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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 27:5

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 27:5

For in the time of trouble he shall hide me in his pavilion: in the secret of his tabernacle shall he hide me; he shall set me up upon a rock.

5. For he shall conceal me in his pavilion in the day of trouble,

He shall hide me in the hiding-place of his tent;

Upon a rock shall he lift me up.

He will be secured from danger as one who is sheltered from heat and storm, or safe from assault in some inaccessible rock fortress. Cp. Psa 31:20; Isa 4:6; and the expression his hidden or secret ones in Psa 83:3.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

For in the time of trouble – When I am surrounded by dangers, or when affliction comes upon me.

He shall hide me – The word used here means to hide; to secrete; and then, to defend or protect. It would properly be applied to one who had fled from oppression, or from any impending evil, and who should be secreted in a house or cavern, and thus rendered safe from pursuers, or from the threatening evil.

In his pavilion – The word pavilion means tent or tabernacle. The Hebrew word – sukah – means properly a booth, hut, or cot formed of green branches interwoven: Jon 4:5; Job 27:18; see the notes at Isa 4:6. Then it is applied to tents made of skins: Lev 23:43; 2Sa 11:11. It thus is used to denote the tabernacle, considered as the dwelling-place of God on earth, and the meaning here is, that God would hide him as it were in His own dwelling; He would admit him near to Himself; He would take care that he should be protected as if he were one of His own family; as a man protects those whom he admits to his own abode.

In the secret of his tabernacle – In the most retired and private part of His dwelling. He would not merely admit him to His premises; not only to the vestibule of His house; not only to the open court, or to the parts of His house frequented by the rest of His family; but he would admit him to the private apartments – the place to which He Himself withdrew to be alone, and where no stranger, and not even one of the family, would venture to intrude. Nothing could more certainly denote friendship; nothing could more certainly make protection sure, than thus to be taken into the private apartment where the master of a family was accustomed himself to withdraw, that he might be alone; and nothing, therefore, can more beautifully describe the protection which God will give to His friends than the idea of thus admitting them to the secret apartments of His own dwelling-place.

He shall set me up upon a rock – A place where I shall be secure; a place inaccessible to my enemies. Compare Psa 18:1-2; Psa 19:14 (margin); Psa 61:2; Psa 71:3. The meaning is, that he would be safe from all his enemies.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Psa 27:5-6

For in the time of trouble He shall hide me.

Safety in time of trouble


I.
David makes account that, while he lives here on earth, he is liable and subject to manifold evils. Reasons–

1. Gods Divine sovereignty, whereby He may do with His own what He will, and dispose of His dearest children to endure both sorrow and great affliction.

2. Because of iniquity.

(1) Davids own sins made him liable to evils of affliction.

(2) Likewise the sins of the wicked in his time.

(3) Satans malice.

(4) The malice of the wicked, who are the seed of the serpent.

Uses–

1. For instruction. See from Davids resolution what is the case and condition of all the godly, viz. to be subject to evils and troubles.

2. For admonition.

(1) To the wicked of the world, to beware of self-deceit in promising to themselves continued happiness and freedom from evils, because for the present they enjoy peace and prosperity (1Pe 4:17-18).

(2) To the godly, to bethink themselves with David that troubles may come, and therefore to prepare for them, and to glorify God under afflictions.


II.
When God shall grant to David to dwell in His house, he doth assure himself of special safety, and protection in times of trouble (Psa 61:3-4; Psa 61:6-7).

1. He put his trust and hope in God (Psa 21:7; Psa 11:1; Psa 16:1; Psa 86:2).

2. He testified his trust in God by prayer (Psa 7:1; Psa 116:3-4).

3. He made conscience of a godly and upright life, and thereon grounds his assurance of special protection (Psa 4:3; Psa 18:17; Psa 18:20)

Uses–

1. For instruction. See here with David the true and right way of safety in time of trouble. In the days of grace, and times of the New Testament, the tabernacle of God is with men, and He dwells with them (Rev 21:3).

2. For admonition. As we desire safety and shelter in time of trouble, so we must with David strive to endeavour after a sure place in Gods house, become true members of Gods Church.

(1) Break off the course of all known sin, for that prevents society with God.

(2) Labour for true faith in Christ.

(3) Walk in new obedience.

3. For comfort;. This makes greatly to all true believers, in times of trouble: for certainly they have right and title to this immunity of Gods house.

(1) God will not fail them, nor forsake them (Heb 13:5-6).

(2) God will cause their troubles to work for their good (Rom 8:28; Heb 12:10).

(3) God will give an issue with the trial, that they may be able to bear it (1Co 10:13). (T. Pierson.)

The influence of religion upon adversity

To a thoughtful mind, no study can appear more important than how to be suitably prepared for the misfortunes of life; so as to contemplate them in prospect without dismay, and, if they must befall, to bear them without dejection. Power has endeavoured to remove adversity to a distance; Philosophy has studied, when it drew nigh, to conquer it by patience; and Wealth has sought out every pleasure that can compensate or alleviate pain. While the wisdom of the world is thus occupied, religion has been no less attentive to the same important object.


I.
religion prepares the mind for encountering, with fortitude, the most severe shocks of adversity; whereas vice, by its natural influence on the temper, tends to produce dejection under the slightest trials. In the course of living righteously, soberly, and godly, a good man acquires a steady and well-governed spirit. He has learned firmness and self-command. He is accustomed to look up to that Supreme Providence, which disposes of human affairs, not with reverence only, but with trust and hope. The time of prosperity was to him not merely a season of barren joy, but productive of much useful improvement. He had cultivated his mind. He had stored it with useful knowledge, with good principles, and virtuous dispositions. These resources remain entire, when the days of trouble come. His chief pleasures were always of the calm, innocent, and temperate kind; and over these the changes of the world have the least power. His mind is a kingdom to him; and he can still enjoy it. The world did not bestow upon him all his enjoyments; and therefore it is not in the power of the world, by its most cruel attacks, to carry them all away.


II.
the distresses of life are alleviated to good men, by reflections on their past conduct; while, by such reflections, they are highly aggravated to the bad. During the gay and active periods of life, sinners elude, in some measure, the force of conscience. Carried round in the world of affairs and pleasures; intent on contrivance, or eager in pursuit; amused by hope, or elated by enjoyment; they are sheltered, by that crowd of trifles which surrounds them, from serious thought. But conscience is too great a power to remain always suppressed. There is in every mans life a period when he shall be made to stand forth as a real object to his own view: and when that period comes, woe to him who is galled by the sight! Whereas, tie who is blessed with a clear conscience, enjoys in the worst conjunctures of human life, a peace, a dignity, an elevation of mind peculiar to virtue. The testimony of a good conscience is indeed to be always distinguished from that presumptuous boast of innocence, which every good Christian totally disclaims. The better he is, he will be more humble, and sensible of his failings. But though tie acknowledge that he can claim nothing from God upon the footing of desert, yet lie can trust in His merciful acceptance through Jesus Christ, according to the terms of the Gospel. He can hope that his prayers and his alms have come up in memorial before God. Tim piety and virtue of his former life were as seeds sown in his prosperous state, of which he reaps the fruits in the season of adversity.


III.
ill men, in the time of trouble, can look up to no protector, while good men commit themselves, with trust and hope, to the care of heaven. The human mind, naturally feeble, is made to feel all its weakness by the pressure of adversity. Now, whither should the ungodly, in this situation, turn for aid? After having contended with the storms of adverse fortune till their spirits are exhausted, gladly would they retreat at last to the sanctuary of religion. But that sanctuary is shut against them; nay, it is environed with terrors. They behold there, not a Protector to whom they can fly, but a Judge whom they dread; and in those moments when they need His friendship the most, they are reduced to deprecate His wrath. But of all the thoughts which can enter into the mind, in the season of distress, the belief of an interest in His favour who rules the world is the most soothing. Every form of religion has afforded to virtuous men some degree of this consolation. But it was reserved for the Christian revelation to carry it to its highest point. For it is the direct scope of that revelation, to accommodate itself to the circumstances of man, under two main views; as guilty in the sight of God, and as struggling with the evils of the world. Under the former, it discovered to him a Mediator and an atonement; under the latter, it promises him the Spirit of grace and consolation. The same hand which holds out forgiveness to the penitent, and assistance to the frail, dispenses comfort and hope to the afflicted.


IV.
good men are comforted under their troubles by the hope of heaven; while bad men are not only deprived of this hope, rut distressed with fears arising from a future state. How miserable the man, who, under the distractions of calamity, hangs doubtful about an event which so nearly concerns him; who, in the midst of doubts and anxieties, approaching to that awful boundary which separates this world from the next, shudders at the dark prospect before him; wishing to exist after death, and yet afraid of that existence; catching at every feeble hope which superstition can afford him, and trembling, in the same moment, from reflection upon his crimes! But blessed be God who hath brought life and immortality to light; who hath not only brought them to light, but secured them to good men; and, by the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, hath begotten them unto the lively hope of an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled, and that fadeth not away. Justly is this hope styled in Scripture, the anchor of the soul, both sure and steadfast. For what an anchor is to a ship in a dark night, on an unknown coast, and amidst a boisterous ocean, that is this hope to the soul, when distracted by the confusions of the world. In danger, it gives security; amidst general fluctuation, it affords one fixed point of rest. (H. Blair, D. D.)

A sure promise

If a man should write upon his sign-board the words, Call upon me in the day of trouble, and I will deliver thee, he would have plenty of callers. No man dare try the experiment; but God has had those words written above His door for thousands of years, and none have ever called upon Him in vain. (S. Sellars.)

In the secret of His tabernacle shall He hide me.

Safety in the secret of the tabernacle

Not only are non-Muhammadans forbidden to enter the sacred enclosure at Mecca, but the territory around Mecca–the Beled el-Harem, or district of the sanctuary–is regarded as a sacred asylum. Here, according to the sacred law, no war can be waged, no blood can be shed, no animal can be killed, no tree can be cut down. Not even a fly can be killed in the sacred district; but if any of the insect pests which are so common in the East annoy the pilgrim, it is permitted to him, if they cannot well be endured any longer, to remove them from one part of the body to another. The idea which underlies these whimsical rules is that the place of Gods sanctuary should be open only to true believers, to whom it should always be a safe retreat from peril of their enemies. Burton, in his El Medinah and Mecca, gives several specimens of Muhammadan belief regarding the miraculous safety to be found in Mecca. The Black Stone and the Place of Abraham have been miraculously preserved from their foes; at the time of the deluge, the great fish of the sea did not eat the little fish of the Meccan Sanctuary; ravenous beasts will not destroy their prey in the Beled el-Harem; no one is ever hurt in the Kaabah; ten thousand mercies descend upon it daily; and when men see the sacred building for the first time their hearts are filled with awe and their eyes with tears. The Quran expressly teaches that the Kaabah is a safe place of refuge: Verily the first house appointed unto men was that which is in Becca (Mecca). . . therein are manifest signs, the place where Abraham stood; and whoso entereth therein, shall be safe. This is but the relic of the old sanctuary idea which is seen in the case of the cities of refuge among the Jews, and in the (limited) right of sanctuary at the horns of the altar (1Ki 2:28-31). In many of the ancient Greek temples criminals were given the right of sanctuary, and protected from their pursuers; and in some of the old English churches a stone seat beside the altar was provided for those fleeing to the safety of the church. In pre-Protestant Scotland, excommunication was the penalty of dragging a fugitive from the sanctuaries of the church. A trace of the sanctuary law still exists in Scotland (or existed until lately) in the sanctuary for debtors in the Abbey of Holyrood. (American Sunday School Times.)

Now shall mine head be lifted up above mine enemies.

The head uplifted among enemies

As contrasted with Occidentals, the Orientals seem in many respects to be simply grown-up children. They do not attempt to veil extravagant or unseemly demonstrations of joy or grief, as a European would do, but display their feelings as openly as does a junior schoolboy. Especially is this seen in the conduct of enemies toward one another. Those who were in Egypt after the massacre in Alexandria, and before the bombardment, say that they will not soon forget the change which passed over the bearing of the natives toward the foreign Christians at the time of the massacre. Those who before showed an almost servile respect toward the European residents, now marched proudly through the streets, pushing the hated Franks insolently out of their way, and gibing and jeering at their comparative helplessness. All travellers in the East notice the different bearing of an Oriental when he is in an enemys country, and when he is in a place where his friends are in a majority. The man who skulks in Medeenah will swagger in Mekkeh. An Oriental seldom cares to conceal his consciousness of power, nor does the ruling party conceal its contempt for the ruled. Let a revolution of the political wheel reverse the position of two parties, and the former serf passes into the braggart, and the former braggart into the serf, without any shamefacedness on either side. The psalmist, therefore, compares the safety which he feels to be his in God, to the confident security of the man whose power is assured, and who can lift up his head without fear in the midst of his cringing enemies. (American Sunday School Times.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 5. He shall hide me in his pavilion] besuccoh, in his tabernacle. I would make his temple my residence; I would dwell with God, and be in continual safety. Pavilion comes from papilio and , a butterfly. It signifies a tent made of cloth stretched out on poles, which in form resembles in some measure the insect above named.

In the secret of his tabernacle] Were there no other place, he would put me in the holy of holies, so that an enemy would not dare to approach me.

He shall set me upon a rock.] He shall so strengthen and establish me, that my enemies shall not be able to prevail against me. He shall hide me where they cannot find me, or put me out of the reach of the fiery darts of the wicked. He who lives nearest to God suffers least from temptation. “Draw nigh to God, and he will draw nigh to thee: resist the devil and he will flee from thee.”

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

He shall hide me; or, hath hid me; or, useth to hide me. Justly do I prize the house and service of God so highly, both because I have such vast obligations to him for his former protection and favours, and because all my hope, and confidence, and security depends upon him.

In the secret of his tabernacle; in his tabernacle, into which mine enemies cannot come; and in a secret place in it, where, if they come, they cannot find me. Or, as it were (for the note of similitude is oft understood)

in the secret of his tabernacle, i. e. in as safe a place as the holy of holies, which is called Gods secret, Eze 7:22, where none might come but the high priest, and he but one day in a year. He alludes to the ancient custom of offenders, who used to flee to the tabernacle or altar, where they esteemed themselves safe, 1Ki 2:28.

Upon a rock; a place high and inacessible, strong and impregnable.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

For in the time of trouble he shall hide me in his pavilion,…. This, with what follows, is given as a reason why the psalmist desired to dwell in the house of the Lord; because he considered it as a pavilion or booth, as the word h signifies in which he should be hid by the Lord, in times of trouble and distress, either through the heat of persecution, or of inward anxiety of mind, caused by the working of a fiery law; the allusion being, as some think, to the shepherd’s tent or booth, into which he sometimes takes a poor sheep, and protects it from the scorching heat of the sun at noon: and of such use is the tabernacle of the Lord; see Isa 4:6;

in the secret of his tabernacle shall he hide me; alluding either to the tents of generals of armies, who receive into them those whom they would protect from the insults and injuries of others; or rather to the most holy place in the tabernacle, called the secret place, Eze 7:22; typical of Christ, the hiding place of his, people, in whom their life is hid, and where it is safe and secure;

he shall set me up upon a rock; where he would be above and out of the reach of his enemies; meaning Christ, comparable to a rock for its height, he being higher than the kings of the earth, than the angels in heaven, than the heavens themselves, and much more than the sons of men; see Ps 61:2; and for shelter and safety, he being a munition of rocks, a strong tower, a place of defence, and rock of refuge; and for firmness, solidity, and strength, he being able to bear the whole weight of the building of the church, and every believer laid upon him; and for duration, he being more immovable than rocks and mountains; so that such who are set up upon him are in the most safe and secure state imaginable.

h “in tugurio suo”, Junius & Tremellius, Piscator, Cocceius, Michaelis.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

5. For he shall hide me in his tent. Here the Psalmist promises himself that his prayer would not be in vain. Although he is deprived of the visible sanctuary for a time, he doubts not that, wherever he may be, he shall experience the protecting power of God. And he alludes to the temple, because it was a symbol to the faithful of the divine presence; as if he had said, that in making the request which he mentioned he by no means lost his labor; for every one who shall seek God sincerely, and with a pure heart, shall be safely concealed under the wings of his protection. The figure of the temple, he therefore affirms, was not an unmeaning one, for there God, so to speak, spread forth his wings to gather true believers under his protection. From this he concludes, that as he had no greater desire than to flee for refuge under these wings, there would be a shelter ready for him in times of adversity, under the divine protection, which, under the figure of a rock, he tells us, would be impregnable like towers, which, for the sake of strength, were wont to be built, in ancient times, in lofty places. Although he was, therefore, at this time, environed by enemies on every side, yet he boasts that he shall overcome them. It is, indeed, a common form of speech in the Scriptures to say, that those who are oppressed with grief walk with a bowed down back and dejected countenance, while, on the other hand, they lift up their heads when their joyfulness is restored. Thus David spake, Psa 3:4, “Thou, Lord, art the lifter up of mine head.” But because besieging is here put in opposition to this, he meant to say, that in that divine refuge he would be as it were lifted on high, so that he might fearlessly disregard the darts of his enemies, which might have otherwise pierced him. And in hoping for victory, though he was reduced to such straits as threatened instant death, he gives us a remarkable proof of his faith; by which we are taught not to measure the aid of God by outward appearances or visible means, but even in the midst of death to hope for deliverance from his powerful and victorious hand.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(5) Pavilion.A booth or hut; also of the lair of wild beasts (Psa. 10:9; Jer. 25:38). (Comp. Job. 38:40.)

Secret of his tabernacle.Better, hiding place of his tent (hel), the regular word for the tent of the congregation, but also used generally of a habitation of any kindnot necessarily of the tent set up for the ark by David at Zion (2Sa. 6:17). The clause, He shall set me up upon a rocki.e., for safetyshows that the tent is also used figuratively for shelter; but there may also be a thought of the sure asylum to be found in the tabernacle of the congregation.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

5. Pavilion The word means a covering, a tent, same as tabernacle in next line.

Secret of his tabernacle The covert, or hidingplace of his tent. The sacred tabernacle alone was God’s provided refuge for souls, and its inmost apartment, the “holy of holies,” the hidingplace of his tent, called Psa 31:20, the “secret of thy presence.” The place of the divine presence was his refuge in trouble. The historic basis of the metaphor is found in the form of Oriental tents and encampments, where the emir has his tent in the centre of the camp, and the inner apartment of the tent reserved for himself. This was the place of honour and greatest safety. See on Psa 61:4; Psa 31:20. On the plan of encampment, see 1Sa 26:5; 1Sa 26:7; 1Sa 17:20; where “trench” means a rampart of military carriages.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

For in the day of trouble he will keep me,

Secretly in his pavilion.

In the covert of his tabernacle will he hide me,

He will lift me up on a rock.

That the Psalmist is already conscious of the troubles that will take up the second part of the Psalm comes out here. But he recognises that his trust must be firmly in YHWH. YHWH will protect and keep him. He will keep him safe in His pavilion, hidden in the security of His tent, firmly established in his impregnable fortress on a rock. None can feel insecure when protected by the Warrior King, the Mighty in battle, YHWH of hosts.

Once again we have the dual comparison of the King’s table, spread in His pavilion, and the protection of the sanctuary which was absolute. The one who was in the King’s pavilion was safe from plottings and deceitful tongues, especially when his presence there was unknown (Psa 31:20). In the same way Isaiah also pictures the glorious future of God’s true people in terms of a pavilion where the glory of YHWH is manifested (Isa 4:5-6), and of a strong city where none can harm them (Isa 26:1-4), protected by the walls of salvation and praise (Isaiah 61:18). And one day, ‘a Man will be as a hiding place from the wind, and a covert from the tempest, as rivers of water in a dry place and as the shadow of a great rock in a weary land’ (Isa 32:2) and will be manifested by the opening of ears and eyes, and the giving of knowledge and the releasing of tongues (Isa 32:3). And it is to Him that we must look constantly.

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

These are some of the blessed effects of the knowledge and enjoyment of the Lord. Oh, how blessed is it to be in Christ, the sanctuary! Oh, how blessed to lift up the head in his strength! And oh, how blessed to sing the song of Moses and the Lamb, here below; while the church above is singing the same at the fountain-head of joy.

Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

Psa 27:5 For in the time of trouble he shall hide me in his pavilion: in the secret of his tabernacle shall he hide me; he shall set me up upon a rock.

Ver. 5. For in time of trouble he shall hide me ] This protection he boldly promiseth himself as a fruit of his faith, fostered by the use of the ordinances. He knew that the only way to be safe was to get under God’s wing, Psa 91:4 , to take sanctuary there, to be hid under God’s altar; for upon all the glory there is a defence, Isa 4:5 . Joash was preserved six years in the sanctuary, where he was hid. The sanctuary is called God’s hidden place, Eze 7:22 , and his saints his hidden ones, Psa 83:3 .

In his pavilion ] The Hebrew Succoh is written with a little Samech , Hebrew Text Note to show, say the Masorites, that a little pavilion or cottage where God is shall be sufficient to safeguard the saints, Quod tabernaculum exile , est asylum tutissimum.

In the secret of his tabernacle ] I shall be as safe as if I were shut up in his holy ark.

He shall set me upon a rock ] Out of mine enemy’s reach.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

time = day,

hide. Figure of speech Metonymy (of Adjunct), App-6; hiding put for protection afforded by it.

pavilion = dwelling.

secret = secret place, where no stranger was admitted.

tabernacle = tent, or habitation. Hebrew. ‘ohel. App-40(3).

rock. Hebrew. zur. See note on Psa 18:1, Psa 18:2.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

Psa 27:5-6

Psa 27:5-6

“For in the day of trouble he will keep me secretly in his pavilion:

In the covert of his tabernacle will he hide me;

He will lift me up upon a rock.

And now shall my head be lifted up above mine enemies round about me;

And I will offer in his tabernacle sacrifices of joy;

I will sing, yea, I will sing praises unto Jehovah.”

“He will keep me secretly in his pavilion” (Psa 27:5). “This should not be understood literally, as some Jewish commentators suppose, claiming that David even hid himself in the tabernacle; but David means that his spirit shall find a refuge with God in the times of trouble.

“Now shall my head be lifted up” (Psa 27:6). There is no safety or security on earth that can be compared with the confident stability of the soul that is truly anchored `in the Lord.’ If a government forbids Christians, they may reply with Peter, “We must obey God rather than men.” If obstacles are multiplied, we may say with Paul, “None of these things move me.” If our lives are threatened, we may remember the words of the Christ who said, “Be not afraid of them that kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul; but rather fear him who is able to destroy both soul and body in hell” (Mat 10:28).

Every man can testify of “mountains” and “valleys” in his spiritual life; and in this psalm, we now, quite suddenly, find ourselves in a valley of distress and depression.

E.M. Zerr:

Psa 27:5. A pavilion is a covering and shelter. In times of trouble God will cover his faithful servants with strong protection. In the secret or intimacy of the sacred house of the Lord there is shelter from the storms of life. A rock is a sure foundation, and God will be a rock of support for his loved ones.

Psa 27:6. To lift up the head means to have a feeling of triumph when it is said with reference to personal enemies. A man might have various reasons for coming to the house of God with an offering. David’s success over his enemies gave him one of his chief motives for such devotion, and it was accompanied with songs of praise.

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

For in: Psa 10:1, Psa 32:6, Psa 32:7, Psa 46:1, Psa 50:15, Psa 77:2, Psa 91:15, Psa 138:7, Pro 1:24-28, Isa 26:16, Jer 2:27, Jer 2:28

hide: Psa 57:1, Psa 83:3, Psa 119:114, Pro 18:10, Isa 4:5, Isa 4:6, Isa 26:20, Isa 32:2, Mat 23:37, Col 3:3

secret: Psa 31:20, Psa 91:1, 2Ch 22:12, Neh 6:10, Neh 6:11

set me: Psa 18:33, Psa 40:2, Psa 61:2, Hab 3:18, Hab 3:19, Mat 7:24, Mat 7:25, Mat 16:16-18

Reciprocal: Exo 26:14 – a covering Deu 33:27 – refuge 2Sa 15:25 – he will bring 2Sa 22:3 – my refuge 2Sa 22:12 – made Job 29:4 – the secret Psa 18:6 – heard Psa 18:11 – secret Psa 64:2 – Hide Isa 37:14 – and Hezekiah went Isa 38:20 – therefore Jer 16:19 – my strength Jer 36:26 – but Jer 43:10 – his royal Nah 1:7 – strong hold

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Psa 27:5-6. In the time of trouble he shall hide, or, hath hid me Justly do I prize the house and service of God so highly, both because I am under such vast obligations to him for his former protection and favours, and because all my confidence and hope of security depend upon him; in the secret of his tabernacle Into which mine enemies cannot come; or, as it were in the secret of his tabernacle he shall hide me That is, in a place as safe as the holy of holies, termed Gods secret place, (Eze 7:22,) into which none might enter but the high-priest, and he only one day in a year. He alludes to the ancient custom of offenders fleeing to the tabernacles or altars for safety. He shall set me upon a rock Upon a place high and inaccessible, strong and impregnable, where I shall be out of the reach of mine enemies. The temple was thought a safe place for Nehemiah to lie hid in, Neh 6:10; but the safety of believers is not in the walls of the temple, but in the God of the temple, and their comfort in communion with him. My head shall be lifted up above mine enemies

He will advance me above them, and give me a complete victory over them. Therefore will I offer sacrifices of joy Hebrew, , terugnah, of shouting, or resounding, that is, of thanksgiving and praise, which used to be accompanied with the sound of trumpets and other instruments.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

By seeking the Lord, David would obtain His protection from his enemies and a firm foundation for his life. These foes would not pursue him into the sanctuary. The psalmist’s real security came in seeking refuge in the Lord Himself-that His tabernacle only symbolized. David was sure the Lord would exalt him above his enemies eventually. When this happened, he promised to worship the Lord with sacrifices and verbal praise.

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)