–
1. Nathaniel. He was a man whose outward character corresponded with the promptings of his heart.
2. Remember there may be uprightness of heart with many failings. God looks at the intents of the heart. Only they must be sincere.
II. The privilege of this character.
1. Gods defence. We see how God defends the tender plants from winters cold and summers heat. But yet more does He protect His children. For His love is deeper, stronger, and more lasting than that of a mother.
2. Gods salvation. God raiseth the upright in heart. But our salvation is in Christ, there is none out of Him. (W. D. Howard.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 10. My defence is of God] I now leave my cause in the hands of my Judge. I have no uneasy or fearful apprehensions, because I know God will save the upright in heart.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
My defence is of God, Heb. My shield is upon God; he doth as it were carry my shield before me. See 1Sa 17:7. He doth and will protect me against all mine enemies.
Which saveth the upright in heart; and therefore me, whom he knoweth to be sincere and honest in my carriage toward him and toward Saul.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
10. defenceliterally,”shield” (Ps 5:12).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
My defence [is] of God,…. Or “my shield [is] in” or “of God” e; God was his shield, his protector and defender; see Ps 3:3; or “my shield [is] with God”; that is, Christ, who was the shield his faith made use of against every spiritual enemy, was with God; he was with him as the Word and Son of God from all eternity, and as the living Redeemer of his people before his incarnation; and he is now with him as their intercessor and advocate, who pleads in defence of them, and opposes himself, his blood and righteousness, to all the charges and accusations of Satan;
which saveth the upright in heart: who have the truth of grace in them, wisdom in the hidden part; who are sincere in their affections, purposes, and designs, in their faith, hope, and love; and act from real principles of truth and love, in the integrity of their souls; for these light and gladness are sown, to them grace and glory are given, and no good thing is withheld from them; they are saved by God from sin, Satan, the world, death, and hell, and every enemy, with a spiritual and everlasting salvation.
e “in Deo”, Musculus, Tigurine version, Junius Tremellius, Muis, Ainsworth “apud Deum”, Lutherus, Piscator, Gejerus, Cocceius, Michaelis.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
| The Persecutor’s Doom. | |
10 My defence is of God, which saveth the upright in heart. 11 God judgeth the righteous, and God is angry with the wicked every day. 12 If he turn not, he will whet his sword; he hath bent his bow, and made it ready. 13 He hath also prepared for him the instruments of death; he ordaineth his arrows against the persecutors. 14 Behold, he travaileth with iniquity, and hath conceived mischief, and brought forth falsehood. 15 He made a pit, and digged it, and is fallen into the ditch which he made. 16 His mischief shall return upon his own head, and his violent dealing shall come down upon his own pate. 17 I will praise the LORD according to his righteousness: and will sing praise to the name of the LORD most high.
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 does, as it were, take out judgment upon the appeal, by faith in the word of God, and the assurance it gives of the happiness and safety of the righteous and the certain destruction of wicked people that continue impenitent.
I. David is confident that he shall find God his powerful protector and Saviour, and the patron of his oppressed innocency (v. 10): “My defence is of God. Not only, God is my defender, and I shall find him so; but I look for defence and safety in no other; my hope for shelter in a time of danger is placed in God alone; if I have defence, it must be of God.” My shield is upon God (so some read it); there is that in God which gives an assurance of protection to all that are his. His name is a strong tower, Prov. xviii. 10. Two things David builds this confidence upon:– 1. The particular favour God has for all that are sincere: He saves the upright in heart, saves them with an everlasting salvation, and therefore will preserve them to his heavenly kingdom; he saves them out of their present troubles, as far as is good for them; their integrity and uprightness will preserve them. The upright in heart are safe, and ought to think themselves so, under the divine protection. 2. The general respect he has for justice and equity: God judgeth the righteous; he owns every righteous cause, and will maintain it in every righteous man, and will protect him. God is a righteous Judge (so some read it), who not only doeth righteousness himself, but will take care that righteousness be done by the children of men and will avenge and punish all unrighteousness.
II. He is no less confident of the destruction of all his persecutors, even as many of them as would not repent, to give glory to God. He reads their doom here, for their good, if possible, that they might cease from their enmity, or, however, for his own comfort, that he might not be afraid of them nor aggrieved at their prosperity and success for a time. He goes into the sanctuary of God, and there understands,
1. That they are children of wrath. They are not to be envied, for God is angry with them, is angry with the wicked every day. They are every day doing that which is provoking to him, and he resents it, and treasures it up against the day of wrath. As his mercies are new every morning towards his people, so his anger is new every morning against the wicked, upon the fresh occasions given for it by their renewed transgressions. God is angry with the wicked even in the merriest and most prosperous of their days, even in the days of their devotion; for, if they be suffered to prosper, it is in wrath; if they pray, their very prayers are an abomination. The wrath of God abides upon them (John iii. 36) and continual additions are made to it.
2. That they are children of death, as all the children of wrath are, sons of perdition, marked out for ruin. See their destruction.
(1.) God will destroy them. The destruction they are reserved for is destruction from the Almighty, which ought to be a terror to every one of us, for it comes from the wrath of God,Psa 7:13; Psa 7:14. It is here intimated, [1.] That the destruction of sinners may be prevented by their conversion, for it is threatened with that proviso: If he turn not from his evil way, if he do not let fall his enmity against the people of God, then let him expect it will be his ruin; but, if he turn, it is implied that his sin shall be pardoned and all shall be well. Thus even the threatenings of wrath are introduced with a gracious implication of mercy, enough to justify God for ever in the destruction of those that perish; they might have turned and lived, but they chose rather to go on and die and their blood is therefore upon their own heads. [2.] That, if it be not thus prevented by the conversion of the sinner, it will be prepared for him by the justice of God. In general (v. 13), He has prepared for him the instruments of death, of all that death which is the wages of sin. If God will slay, he will not want instruments of death for any creature; even the least and weakest may be made so when he pleases. First, Here is variety of instruments, all which breathe threatenings and slaughter. Here is a sword, which wounds and kills at hand, a bow and arrows, which wound and kill at a distance those who think to get out of the reach of God’s vindictive justice. If the sinner flees from the iron weapon, yet the bow of steel shall strike him through, Job xx. 24. Secondly, These instruments of death are all said to be made ready. God has them not to seek, but always at hand. Judgments are prepared for scorners. Tophet is prepared of old. Thirdly, While God is preparing his instruments of death, he gives the sinners timely warning of their danger, and space to repent and prevent it. He is slow to punish, and long-suffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish. Fourthly, The longer the destruction is delayed, to give time for repentance, the sorer will it be and the heavier will it fall and lie for ever if that time be not so improved; while God is waiting the sword is in the whetting and the bow in the drawing. Fifthly, The destruction of impenitent sinners, though it come slowly, yet comes surely; for it is ordained, they are of old ordained to it. Sixthly, Of all sinners persecutors are set up as the fairest marks of divine wrath; against them, more than any other, God has ordained his arrows. They set God at defiance, but cannot set themselves out of the reach of his judgments.
(2.) They will destroy themselves, v. 14-16. The sinner is here described as taking a great deal of pains to ruin himself, more pains to damn his soul than, if directed aright, would save it. His conduct is described, [1.] By the pains of a labouring woman that brings forth a false conception, v. 14. The sinner’s head with its politics conceives mischief, contrives it with a great deal of art, lays the plot deep, and keeps it close; the sinner’s heart with its passions travails with iniquity, and is in pain to be delivered of the malicious projects it is hatching against the people of God. But what does it come to when it comes to the birth? It is falsehood; it is a cheat upon himself; it is a lie in his right hand. He cannot compass what he intended, nor, if he gain his point, will he gain the satisfaction he promised himself. He brings forth wind (Isa. xxvi. 18), stubble (Isa. xxxiii. 11), death (James i. 15), that is, falsehood. [2.] By the pains of a labouring man that works hard to dig a pit, and then falls into it and perishes in it. First, This is true, in a sense of all sinners. They prepare destruction for themselves by preparing themselves for destruction, loading themselves with guilt and submitting themselves to their corruptions. Secondly, It is often remarkably true of those who contrive mischief against the people of God or against their neighbours; by the righteous hand of God it is made to return upon their own heads. What they designed for the shame and destruction of others proves to be their own confusion.
| ——————— Nec lex est jusitior ulla Quam necis artifices arte perire sua ——— There is not a juster law than that the author of a murderous contrivance shall perish by it. |
Some apply it to Saul, who fell upon his sword.
In singing this psalm we must do as David here does (v. 17), praise the Lord according to his righteousness, that is, give him the glory of that gracious protection under which he takes his afflicted people and of that just vengeance with which he will pursue those that afflict them. Thus we must sing to the praise of the Lord most high, who, when his enemies deal proudly, shows that he is above them.
Fuente: Matthew Henry’s Whole Bible Commentary
10. My shield It is not wonderful that David often mingles meditations with his prayers, thereby to inspire himself with true confidence. We may go to God in prayer with great alacrity; but our fervour, if it does not gather new strength, either immediately fails or begins to languish. David, therefore, in order to continue in prayer with the same ardour of devotion and affection with which he commenced, brings to his recollection some of the most common truths of religion, and by this means fosters and invigorates his faith. He declares, that as God saves the upright in heart, he is perfectly safe under his protection. Whence it follows, that he had the testimony of an approving conscience. And, as he does not simply say the righteous, but the upright in heart, he appears to have an eye to that inward searching of the heart and reins mentioned in the preceding verse.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(10) My defence.Literally, as in margin, my shield is upon God. (Comp. Psa. 62:7, In God is my salvation, where the Hebrew is as here, God is my shield-bearer.) Another explanation appears in Miltons translation
On God is cast
My defence, and in Him lies,
In Him who both just and wise,
Saves the upright at heart at last.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
If we read these verses with reference to David’s history, how were these truths confirmed in the instance of the Benjamite Saul? And if we read them with reference to a greater than David, even David’s Lord, what an awful example doth the history of Judas afford in confirmation. Act 1:18 .
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
“Handfuls of Purpose”
For All Gleaners
“My defence is of God, which saveth the upright in heart? Psa 7:10
This follows the previous text with remarkable propriety. The text might read, “My shield is upon God;” in other words, God is my shield-bearer.
Fuente: The People’s Bible by Joseph Parker
Psa 7:10 My defence [is] of God, which saveth the upright in heart.
Ver. 10. My defence is of God ] Heb. My buckler is upon God. See Trapp on “ Psa 3:3 “
Which saveth the upright in heart
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
defence = shield. See note on “shield”, Psa 6:12.
upright. Plural.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Psa 7:10-11
Psa 7:10-11
“My shield is with God,
Who saveth the upright in heart.
God is a righteous judge,
Yea, a God that hath indignation every day.”
“Indignation every day.” God is angry with the wicked “every day,” and presumably that is the indignation indicated here. The righteous are protected and blessed by the Lord who is a shield about them, protecting and preserving them from the ravages of the wicked.
The last six verses (Psa 7:12-17) return to a description of God’s judgment upon evil men, who appear here as the enemies of the hated and slandered righteous man of Psa 7:1-5.
E.M. Zerr:
Psa 7:10. God will save only the upright. David’s righteousness was the basis for his expecting the defense from God.
Psa 7:11. With the wicked is not in the original. The statement is simply that God is angry every day. The thoughts in the text and the comments at ch. 5:5 will indicate what it is at which God is angry. The intensity of the Lord’s anger is clear from the definition of the word in Strong’s lexicon thus: “a primitive root; properly, to foam at the mouth, i.e. to be enraged.”
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
My: etc. Heb. My buckler is upon God, Psa 3:3, Psa 18:1, Psa 18:2, Psa 84:11, Psa 89:18, Gen 15:1
which: Psa 112:2, Psa 125:4, Job 8:6, Pro 2:21, Pro 11:20, Pro 28:18
Reciprocal: 2Ch 29:34 – upright Psa 11:2 – the upright Psa 19:13 – upright
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Psa 7:10-11. My defence is of God Hebrew, , maginni gnal Elohim, my shield is upon God. He, as it were, carries my shield before me: see 1Sa 17:7. He does and will protect me against all mine enemies. Which saveth the upright in heart And therefore will save me whom he knows to be sincere and upright in my conduct toward him and toward Saul. God judgeth the righteous That is, defendeth, or avengeth, or delivereth, as this word is often used. To judge is properly to give sentence; which, because it may be done either by absolving and acquitting from punishment, or by condemning and giving up to punishment, therefore, it is sometimes used for the one and sometimes for the other, as the circumstances of the place determine. God is angry with the wicked every day Even then when his providence seems to favour them, and they are most secure and confident.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
4. Description of justice 7:10-16
Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)
David counted on God to defend him as a shield, since God saves the upright in heart, and David was upright. His confidence lay also in God’s righteous character. God would judge justly, and injustice touches His heart as well as His head. Even though God does not always judge as quickly as His people want, injustice does not escape His eye, and one day He will judge righteously (cf. 2Pe 3:9). In view of this, we can leave vengeance up to Him (Rom 12:19; Heb 10:30).