Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Psalms 61:3
For thou hast been a shelter for me, [and] a strong tower from the enemy.
3. For thou hast been a refuge for me,
A strong tower from the enemy (R.V.).
He appeals to past experience. “In Thee have I taken refuge” is the constant cry with which faith approaches God (Psa 7:1; Psa 11:1; Psa 16:1; Psa 31:1; Psa 57:1; Psa 71:1; &c.). In Psa 18:2 David addresses God as “my Rock in whom I take refuge.” We may see from Jdg 9:51 what ‘a strong tower’ meant literally: for the metaphor cp. Pro 18:10.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
For thou hast been a shelter for me – A place of refuge; a place where I have found safety. He refers here to what had occurred in former times. God had protected him when in danger, and he pleads that fact as a reason why God should now interpose and deliver him. That reason seems to be founded on two considerations:
(a) God had thus shown that he had power to deliver him; and
(b) it might be expected that God who is unchangeable, and who had interposed, would manifest the same traits of character still, and would not leave him now.
Both of these are proper grounds for prayer.
And strong tower from the enemy – See the notes at Psa 18:2.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Psa 61:3
For Thou hast been a shelter to me, and a strong tower from the enemy.
Past mercies earnests of future ones
The psalmist had good ground for the determination which he cordially expresses. It is manifest that, with David, to call to mind past mercies was to expect future. He was at the very ends of the earth; his heart was overwhelmed; but as soon as he remembered how God had delivered and shielded him before, he was at once confident that the wings of his protection were stretched over him still. Perhaps he recollected how he had been saved from the paw of the lion and the paw of the bear–how wonderfully he had been enabled to smite down the uncircumcised Philistine; and then, remembering that God was still the same God, he took courage, and felt it impossible that he could now be deserted. Let us, then, show the soundness of Davids argument. If it be not sound, and God, though He once loved us and sought to do us good, doth now no longer love us, then He, the unchangeable must have changed. But is the Lords arm shortened that He cannot save? The mercies, therefore, that memory adduces cannot have exhausted Him; otherwise He were not Almighty; nay, they actually pledge Him to assist me, otherwise He were not unchangeable. And consider St. Pauls argument: He that spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with Him also freely give us all things? The apostle here makes the great fact of human redemption–a redemption of which all men, without exception, are the subjects–a reason why God should bestow upon us whatsoever is good; or rather, an evidence that He cannot be willing to withhold from us any real benefit. And, perhaps, there is hardly the use made which there might be of the grand fact of redemption, when men are to be urged to dependence on God, or to confidence in His mercy. It is generally to God as a God of providence, rather than of salvation, that reference is made. We speak of Him as the Being who has watched over us from infancy Upwards; and we argue that He who has bestowed so many blessings Will surely not forsake us if we will trust in His protection. The argument is quite correct so far as it goes. There is no fault to be found with it, except that it does not take the highest ground. For it is not every man, who, like David, has been wondrously delivered from the vicious, uncicumcised Philistine, and who can therefore say of his Maker, Thou hast been a shelter for me. Still every man may say this, though he may be quite unable to trace any single interposition, or speak of special instances in which he has been secured by the shelter of the Almighty–every man may say it, because he has had a share in the general providence of God, having been fed by His bounty, and guarded by His power. Every man may say it, because on his behalf–as actually on his behalf as though he had been a solitary offender–did Gods own Son take on Him human nature, undergo ignominy, and die as a propitiation. The mother who has lost a child, and yet has been enabled, when that child was carried forth to the burial, to exclaim, The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord–what right has she to be confounded or dismayed when another child seems sickening, as though it were about to die? Why should she recoil from the new trial as certainly more than she can bear, when she has the memory of support given her in her former affliction? God comforted her then; why not now? And so with other mourners and other trials. It is in this way that we would have you live over again times and seasons of extraordinary mercies, in order that you may be nerved for extraordinary trials. Christians should study the history of eminent saints, in order that, through observing what deliverances have been wrought for others, they may be encouraged to expect deliverance for themselves. There is not a converted man who has not such a book–the book of his own experience, on whose pages are inscribed the unnumbered things that God has done for himself. Its title may be said to have been written on the day of conversion, and each following page on every succeeding day. It is the history of himself, and there is a reality about it to convince, which the history of another can scarcely ever have. And note, too, the striking expression of St. Paul, I know whom I have believed. It was no mere report or hearsay with him, that God was a merciful Father, or Christ a powerful Saviour. He had had proof, and he knew and was persuaded that he was able to keep that, etc. He had stored in his memory evidences both of the love and might of the Redeemer to which in the hour of trial he could appeal. And if we did the like, then we should not be, as we too often are, dismayed by the prospect of any new trial, or as much disheartened by the pressure of some new burden, as though we never had experienced the supports and consolations which the Almighty can bestow. Let mercies be remembered as well as enjoyed, and they must be as lights in our dark days, and as shields in our perilous. Strive to acquire the habit of noting and recording the blessings you receive; so that you may have, as it were, books to which to refer. We care not whether or not you do what many have done–accustom yourselves to the keeping a diary in which to register the incidents of life. We are not anxious about the method, but only as to the thing. In one way or another, keep the past before you, if you would look the future calmly in the face. Every fresh discovery of Gods gracious care of us will increase our admiring love, and with our love our happiness. Thus will life be to eternity what the past is now to the future, the supplying motive to a yet heartier rejoicing in the Lord our God. (H. Melvill, B. D.)
A strong tower
Let us think of the Lord as a strong tower.
I. Remember that the children wanted such a refuge just as much as the grown-up people did. It would never have done for the mother to have left her little child, or the father his boys and maidens. The enemy would have carried them away as slaves, or perhaps have killed them. Whenever temptation comes to you remember that none of us can fight this enemy by ourselves. We must run away at once and hide ourselves in Jesus. Nor is this the only enemy that makes us need the strong tower. We have often to run away from ourselves. Our tempers perhaps are passionate, and set us all on fire, like robbers used to do to the cottages and homes of the people. The feelings sometimes are full of anger and hatred, like those cruel men. Now for them too the Lord is a strong tower. He comes forth with His strong right hand to destroy this nest of robbers.
II. Think what a safe refuge we have when the Lord is our strong tower. He is the Almighty.
III. David not only speaks of the safety, but of the blessedness also. I will trust in the covert of Thy wings (Psa 61:4). When I was going over that great castle, I thought that it was a very good place to hide in, but not a very comfortable place to live in. But when I got up to the very safest place of all, there I found a most pleasant little cottage; the ivy grew on the thatch, the jessamine and rose hung about the porch, a bird was singing merrily over the door, and from within came the happy laugh of children. There was strength, and there was comfort too. There was safety, and loving care. And so is it in the Lords strong tower. The Almighty power goes around us to defend us, and the arms that encircle us are the arms of Love, (Mark Guy Pearse.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 3. Thou hast been a shelter for me] During the whole duration of the captivity God marvellously dealt with the poor Jews; so that, although they were cast down, they were not utterly forsaken.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
3. shelter . . . and strongtowerrepeat the same sentiment.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
For thou hast been a shelter for me,…. Or “refuge” y, from avenging justice; a hiding place and covert from the storms and tempests of divine wrath; a shadow and a screen from the heat of Satan’s fiery darts, and the blast of his terrible temptations,
Isa 25:4;
[and] a strong tower from the enemy: from Satan the devouring lion, from furious persecutors, and every other enemy; see Pr 18:10; and this experience the psalmist had of protection from the Rock in former times made him desirous of being led to it now.
y “asylum”, Tigurine version, Vatablus; “perfagium”, Cocceius; “refugium”, Michaelis.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
3. For thou hast been my hope Here we may suppose, either that he calls to his remembrance such benefits as he had formerly received, or that he congratulates himself upon deliverance which he had presently experienced. There is much probability in either supposition. Nothing animates our hopes more than the recollection of the past goodness of God, and, in the midst of his prayers, we frequently find David indulging in reflections of this kind. On the other hand, the remainder of the psalm is occupied with returning praise to God for his present goodness; and there is no reason why we should not suppose, that these words before us form the commencement of the thanksgiving. In that case, the Hebrew particle, which we have rendered for or because, may be understood rather in an affirmative sense, surely or certainly.
In the verse which follows, he expresses the confidence which he had that he would dwell from this time forth in the sanctuary of the Lord. I cannot altogether agree with those who think that David was still in his state of exile from his native country when this was written, and is merely to be understood as promising to himself the certainty of his return. He would seem rather to be rejoicing in restoration already obtained, than assuaging his grief by anticipation of it in the future; and this will be still more apparent, when we come to consider the immediate context. It is noticeable, that now when he was returned from his banishment, and established within his own palace, his heart was set more upon the worship of God than all the wealth, splendor, and pleasures of royalty. We have his testimony in other parts of his writings, that in the worst calamities which he endured, he experienced nothing which could be compared to the bitterness of being shut out from the ordinances of religion; and now he accounts it a higher pleasure to lie as a suppliant before the altar, than to sit upon the throne of a king. By the words which immediately follow, he shows that he did not, like too many uninformed persons, attach a superstitious importance to the mere externals of religion, adding, that he found his safety under the shadow of God’s wings. Ignorant persons might conceive of God as necessarily confined to the outward tabernacle, but David only improved this symbol of the Divine presence as a means of elevating the spiritual exercises of his faith. I would not deny that there may be an allusion to the cherubim when he speaks of the shadow of God’s wings. Only we must remember, that David did not rest in carnal ordinances, the elements of the world, (404) but rose by them and above them to the spiritual worship of God.
(404) “ Non fuisse retentum in mundi elementis.” — Lat. “ David ne s’est point arret, aux elemens du monde, (comme Sainct Paul appelle les ceremonies prises charnellement et quant a l’exterieur,”) etc. — Fr.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(3) A strong tower.Comp. Pro. 18:10.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
3. For thou hast been a shelter a strong tower A bringing out the figure of “the rock higher than I,” in previous verse.
Thou hast been A remembrance of former mighty perils and deliverances. Past mercies inspire confidence for the future.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Are not all these well known (and may I not add, Reader, well proved, in your soul’s experience) characters of the Lord Jesus? Is not Jesus the hiding place, and the covert, and the strong tower, and security, of all his redeemed? Pray look at those sweet scriptures: Isa 32:2 ; Psa 18:1-2 , etc. And, Reader, while Jesus thus appears as the only sanctuary of his people, let you and I pause and ask each one his own heart, Can we adopt this language? Do I really abide in Jesus? and do I truly trust in him for the whole of my life and salvation? Joh 15:4 .
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Psa 61:3 For thou hast been a shelter for me, [and] a strong tower from the enemy.
Ver. 3. For thou hast been a shelter for me ] Thou hast, and therefore thou wilt, is an ordinary Scripture medium, and well it may; for God is unchangeable, and his decree for preserving his people is (as the poet saith well) , Irrevocable.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
shelter = refuge.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
thou: Psa 4:6, Psa 4:7, Psa 116:2, Psa 140:7, Isa 46:3, Isa 46:4, 2Co 1:10
strong: Psa 18:2, Pro 18:10
Reciprocal: 2Sa 22:3 – my high Psa 59:16 – for thou Psa 91:1 – dwelleth Psa 143:9 – flee unto thee Joe 3:16 – hope
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
2. Confidence in God 61:3-7
Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)
David’s desire for God’s protection rested on the Lord’s previous provisions of deliverance for him. God had proved to be his refuge and tower of strength. Now the psalmist longed to dwell in the Lord’s tent or tabernacle and to enjoy the protection of His wings, as though he were a baby chick or bird (cf. Psa 17:8; Psa 36:7; Psa 57:1; Psa 63:7; Psa 91:4).
"The psalmist’s longing for God (Psa 61:1-5) is a familiar motif in the Psalms as an expression of deep love for God arising out of great adversity (cf. Psalms 20; Psalms 21; Psalms 27; Psalms 42; Psalms 43; Psalms 63)." [Note: VanGemeren, p. 417.]