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Psalms 27:1 Darby English Bible (DARBY)

1 {[A Psalm] of David.} Jehovah is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear? Jehovah is the strength of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?

Cross Reference

Psalms 118:6 DARBY

Jehovah is for me, I will not fear; what can man do unto me?

Hebrews 13:6 DARBY

So that, taking courage, we may say, The Lord [is] my helper, and I will not be afraid: what will man do unto me?

Exodus 15:2 DARBY

My strength and song is Jah, and he is become my salvation: This is my ùGod, and I will glorify him; My father's God, and I will extol him.

2 Corinthians 12:9 DARBY

And he said to me, My grace suffices thee; for [my] power is perfected in weakness. Most gladly therefore will I rather boast in my weaknesses, that the power of the Christ may dwell upon me.

Isaiah 60:19-20 DARBY

The sun shall be no more thy light by day, neither for brightness shall the moon give light unto thee; but Jehovah shall be thine everlasting light, and thy God thy glory. Thy sun shall no more go down, neither shall thy moon withdraw itself; for Jehovah shall be thine everlasting light, and the days of thy mourning shall be ended.

Micah 7:7-8 DARBY

But as for me, I will look unto Jehovah; I will wait for the God of my salvation: my God will hear me. Rejoice not against me, O mine enemy: though I fall, I shall arise; when I sit in darkness, Jehovah shall be a light unto me.

Psalms 84:11 DARBY

For Jehovah Elohim is a sun and shield: Jehovah will give grace and glory; no good thing will he withhold from them that walk uprightly.

Isaiah 61:10 DARBY

I will greatly rejoice in Jehovah, my soul shall be joyful in my God; for he hath clothed me with the garments of salvation, he hath covered me with the robe of righteousness, as a bridegroom decketh himself with the priestly turban, and as a bride adorneth herself with her jewels.

Revelation 21:23 DARBY

And the city has no need of the sun nor of the moon, that they should shine for it; for the glory of God has enlightened it, and the lamp thereof [is] the Lamb.

Romans 8:31 DARBY

What shall we then say to these things? If God [be] for us, who against us?

John 8:12 DARBY

Again therefore Jesus spoke to them, saying, I am the light of the world; he that follows me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the light of life.

Malachi 4:2 DARBY

And unto you that fear my name shall the Sun of righteousness arise with healing in his wings; and ye shall go forth and leap like fatted calves.

Psalms 18:28 DARBY

For it is thou that makest my lamp to shine: Jehovah my God enlighteneth my darkness.

Isaiah 2:5 DARBY

House of Jacob, come ye, and let us walk in the light of Jehovah.

Psalms 62:6 DARBY

He only is my rock and my salvation; my high fortress: I shall not be moved.

Psalms 19:14 DARBY

Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in thy sight, O Jehovah, my rock, and my redeemer.

Psalms 18:1-2 DARBY

{To the chief Musician. [A Psalm] of David, the servant of Jehovah, who spoke to Jehovah the words of this song in the day that Jehovah had delivered him out of the hand of all his enemies and out of the hand of Saul. And he said,} I will love thee, O Jehovah, my strength. Jehovah is my rock, and my fortress, and my deliverer; my ùGod, my rock, in whom I will trust; my shield, and the horn of my salvation, my high tower.

Psalms 68:19-20 DARBY

Blessed be the Lord: day by day doth he load us [with good], the ùGod who is our salvation. Selah. Our ùGod is the ùGod of salvation; and with Jehovah, the Lord, are the goings forth [even] from death.

Revelation 7:10 DARBY

And they cry with a loud voice, saying, Salvation to our God who sits upon the throne, and to the Lamb.

Philippians 4:13 DARBY

I have strength for all things in him that gives me power.

John 1:1-5 DARBY

In [the] beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. *He* was in the beginning with God. All things received being through him, and without him not one [thing] received being which has received being. In him was life, and the life was the light of men. And the light appears in darkness, and the darkness apprehended it not.

Isaiah 12:2 DARBY

Behold, ùGod is my salvation: I will trust, and not be afraid; for Jah, Jehovah, is my strength and song, and he is become my salvation.

Psalms 118:21 DARBY

I will give thee thanks, for thou hast answered me, and art become my salvation.

Psalms 118:14-15 DARBY

My strength and song is Jah, and he is become my salvation. The voice of triumph and salvation is in the tents of the righteous: the right hand of Jehovah doeth valiantly;

Psalms 62:2 DARBY

He only is my rock and my salvation; my high fortress: I shall not be greatly moved.

Psalms 46:1-2 DARBY

{To the chief Musician. Of the sons of Korah. On Alamoth. A song.} God is our refuge and strength, a help in distresses, very readily found. Therefore will we not fear though the earth be removed, and though the mountains be carried into the heart of the seas;

Psalms 18:46 DARBY

Jehovah liveth; and blessed be my rock; and exalted be the God of my salvation,

Revelation 22:5 DARBY

And night shall not be any more, and no need of a lamp, and light of [the] sun; for [the] Lord God shall shine upon them, and they shall reign to the ages of ages.

Isaiah 60:1-3 DARBY

Arise, shine! for thy light is come, and the glory of Jehovah is risen upon thee. For behold, darkness shall cover the earth, and gross darkness the peoples; but Jehovah will arise upon thee, and his glory shall be seen on thee. And the nations shall walk by thy light, and kings by the brightness of thy rising.

Isaiah 51:6-8 DARBY

Lift up your eyes to the heavens, and look on the earth beneath: for the heavens shall vanish away like smoke, and the earth shall grow old like a garment, and they that dwell therein shall die in like manner; but my salvation shall be for ever, and my righteousness shall not be abolished. Hearken unto me, ye that know righteousness, the people in whose heart is my law; fear not the reproach of men, and be not afraid of their revilings. For the moth shall eat them up like a garment, and the worm shall eat them like wool; but my righteousness shall be for ever, and my salvation from generation to generation.

Isaiah 45:24 DARBY

Only in Jehovah, shall one say, have I righteousness and strength. To him shall [men] come; and all that are incensed against him shall be ashamed.

Job 29:3 DARBY

When his lamp shone over my head, [and] by his light I walked through darkness;

Luke 3:6 DARBY

and all flesh shall see the salvation of God.

Psalms 28:7-8 DARBY

Jehovah is my strength and my shield; my heart confided in him, and I was helped: therefore my heart exulteth, and with my song will I praise him. Jehovah is their strength; and he is the stronghold of salvation to his anointed one.

Psalms 3:8 DARBY

Salvation is of Jehovah; thy blessing is upon thy people. Selah.

Psalms 43:2 DARBY

For thou art the God of my strength: why hast thou cast me off? why go I about mourning because of the oppression of the enemy?

John 1:9 DARBY

The true light was that which, coming into the world, lightens every man.

Matthew 8:26 DARBY

And he says to them, Why are ye fearful, O ye of little faith? Then, having arisen, he rebuked the winds and the sea, and there was a great calm.

Psalms 56:2-4 DARBY

Mine enemies would swallow [me] up all the day long; for they are many that fight against me haughtily. In the day that I am afraid, I will confide in thee. In God will I praise his word, in God I put my confidence: I will not fear; what can flesh do unto me?

Psalms 11:1 DARBY

{To the chief Musician. [A Psalm] of David.} In Jehovah have I put my trust: how say ye to my soul, Flee [as] a bird to your mountain?

Luke 2:30 DARBY

for mine eyes have seen thy salvation,

Worthy.Bible » Commentaries » Keil & Delitzsch Commentary » Commentary on Psalms 27

Commentary on Psalms 27 Keil & Delitzsch Commentary


Introduction

Taking Heart in God, the All-Recompensing One

The same longing after Zion meets us sounding forth from this as from the preceding Psalm. To remain his whole life long in the vicinity of the house of God, is here his only prayer; and that, rescued from his enemies, he shall there offer sacrifices of thanksgiving, is his confident expectation. The היכל of God, the King, is at present only a אהל which, however, on account of Him who sits enthroned therein, may just as much be called היכל as the היכל which Ezekiel beheld in remembrance of the Mosaic tabernacle, אהל , Ezekiel 41:1. Cut off from the sanctuary, the poet is himself threatened on all sides by the dangers of war; but he is just as courageous in God as in Psalms 3:7, where the battle is already going on: “ I do not fear the myriads of people, who are encamped against me. ” The situation, therefore, resembles that of David during the time of Absolom. But this holds good only of the first half, Psalms 27:1. In the second half, Psalms 27:10 is not in favour of its being composed by David. In fact the two halves are very unlike one another. They form a hysteron-proteron , inasmuch as the fides triumphans of the first part changes into fides supplex in the second, and with the beginning of the δέησις in Psalms 27:7, the style becomes heavy and awkward, the strophic arrangement obscure, and even the boundaries of the lines of the verses uncertain; so that one is tempted to regard Psalms 27:7 as the appendage of another writer. The compiler, however, must have had the Psalm before him exactly as we now have it; for the grounds for his placing it to follow Psalms 26:1-12 are to be found in both portions, cf. Psalms 27:7 with Psalms 26:11; Psalms 27:11 with Psalms 26:12.


Verses 1-3

In this first strophe is expressed the bold confidence of faith. It is a hexastich in the caesural schema. Let darkness break in upon him, the darkness of night, of trouble, and of spiritual conflict, yet Jahve is his Light, and if he is in Him, he is in the light and there shines upon him a sun, that sets not and knows no eclipse. This sublime, infinitely profound name for God, אורי , is found only in this passage; and there is only one other expression that can be compared with it. viz., בּא אורך in Isaiah 60:1; cf. φῶς ἐλήλυθα , John 12:46. ישׁעי does not stand beside אורי as an unfigurative, side by side with a figurative expression; for the statement that God is light, is not a metaphor. David calls Him his “salvation” in regard to everything that oppresses him, and the “stronghold ( מעוז from עזז , with an unchangeable å ) of his life” in regard to everything that exposes him to peril. In Jahve he conquers far and wide; in Him his life is hidden as it were behind a fortress built upon a rock (Psalms 31:3). When to the wicked who come upon him in a hostile way ( קרב על differing from קרב אל ), he attributes the intention of devouring his flesh, they are conceived of as wild beasts. To eat up any one's flesh signifies, even in Job 19:22, the same as to pursue any one by evil speaking (in Aramaic by slander, back-biting) to his destruction. In בּקרב (the Shebâ of the only faintly closed syllable is raised to a Chateph , as in ולשׁכני , Psalms 31:12, לשׁאול , and the like. The לי of איבי לּי may, as also in Psalms 25:2 (cf. Psalms 144:2), be regarded as giving intensity to the notion of special, personal enmity; but a mere repetition of the subject (the enemy) without the repetition of their hostile purpose would be tame in the parallel member of the verse : לי is a variation of the preceding עלי , as in Lamentations 3:60. In the apodosis המּה כּשׁלוּ ונפלוּ , the overthrow of the enemy is regarded beforehand as an accomplished fact. The holy boldness and imperturbable repose are expressed in Psalms 27:3 in the very rhythm. The thesis or downward movement in Psalms 27:3 is spondaic: he does not allow himself to be disturbed; the thesis in Psalms 27:3 is iambic: he can be bold. The rendering of Hitzig (as of Rashi): “in this do I trust, viz., that Jahve is my light, etc.,” is erroneous. Such might be the interpretation, if בזאת אני בוטח closed Psalms 27:2; but it cannot refer back over Psalms 27:2 to Psalms 27:1; and why should the poet have expressed himself thus materially, instead of saying ביהוה ? The fact of the case is this, בוטח signifies even by itself “of good courage,” e.g., Proverbs 11:15; and בזאת “in spite of this” (Coccejus: hoc non obstante ), Leviticus 26:27, cf. Psalms 78:32, begins the apodosis, at the head of which we expect to find an adversative conjunction.


Verse 4-5

There is only one thing, that he desires, although he also has besides full satisfaction in Jahve in the midst of strangers and in trouble. The future is used side by side with the perfect in Psalms 27:4 , in order to express an ardent longing which extends out of the past into the future, and therefore runs through his whole life. The one thing sought is unfolded in שׁבתּי וגו . A life-long dwelling in the house of Jahve, that is to say intimate spiritual intercourse with the God, who has His dwelling ( בית ), His palace ( היכל ) in the holy tent, is the one desire of David's heart, in order that he may behold and feast upon ( חזה בּ of a clinging, lingering, chained gaze, and consequently a more significant form of expression than חזה with an accusative, Psalms 63:3) נעם ה (Psalms 90:17), the pleasantness (or gracefulness) of Jahve, i.e., His revelation, full of grace, which is there visible to the eye of the spirit. The interpretation which regards amaenitas as being equivalent to amaenus cultus takes hold of the idea from the wrong side. The assertion that בּקּר בּ is intended as a synonym of חזה בּ , of a pleased and lingering contemplation (Hupf., Hitz.), is contrary to the meaning of the verb, which signifies “to examine (with ל to seek or spie about after anything, Leviticus 13:36), to reflect on, or consider;” even the post-biblical signification to visit, more especially the sick (whence בּקּוּר הלים ), comes from the primary meaning investigare . An appropriate sense may be obtained in the present instance by regarding it as a denominative from בּקשׁ and rendering it as Dunash and Rashi have done, “and to appear early in His temple;” but it is unnecessary to depart from the general usage of the language. Hengstenberg rightly retains the signification “to meditate on.” בּהיכלו is a designation of the place consecrated to devotion, and לבקּר is meant to refer to contemplative meditation that loses itself in God who is there manifest. In Psalms 27:5 David bases the justification of his desire upon that which the sanctuary of God is to him; the futures affirm what Jahve will provide for him in His sanctuary. It is a refuge in which he may hide himself, where Jahve takes good care of him who takes refuge therein from the storms of trouble that rage outside: there he is far removed from all dangers, he is lifted high above them and his feet are upon rocky ground. The Chethîb may be read בּסכּה , as in Psalms 31:21 and with Ewald §257, d ; but, in this passage, with אהל alternates סך , which takes the place of סכּה in the poetic style (Psalms 76:3; Lamentations 2:6), though it does not do so by itself, but always with a suffix.

(Note: Just in like manner they say in poetic style צידהּ , Psalms 132:15; פּנּהּ , Proverbs 7:8; מדּה , Job 11:9; גּלּהּ , Zechariah 4:2; and perhaps even נצּהּ , Genesis 40:10; for צידתהּ , פּנּתהּ , מדּתהּ , גּלּתהּ , and נצּתהּ ; as, in general, shorter forms are sometimes found in the inflexion, which do not occur in the corresponding principal form, e.g., צוּרם , Psalms 49:15, for צוּרתם ; מגוּרם , Psalms 55:16, for מגוּרתם ; בּערמם , Job 5:13, for בּערמתם ; בּתבוּנם , Hosea 13:2, for בּתבוּנתם ; פּחם ; Nehemiah 5:14, for פּחתם ; cf. Hitzig on Hosea 13:2, and Böttcher's Neue Aehrenlese, No. 693.)


Verse 6

With ועתּה the poet predicts inferentially (cf. Psalms 2:10) the fulfilment of what he fervently desires, the guarantee of which lies in his very longing itself. זבחי תּרוּעה do not mean sacrifices in connection with which the trumpets are blown by the priests; for this was only the case in connection with the sacrifices of the whole congregation (Numbers 10:10), not with those of individuals. תּרוּעה is a synonym of תּודה , Psalms 26:7; and זבחי תּרוּעה is a stronger form of expression for זבחי תודה (Psalms 107:22), i.e., (cf. זבחי צדק , Psalms 4:6; 51:21) sacrifices of jubilant thanksgiving: he will offer sacrifices in which his gratitude plays a prominent part, and will sing songs of thanksgiving, accompanied by the playing of stringed instruments, to his Deliverer, who has again and so gloriously verified His promises.


Verse 7-8

Vows of thanksgiving on the assumption of the answering of the prayer and the fulfilment of the thing supplicated, are very common at the close of Psalms. But in this Psalm the prayer is only just beginning at this stage. The transition is brought about by the preceding conception of the danger that threatens him from the side of his foes who are round about him. The reality, which, in the first part, is overcome and surmounted by his faith, makes itself consciously felt here. It is not to be rendered, as has been done by the Vulgate, Exaudi Domine vocem qua clamavi (rather, clamo ) ad te (the introit of the Dominica exspectationis in the interval of preparation between Ascension and Pentecost). שׁמע has Dechî , and accordingly קולי אקרא , voce mea (as in Psalms 3:5) clamo , is an adverbial clause equivalent to voce mea clamante me . In Psalms 27:8 לך cannot possibly be so rendered that ל is treated as Lamed auctoris (Dathe, Olshausen): Thine, saith my heart, is (the utterance:) seek ye may face. The declaration is opposed to this sense, thus artificially put upon it. לך אמר are undoubtedly to be construed together; and what the heart says to Jahve is not: Seek ye my face, but by reason of this, and as its echo (Calvin: velut Deo succinens ): I will therefore seek Thy face. Just as in Job 42:3, a personal inference is drawn from a directly quoted saying of God. In the periodic style it would be necessary to transpose בּקּשׁוּ פּני thus: since Thou hast permitted and exhorted us, or in accordance with Thy persuasive invitation, that we should seek Thy face, I do seek Thy face (Hupfeld). There is no retrospective reference to any particular passage in the Tôra, such as Deuteronomy 4:29. The prayer is not based upon any single passage of Scripture, but upon God's commands and promises in general.


Verse 9-10

The requests are now poured forth with all the greater freedom and importunity, that God may be willing to be entreated and invoked. The Hiph . הטּה signifies in this passage standing by itself (cf. Job 24:4): to push aside. The clause עזרתי היית does not say: be Thou my help (which is impossible on syntactical grounds), nor is it to be taken relatively: Thou who wast my help (for which there is no ground in what precedes); but on the contrary the praet . gives the ground of the request that follows “Thou art my help (lit., Thou has become, or hast ever been) - cast me, then, not away,” and it is, moreover, accented accordingly. Psalms 27:10, as we have already observed, does not sound as though it came from the lips of David, of whom it is only said during the time of his persecution by Saul, that at that time he was obliged to part from his parents, 1 Samuel 22:3. The words certainly might be David's, if Psalms 27:10 would admit of being taken hypothetically, as is done by Ewald, §362, b : should my father and my mother forsake me, yet Jahve will etc. But the entreaty “forsake me not” is naturally followed by the reason: for my father and my mother have forsaken me; and just as naturally does the consolation: but Jahve will take me up, prepare the way for the entreaties which begin anew in Psalms 27:11. Whereas, if כי is taken hypothetically, Psalms 27:11 stands disconnectedly in the midst of the surrounding requests. On יאספני cf. Joshua 20:4.


Verse 11-12

He is now wandering about like a hunted deer; but God is able to guide him so that he may escape all dangers. And this is what he prays for. As in Psalms 143:10, מישׁור is used in an ethical sense; and differs in this respect from its use in Psalms 26:12. On שׁררים , see the primary passage Psalms 5:9, of which this is an echo. Wily spies dodge his every step and would gladly see what they have invented against him and wished for him, realised. Should he enter the way of sin leading to destruction, it would tend to the dishonour of God, just as on the contrary it is a matter of honour with God not to let His servant fall. Hence he prays to be led in the way of God, for a oneness of his own will with the divine renders a man inaccessible to evil. נפשׁ , Psalms 27:12, is used, as in Psalms 17:9, and in the similar passage, which is genuinely Davidic, Psalms 41:3, in the signification passion or strong desire; because the soul, in its natural state, is selfishness and inordinate desire. יפח is a collateral form of יפיח ; they are both adjectives formed from the future of the verb פּוּח (like ירב , יריב ): accustomed to breathe out (exhale), i.e., either to express, or to snort, breathe forth (cf. πνεῖν , or ἐμπνεῖν φόνον and θόνοῦ, θυμον , and the like, Acts 9:1). In both Hitzig sees participles of יפח (Jeremiah 4:31); but Psalms 10:5 and Habakkuk 2:3 lead back to פּוּח ( פּיח ) ; and Hupfeld rightly recognises such nouns formed from futures to be, according to their original source, circumlocutions of the participle after the manner of an elliptical relative clause (the ṣifat of the Arabic syntax), and explains יפיח כּזבים , together with יפח חמס , from the verbal construction which still continues in force.


Verse 13-14

Self-encouragement to firmer confidence of faith. Joined to Psalms 27:12 (Aben-Ezra, Kimchi), Psalms 27:13 trails badly after it. We must, with Geier, Dachselt, and others, suppose that the apodosis is wanting to the protasis with its לוּלא pointed with three points above,

(Note: The ו has not any point above it, because it might be easily mistaken for a Cholem , vid., Baer's Psalterium p. 130.)

and four below, according to the Masora (cf. B. Berachoth 4 a ), but a word which is indispensably necessary, and is even attested by the lxx ( ἑαυτῇ ) and the Targum (although not by any other of the ancient versions); cf. the protasis with לוּ , which has no apodosis, in Genesis 50:15, and the apodoses with כּי after לוּלי in Genesis 31:42; Genesis 43:10; 1 Sam. 35:34; 2 Samuel 2:27 (also Numbers 22:33, where אוּלי = אם לא = לוּלי ), which are likewise to be explained per aposiopesin . The perfect after לוּלא ( לוּלי ) has sometimes the sense of a plusquamperfectum (as in Genesis 43:10, nisi cunctati essemus ), and sometimes the sense of an imperfect , as in the present passage (cf. Deuteronomy 32:29 , si saperent ). The poet does not speak of a faith that he once had, a past faith, but, in regard to the danger that is even now abiding and present, of the faith he now has, a present faith. The apodosis ought to run something like this (Psalms 119:92; Psalms 94:17): did I not believe, were not confidence preserved to me...then ( אז( ne or כּי אז ) I should perish; or: then I had suddenly perished. But he has such faith, and he accordingly in Psalms 27:14 encourages himself to go on cheerfully waiting and hoping; he speaks to himself, it is, as it were, the believing half of his soul addressing the despondent and weaker half. Instead of ואמץ (Deuteronomy 31:7) the expression is, as in Ps 31:25, ויאמץ לבּך , let thy heart be strong, let it give proof of strength. The rendering “May He (Jahve) strengthen thy heart” would require יאמּץ ; but האמיץ , as e.g., הרחיב Psalms 25:17, belongs to the transitive denominatives applying to the mind or spirit, in which the Hebrew is by no means poor, and in which the Arabic is especially rich.