The title of this Psalm is simply, A Prayer of David. We
canÕt place it to a specific time in DavidÕs life, because there are too many
possible points where this connects with his general circumstances. This Psalm
is also notable because David calls God Adonai (ÒMasterÓ) seven times.
ÒThere are four other psalms each
called by the name Tephillah, or Ôprayer,Õ but this deserves to be
distinguished from the rest and known as Ôthe prayer of David,Õ even as the
ninetieth Psalm is known as Ôthe prayer of Moses.Õ It savours of David. The man
of sincerity, of ardor, of trials, of faults, and of great heart, pleads, sobs,
and trusts through all the verses of this psalm.Ó (Spurgeon)
A. A plea for help with reasons given.
1. (1) Help me because of my great
need.
Bow down Your ear, O Lord,
hear me;
For I am poor and
needy.
a. Bow down Your ear: David used expressive
language to speak of his need. The idea – figurative, of course –
is that God in heaven bows His head to earth to hear DavidÕs plea for help
– DavidÕs cry, ÒHear me.Ó
i. ÒWhen our prayers are lowly by
reason of our humility, or feeble by reason of our sickness, or without wing by
reason of our despondency, the Lord will bow down to them, the infinitely
exalted Jehovah will have respect unto them.Ó (Spurgeon)
ii. Following this request will
come a reason David will give to God why
his prayer should be answered. David thought carefully in his prayer, and
presented both requests and reasons to God. ÒThe psalm is unique in its method
of urging a petition upon the ground of some known fact.Ó (Morgan)
b. For
I am poor and needy: David gives the first of several reasons why God should answer. David here appealed to GodÕs
sympathy, to His compassion. A hard-hearted God wouldnÕt care for a poor and needy man, or worse yet might
despise him. Yet David knew that God was full of love and compassion and would
be moved by the fact that David was, and knew himself to be, poor and needy.
i. It is significant that David began his plea with this. His understanding of the love
and compassion of God was foundational.
ii. ÒTo confess that we are poor
and needy seem demeaning. To be a servant seems unworthy. We want to be people
who deserve something from God because of who we are.Ó (Boice)
2. (2)
Help me because I am connected to You.
Preserve my life, for I am holy;
You are my God;
Save Your servant who trusts in You!
a. Preserve my life: DavidÕs problem was
desperate; he felt that without GodÕs help he could perish. Considering the
many people set against him (Psalm 86:14), he had reason to be this concerned.
i. Beyond this, we arenÕt told the
nature of DavidÕs need. We know it was severe, and he felt it to be life
threatening. Yet we donÕt know if it was danger from Saul, or the Philistines,
or from assassins, or from a dozen other things. This is good, because it allows to see our need in DavidÕs need.
It allows us to know that we can approach God on the same basis for whatever
our need is.
b. For
I am holy: This wasnÕt a claim to absolute holiness. David knew he
was a sinner; that he had and would sin. Yet he also knew that as a man among
other men – and especially next to those who were against him – he
was a holy man.
c. You
are my God; save Your servant who trusts in You! David based this
plea on three similar ideas, all rooted in the fact that he was connected to
God.
á I am holy; ÒI am connected to You morally
God; I embrace Your holiness in my own life.Ó
á You are my God; ÒI am connected to You with
worship and honor.Ó
á Save Your servant who trusts in You; ÒI am
connected to You in trust and faith.Ó
i. In
all this we see how intelligent and thought-out DavidÕs prayer was. When he came to the throne of God, he
came with careful thought.
3. (3-4)
Help me because I cry unto You.
Be merciful to me, O Lord,
For I cry to You all day long.
Rejoice the soul of Your servant,
For to You, O Lord, I lift up my soul.
a. Be merciful to me . . . For I cry to You all day long:
David asked for mercy because he was completely dependent upon God. He cried to
God all day long because he could not
or would not rely on anyone else for help.
i. ÒLest any should, by the former
words (I am holy), suspect him to be a merit-monger, he beggeth mercy, with
instancy and constancy of request.Ó (Trapp)
ii. To take this same figure, many
of us would cry to God for a period of
time and then figure out another way to address our need. Not David; he relied
on God and God alone.
iii. O
Lord: This is the first of seven uses of Adonai in this Psalm. ÒThe name of God which dominates is
Adonahy, or Lord, which indicates absolute Lordship, and by the use of which
the singer shows his sense of submission and loyalty.Ó (Morgan)
b. Rejoice the soul of Your servant, for to You . . . I
lift up my soul: The reason
is much the same as in the previous verse; an expression of reliance and trust
in God (to You . . . I lift up my soul).
But the request is beautifully
stated: Rejoice the soul of Your servant.
David felt that he could only find joy in his soul as God met his need.
4. (5)
Help me because You are a gracious God.
For You, Lord, are
good, and ready to forgive,
And abundant in mercy to all those who call upon You.
a. For You, Lord, are good, and ready to forgive:
David based this plea on the graciousness of God; knowing that He is good and ready
to forgive. Far too many people who should know better doubt both
the goodness of God and His readiness to forgive.
i. ÒWhereas most men, though they
will forgive, yet they are not ready to
forgive, they are hardly brought to it, though they do it at last. But God is Ôready
to forgiveÕ.Ó (Caryl, cited in Spurgeon)
ii. ÒWe are blinded by sin, and
cannot believe that God is ready to forgive. We think that we must induce Him
to forgive, by tears, promises of amendment, religious observances . . . Oh,
clasp this word to your heart! Say it over and over again – ÔReady to
forgive, ready to forgive!ÕÓ (Meyer)
iii. Many wait to repent and ask
forgiveness because they think that time
might make God more forgiving.
That isnÕt possible. He is ready to forgive now.
iv. ÒYou have fallen a hundred
times, and are ashamed to come to God again; it seems to much to expect that He
will receive you again. But He will, for He is ready to forgive.Ó (Meyer)
b. Abundant
in mercy to all those who call upon You: As David called upon God
for help, he expected abundant mercy
from God. This expectation of faith would be answered.
5. (6-7)
The confidence of the plea for help.
Give ear, O Lord,
to my prayer;
And attend to the voice of my supplications.
In the day of my trouble I will call upon You,
For You will answer me.
a. Give ear . . . attend to the voice of my supplication:
Again, David simply asked for God to hear
him. He was confident that if the loving, merciful God heard his plea, then He
would answer favorably.
i. David here repeated the idea
from Psalm 86:1, but the repetition had a purpose. ÒHe repeats and multiplies
his requests, both to ease his own troubled mind, and to prevail with God, who
is well-pleased with his peopleÕs importunity in prayer.Ó (Poole)
b. In
the day of trouble I will call upon You, for You will answer me:
This was DavidÕs wonderful confidence in God. He knew that God was not a
fair-weather friend; that instead God could be counted on even in the day of trouble.
i. Adam Clarke put the emphasis on
my and me
in verses 6-7. ÒAttend to me. Millions call upon thee for help and mercy; but who has
more need than myself?Ó
ii. You
will answer me: ÒOur experience confirms us in the belief that
Jehovah the living God really does aid those who call upon him, and therefore
we pray and mean to pray, not because we are so fascinated by prayer that for
its own sake we would continue in it if it proved to be mere folly and
superstition, as vain philosophers assert; but because we really, indeed, and
of a truth, find it to be a practical and effectual means of obtaining help
from God in the hour of need.Ó (Spurgeon)
B. Depending on the great God who
helps His people.
1. (8-10)
The greatness of God.
Among the gods there is
none like You, O Lord;
Nor are there any works
like Your works.
All nations whom You have made
Shall come and worship before You, O Lord,
And shall glorify Your name.
For You are great,
and do wondrous things;
You alone are God.
a. Among the gods there is none like You:
DavidÕs understanding of who God is in this Psalm – listening, holy,
worthy of trust, merciful, good, ready to forgive – stands in contrast to
the contemporary understanding of many of the pagan gods, such as Baal,
Ashtoreth, or Dagon. Many of these gods were understood to be bitter, vengeful,
cunning, and sexually depraved. David knew that the Lord God was different.
i. ÒI am not now calling upon a
deaf and impotent idol, for then I might cry my heart out, and all in vain, as
they did, 1 Kings 18:26-29; but upon the Almighty and most gracious God.Ó
(Poole)
b. Nor
are there any works like Your works: David knew that when God did something, it was glorious. It had the imprint
of His glorious character upon it, and could not be compared to the works of
man.
i. ÒWorks probably mean here the things God has made, rather
than the deeds He has done (which come later, 10a).Ó (Kidner)
c. All
nations whom You have made shall come and worship before You: David
recognized that God was creator and master over all
nations, not merely Israel. In a day when most gods were considered
to be only national or regional deities, David knew that his God – the
living God, the true God – was different.
d. For
You are great, and do wondrous things; You alone are God: David
understood that the Lord was not
one God among many gods, or even the best God among many gods. He alone is God,
and none other.
i. ÒWondrous things, variously translated in the Psalms, is a frequent
term for GodÕs miracles of salvation.Ó (Kidner)
ii. It is do,
not did (though did would be true also). ÒNote that the verb doest
is in the present, the Lord is doing
wondrous things, they are transpiring before our eyes.Ó (Spurgeon)
2.
(11-12) Whole-life dependence on the great God.
Teach me Your way, O Lord;
I will walk in Your truth;
Unite my heart to fear Your name.
I will praise You, O Lord my God, with all my heart,
And I will glorify Your name forevermore.
a. Teach me Your way, O Lord:
Because David knew who God was – not perfectly, of course, but with great
understanding – his natural reaction was to submit himself to this great,
gracious God and to ask Him to teach
him.
i. Again, this shows that David
understood that this amazing God cared for him. This same majestic God, whom all nations will worship and glorify,
will hear the plea from one poor and needy man (Psalm 86:1) who asks, ÒTeach me
Your way, O Lord.Ó
ii. It also shows a subtle shift
in the Psalm. In the first section (86:1-7) David desperately cried out for
help. In doing so, he though deeply about who God is and what He does. Those
thoughts did not make David retract his plea for help, but it did make him say,
ÒI need to learn from this great God. Teach me
Your way, O Lord.Ó
iii. We could even say that DavidÕs
great need showed him his need to be taught. It brought him to say, ÒDonÕt give
me my way, Lord; teach me Your
way.Ó
iv. ÒMost of us, when we pray, are
concerned about deliverance and help and guidance and such things. But we are
not nearly as concerned to be taught GodÕs way and to be helped to serve him
with an undivided heart.Ó (Boice)
b. I will walk in Your truth: This
determination gave integrity to DavidÕs request. He wanted to be taught so that
he could live; so that he could walk
in GodÕs truth. This wasnÕt merely to
satisfy intellectual curiosity or to win arguments; it was to live.
i. ÒWalking, in the Scripture, takes in the whole of our
conversation or conduct: and to walk in anything, intends a fulness of it. For a man to walk in pride, is something more than to be proud: it says,
that pride is his way, his element; that he is wholly under the influence of
it.Ó (Jay, cited in Spurgeon)
c. Unite
my heart to fear Your name: David knew he could only walk in GodÕs
truth with a united heart. A divided
heart – divided among different loyalties and different deities –
could never walk in GodÕs truth.
i. ÒOur minds are apt to be
divided between a variety of objects, like trickling streamlets which waste
their force in a hundred runnels; our great desire should be to have all our
life-floods poured into one channel and to have that channel directed towards
the Lord alone.Ó (Spurgeon)
ii. Unite
my heart: ÒJoin all the purposes, resolutions, and affections of my heart together, to fear and to glorify thy name. This is a most important
prayer. A divided heart is a great
curse; scattered affections are a
miserable plague. When the heart is not
at unity with itself, the work of
religion cannot go on. Indecision of mind and division of affections mar any work. The heart must be one, that
the work may be one. If this be wanting, all is wrong. This is a prayer which
becomes the mouth of every Christian.Ó (Clarke)
iii. ÒAs thou art God alone (ver.
10), so let my heart be toward thee alone.Ó (Trapp)
iv. We could say that the united
heart is the goal; the way to the goal is Òteach
me Your way, O LordÓ
and ÒI will walk in Your truth.Ó DavidÕs
therefore indicates that this couldnÕt happen by DavidÕs self-effort. Instead,
he asked God to unite his heart as He was taught and walked in the
truth.
v. At the same time, the promise
of a unified heart is part of some of the Old Testament promises of the New
Covenant, as in Ezekiel 11:19: Then I will give them one heart. As part of this New Covenant, we have special
reason to pray expecting God to work a unified heart in us.
d. Way . . . truth . . . unite: He is our way,
our truth, and our life (John 14:6). He is our way; we say, ÒTeach me
Your way.Ó He is our truth; we say, ÒI will walk in Your truth.Ó
He is our life; we say, ÒUnite my heart to fear Your name.Ó
e. I will praise You, O Lord my God, with all my heart:
This is what David wanted to do with his united heart – he wanted to praise God with it. From his understanding
of God previously in the Psalm he knew God was worthy of such praise; but he
knew he could only praise God as he should with God uniting his heart.
i. David wanted to do this with his united heart; but perhaps he also understood
that praise is one way to unite the heart.
When we consciously focus the attention of our mind, emotions, and affections
upon who God is and what He has done for us, our heart is marvelously united.
ii. ÒHere is a God-given beginning
(and practical means) to the answer of his prayer: his whole heart absorbed in praise.Ó (Kidner)
iii. ÒThough nothing can add to
GodÕs essential glory, yet praise exalts him in the eyes of others. When we praise
God, we spread his fame and renown, we display the trophies of his excellency.Ó
(Watson, cited in Spurgeon)
iv. O
Lord my God: ÒThis is the second time in the Psalm that David calls
the Lord Ômy God,Õ the first time he was in an agony of prayer (verse 2), and
now he is in an ecstacy of praise.Ó (Spurgeon)
á He
is our God in times of trouble – we rely upon Him.
á He
is our God in times of rejoicing – we praise Him.
3.
(13-15) Depending on the graciousness of God.
For great is Your
mercy toward me,
And You have delivered my soul from the depths of Sheol.
O God, the proud have risen against me,
And a mob of violent men
have sought my life,
And have not set You before them.
But You, O Lord, are
a God full of compassion, and gracious,
Longsuffering and abundant in mercy and truth.
a. For great is Your mercy toward me, and You have
delivered my soul from the depths of Sheol: David thought about
GodÕs past deliverance in his life. The
merciful God who rescued him before would rescue him again.
i. Great is Your mercy: ÒMercyÓ here is hesed, the great word for covenant love, love that is promised in a covenant relationship.
ii. ÒAs for the rescue from the
depths of Sheol, it is possible to take
this as either past or future.Ó (Kidner)
b. The
proud have risen against me, and a mob of violent men have sought my life:
David lived such a long life of danger and adventure that we canÕt precisely
place this event in his life. It could have come at several points.
Nevertheless, the danger was clear and real.
c. And
have not set You before them: For David it was clear. Proud men, violent
mobs, are not surrendered to God. If these proud
and violent men had set God before
them, they would share some of His compassion,
graciousness, longsuffering, and great
mercy and truth.
d. You, O Lord, are a God full of compassion . . .:
David knew that the evil of man did not negate the goodness of God. God is full of compassion, and gracious, longsuffering and
abundant in mercy and truth despite the pride and violence of men.
i. But You: ÒWhat a contrast! We get away from
the hectorings and blusterings of proud but puny men to the glory and goodness
of the Lord.Ó (Spurgeon)
ii. It seems that twice in this Psalm David quoted the words and ideas from MosesÕ encounter with God recorded in Exodus 34:6-7. We see this at Psalm 86:5: For You, Lord, are good, and ready to forgive, and abundant in mercy. Also, it is seen here in Psalm 86:15: But You, O Lord, are a God full of compassion, and gracious, longsuffering and abundant in mercy and truth.
iii. Compare this with the phrasing of Exodus 34:6-7, the great revelation of God to Moses: The Lord, the Lord God, merciful and gracious, longsuffering, and abounding in goodness and truth, keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin.
iv. ÒDavid seems to have stood in the cleft of the rock with Moses, and to have heard the name of the Lord proclaimed even as the great lawgiver did, for in two places in this Psalm he almost quotes verbatim the passage in Exodus 34:6.Ó (Spurgeon)
v. We could say that David read
his Bible, and learned who God is. Then he took that knowledge to prayer, and
asked God to answer his prayer because of who He revealed Himself to be in the
Bible.
4.
(16-17) A hopeful plea for help.
Oh, turn to me, and have mercy on me!
Give Your strength to Your servant,
And save the son of Your maidservant.
Show me a sign for good,
That those who hate me may see it and be ashamed,
Because You, Lord,
have helped me and comforted me.
a. Turn
to me, and have mercy on me! Through it all, David never approached
God on the basis of what he deserved.
Anything he received from God, he would receive on the basis of mercy.
b. Give
Your strength to Your servant: This plea of David is answered by the
later exhortation by Paul: Be strong in the Lord and in the power of His
might (Ephesians 6:10). God does give His strength
to His servant!
c. Save
the son of Your maidservant: We arenÕt told much in 1 or 2 Samuel
about DavidÕs mother, but this brief mention suggests that she was a godly
woman who served God, who could be called ÒYour
maidservant.Ó
i. In a few places (Genesis 14:14,
Jeremiah 2:14) the Bible gives the idea of a home-born slave – someone who is a slave because their
mother was a slave, and they were born into their servitude. That may be
DavidÕs idea here; to express how completely he belongs to God, he pleads as the son of Your maidservant.
d. Show
me a sign for good: David seems to say, ÒLord, I do not expect all
the answer right now. Yet, show me a sign for
good – give me some indication of Your help and power –
so that those who hate me may see it and be
ashamed.Ó
i. Here David is wonderful for his
humility – not demanding all the
answer from God right now. He is also wonderful for his humanity – asking for a
sign for good at the moment.
ii. In some cases, it is wrong to
ask God, ÒShow me a sign for good.Ó It
is wrong when our attitude is, ÒGod, prove to me that You love meÓ or ÒI will
believe if You show me a sign, but if
You do not I will not believe You.Ó Yet there are some good ways legitimate
circumstances in which we can cry out to God, ÒShow
me a sign for good.Ó
á Answers
to prayer are a sign for good (Psalm
86:1, Bow down Your ear, O Lord,
hear me).
á Preservation
of character is a sign for good (Psalm
86:2, for I am holy).
á Deliverance
from trouble is a sign for good (Psalm
86:2, Save Your servant who trusts in You!).
á Joy
in a surrendered life is a sign for good
(Psalm 86:4, Rejoice the soul of Your servant, for to You, O Lord, I lift up
my soul).
á A
sense of forgiveness is a sign for good
(Psalm 86:25, You, Lord, are good, and ready to forgive).
á Confidence
in God is a sign for good (Psalm 86:7,
For You will answer me).
á Knowing
and declaring the greatness of God is a sign for
good (Psalm 86:10, For You are great, and do wondrous things).
á When
the proud and violent are enemies, it is a sign
for good (Psalm 86:14, the proud have risen against me, and a mob
of violent men have sought my life).
iii. Some – such as Adam
Clarke – take this expression differently. ÒÔMake with me a sign.Õ Fix the honourable mark of thy name upon
me, that I may be known to be thy servant. There seems to be an allusion here
to the marking of a slave, to ascertain
whose property he was.Ó Perhaps we could say that the idea is, ÒPut Your
mark of goodness on me, so that all can see that I am Yours and You will deliver
me.Ó
e. Because
You, Lord, have helped me and
comforted me: Once again David bases his current expectation on
GodÕs prior help. Every past experience of GodÕs goodness to us is a promise of
His continued blessing.
© 2010 David Guzik - No
distribution beyond personal use without permission