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Psalms 64:7 Bible in Basic English (BBE)

7 But God sends out an arrow against them; suddenly they are wounded.

Cross Reference

Psalms 7:12-13 BBE

If a man is not turned from his evil, he will make his sword sharp; his bow is bent and ready. He has made ready for him the instruments of death; he makes his arrows flames of fire.

Deuteronomy 32:23 BBE

I will send a rain of troubles on them, my arrows will be showered on them.

Deuteronomy 32:42 BBE

I will make my arrows red with blood, my sword will be feasting on flesh, with the blood of the dead and the prisoners, of the long-haired heads of my haters.

1 Kings 22:34 BBE

And a certain man sent an arrow from his bow without thought of its direction, and gave the king of Israel a wound where his breastplate was joined to his clothing; so he said to the driver of his war-carriage, Go to one side and take me away out of the army, for I am badly wounded.

1 Chronicles 10:3-7 BBE

And the fight was going against Saul, and the archers came across him, and he was wounded by the archers. Then Saul said to the servant who had the care of his arms, Take your sword and put it through me, before these men without circumcision come and make sport of me. But his servant, full of fear, would not do so. Then Saul took out his sword, falling on it himself. And when his servant saw that Saul was dead, he did the same, and came to his death. So death overtook Saul and his three sons; all his family came to an end together. And when all the men of Israel who were in the valley saw that the men of Israel had gone in flight and that Saul and his sons were dead, they went in flight away from their towns; and the Philistines came and took them for themselves.

Job 6:4 BBE

For the arrows of the Ruler of all are present with me, and their poison goes deep into my spirit: his army of fears is put in order against me.

Psalms 18:14 BBE

He sent out his arrows, driving them in all directions; by his flames of fire they were troubled.

Psalms 64:4 BBE

So that in secret they may let loose their arrows at the upright, suddenly and unseen.

Psalms 73:19 BBE

How suddenly are they wasted! fears are the cause of their destruction.

Proverbs 6:15 BBE

For this cause his downfall will be sudden; quickly he will be broken, and there will be no help for him.

Proverbs 29:1 BBE

A man hating sharp words and making his heart hard, will suddenly be broken and will not be made well again.

Isaiah 30:13 BBE

This sin will be to you like a crack in a high wall, causing its fall suddenly and in a minute.

Lamentations 3:12-13 BBE

With his bow bent, he has made me the mark for his arrows. He has let loose his arrows into the inmost parts of my body.

Matthew 24:40 BBE

Then two men will be in the field; one is taken, and one let go;

Matthew 24:50-51 BBE

The lord of that servant will come in a day when he is not looking for him, and in an hour of which he has no knowledge, And will have him cut in two, and will give him a part in the fate of the false ones: there will be weeping and cries of sorrow.

1 Thessalonians 5:2-3 BBE

For you yourselves have the knowledge that the day of the Lord will come like a thief in the night. When they say, There is peace and no danger, then sudden destruction will come on them, as birth-pains on a woman with child; and they will not be able to get away from it.

Worthy.Bible » Commentaries » Keil & Delitzsch Commentary » Commentary on Psalms 64

Commentary on Psalms 64 Keil & Delitzsch Commentary


Introduction

invocation of Divine Protection against the Falseness of Men

Even Hilary begins the exposition of this Psalm with the words Psalmi superscriptio historiam non continet , in order at the outset to give up all attempt at setting forth its historical connection. The Midrash observes that it is very applicable to Daniel, who was cast into the lions' den by the satraps by means of a delicately woven plot. This is indeed true; but only because it is wanting in any specially defined features and cannot with any certainty be identified with one or other of the two great periods of suffering in the life of David.


Verses 1-4

The Psalm opens with an octostich, and closes in the same way. The infinitive noun שׂיח signifies a complaint, expressed not by the tones of pain, but in words. The rendering of the lxx (here and in Psalms 55:3) is too general, ἐν τῷ θέεσθαί με . The “terror” of the enemy is that proceeding from him ( gen. obj . as in Deuteronomy 2:15, and frequently). The generic singular אויב is at once particularized in a more detailed description with the use of the plural. סוד is a club or clique; רגשׁה (Targumic = המון , e.g., Ezekiel 30:10) a noisy crowd. The perfects after אשׁר affirm that which they now do as they have before done; cf. Psalms 140:4 and Psalms 58:8, where, as in this passage, the treading or bending of the bow is transferred to the arrow. דּבר מר is the interpretation added to the figure, as in Psalms 144:7. That which is bitter is called מר , root מר , stringere , from the harsh astringent taste; here it is used tropically of speech that wounds and inflicts pain (after the manner of an arrow or a stiletto), πικροὶ λόγοι . With the Kal לירות (Psalms 11:2) alternates the Hiph . ירהוּ . With פּתאם the description takes a new start. ולא ייראוּ , forming an assonance with the preceding word, means that they do it without any fear whatever, and therefore also without fear of God (Psalms 55:20; Psalms 25:18).


Verse 5-6

The evil speech is one with the bitter speech in Psalms 64:4, the arrow which they are anxious to let fly. This evil speech, here agreement or convention, they make firm to themselves ( sibi ), by securing, in every possible way, its effective execution. ספּר (frequently used of the cutting language of the ungodly, Psalms 59:13; Psalms 69:27; cf. Talmudic ספּר לשׁון שׁלישׁי , to speak as with three tongues, i.e., slanderously) is here construed with ל of that at which their haughty and insolent utterances aim. In connection therewith they take no heed of God, the all-seeing One: they say (ask), quis conspiciat ipsis . There is no need to take למו as being for לו (Hitzig); nor is it the dative of the object instead of the accusative, but it is an ethical dative: who will see or look to them, i.e., exerting any sort of influence upon them? The form of the question is not the direct (Psalms 59:8), but the indirect, in which מי , seq. fut ., is used in a simply future (Jeremiah 44:28) or potential sense (Job 22:17; 1 Kings 1:20). Concerning עולת , vid., Psalms 58:3. It is doubtful whether תּמּנוּ

(Note: תּמּנוּ in Baer's Psalterium is an error that has been carried over from Heidenheim's.)

is the first person (= תּמּונוּ ) as in Numbers 17:13, Jeremiah 44:18, or the third person as in Lamentations 3:22 (= תּמּוּ , which first of all resolved is תּנמוּ , and then transposed תּמּנוּ , like מעזניה = מענזיה = מעזּיה , Isaiah 23:11). The reading טמנוּ , from which Rashi proceeds, and which Luther follows in his translation, is opposed by the lxx and Targum; it does not suit the governing subject, and is nothing but an involuntary lightening of the difficulty. If we take into consideration, that תּמם signifies not to make ready, but to be ready, and that consequently חפשׂ מחפּשׂ is to be taken by itself, then it must be rendered either: they excogitate knavish tricks or villainies, “we are ready, a clever stroke is concocted, and the inward part of man and the heart is deep!” or, which we prefer, since there is nothing to indicate the introduction of any soliloquy: they excogitate knavish tricks, they are ready - a delicately devised, clever stroke (nominative of the result), and (as the poet ironically adds) the inward part of man and the heart is (verily) deep. There is nothing very surprising in the form תּמּנוּ for תּמּוּ , since the Psalms, whenever they depict the sinful designs and doings of the ungodly, delight in singularities of language. On ולב (not ולב ) = ( אישׁ ) ולב = ולבּו , cf. Psalms 118:14 .


Verses 7-10

Deep is man's heart and inward part, but not too deep for God, who knoweth the heart (Jeremiah 17:9.). And He will just as suddenly surprise the enemies of His anointed with their death-blow, as they had plotted it for him. The futt. consec . that follow represent that which is future, with all the certainty of an historical fact as a retribution springing from the malicious craftiness of the enemies. According to the accentuation, Psalms 64:8 is to be rendered: “then will Elohim shoot them, a sudden arrow become their wounds.” Thus at length Hupfeld renders it; but how extremely puzzling is the meaning hidden behind this sentence! The Targum and the Jewish expositors have construed it differently: “Then will Elohim shoot them with arrows suddenly;” in this case, however, because Psalms 64:8 then becomes too blunt and bald, פּתאם has to be repeated in thought with this member of the verse, and this is in itself an objection to it. We interpunctuate with Ewald and Hitzig thus: then does Elohim shoot them with an arrow, suddenly arise (become a reality) their wounds (cf. Micah 7:4), namely, of those who had on their part aimed the murderous weapon against the upright for a sudden and sure shot. Psalms 64:9 is still more difficult. Kimchi's interpretation, which accords with the accents: et corruere facient eam super se, linguam suam , is intolerable; the proleptic suffix, having reference to לשׁונם (Exodus 3:6; Job 33:20), ought to have been feminine (vid., on Psalms 22:16), and “to make their own tongue fall upon themselves” is an odd fancy. The objective suffix will therefore refer per enallagen to the enemy. But not thus (as Hitzig, who now seeks to get out of the difficulty by an alteration of the text, formerly rendered it): “and they cause those to fall whom they have slandered [ lit. upon whom their tongue came].” This form of retribution does not accord with the context; and moreover the gravely earnest עלימו , like the הוּ -, refers more probably to the enemies than to the objects of their hostility. The interpretation of Ewald and Hengstenberg is better: “and one overthrows him, inasmuch as their tongue, i.e., the sin of their tongue with which they sought to destroy others, comes upon themselves.” The subject to ויּכשׁילהוּ , as in Psalms 63:11; Job 4:19; Job 7:3; Luke 12:20, is the powers which are at the service of God, and which are not mentioned at all; and the thought עלימו לשׁונם (a circumstantial clause) is like Psalms 140:10, where in a similar connection the very same singularly rugged lapidary, or terse, style is found. In Psalms 64:9 we must proceed on the assumption that ראה ב in such a connection signifies the gratification of looking upon those who are justly punished and rendered harmless. But he who tarries to look upon such a scene is certainly not the person to flee from it; התנודד does not here mean “to betake one's self to flight” (Ewald, Hitzig), but to shake one's self, as in Jeremiah 48:27, viz., to shake the head (Psalms 44:15; Jeremiah 18:16) - the recognised (vid., Psalms 22:8) gesture of malignant, mocking astonishment. The approbation is awarded, according to Psalms 64:10, to God, the just One. And with the joy at His righteous interposition, - viz. of Him who has been called upon to interpose, - is combined a fear of the like punishment. The divine act of judicial retribution now set forth becomes a blessing to mankind. From mouth to mouth it is passed on, and becomes an admonitory nota bene. To the righteous in particular it becomes a consolatory and joyous strengthening of his faith. The judgment of Jahve is the redemption of the righteous. Thus, then, does he rejoice in his God, who by thus judging and redeeming makes history into the history of redemption, and hide himself the more confidingly in Him; and all the upright boast themselves, viz., in God, who looks into the heart and practically acknowledges them whose heart is directed unswervingly towards Him, and conformed entirely to Him. In place of the futt. consec ., which have a prophetic reference, simple futt . come in here, and between these a perf. consec . as expressive of that which will then happen when that which is prophetically certain has taken place.