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												Verse 1Psalms 109:1. Hold not thy peace 
												— Do not neglect me, but take 
												notice of my extreme danger and 
												misery, and let my sentence come 
												forth from thy presence, Psalms 
												17:2. Delay not to give judgment 
												upon the appeal made to thee. O 
												God of my praise — The author 
												and matter of all my praises: in 
												whom I glory, and not in any 
												wisdom or strength of my own: 
												who hast given me continual 
												occasion to praise thee; whom I 
												have praised, and will praise 
												while I live, and hope to praise 
												to all eternity.
 
 Verses 2-4
 Psalms 109:2-4. The mouth of the 
												wicked, and the mouth of the 
												deceitful — Of those who add 
												hypocrisy and perfidiousness to 
												their malice; are opened against 
												me — They speak against me 
												freely, boldly, and publicly, 
												without any fear or shame. They 
												have spoken against me — Hebrew, 
												אתי, itti, to, or with me, as 
												this particle commonly 
												signifies; with a lying tongue — 
												With deep dissimulation, and 
												professions of friendship and 
												kindness: or, against me, with 
												calumnies, or false and 
												malicious reports. They 
												compassed me with words of 
												hatred — Which, though covered 
												with specious pretences, 
												proceeded from deep malice and 
												hatred, and were designed to 
												work my destruction. Without a 
												cause — Without any just 
												provocation given by me. For my 
												love they are my adversaries — 
												They requite my love and 
												goodwill with enmity and 
												mischief, Psalms 109:5; but I 
												give myself unto prayer —
 
 Hebrew, ואני תפלה, vaani 
												tephillah, but I prayer, that 
												is, I am a man of prayer. Thus, 
												I peace, is put for, I am for 
												peace, as we render it, Psalms 
												120:7. The sense here is, While 
												they reproach and curse me, I 
												pray, either, 1st, For them, as 
												Psalms 35:13; or, 2d, For 
												himself: I do not render unto 
												them evil for evil, but quietly 
												commit myself and my cause to 
												God by prayer, desiring him to 
												plead my cause against them.
 
 Verse 6-7
 Psalms 109:6-7. Set thou a 
												wicked man over him — Either 
												over all his enemies, speaking 
												of them collectively, or over 
												some one particular enemy, who 
												was worse than any of the rest, 
												more implacable and inexcusable, 
												whom he did not think proper to 
												name. Set a wicked man over him 
												to be as cruel and oppressive to 
												him as he hath been to others; 
												for God often makes one wicked 
												man a scourge to another. 
												Hebrew, רשׁע, the wicked, or the 
												wicked one; namely, Satan, who 
												is mentioned in the next clause. 
												Let him be, or he shall be, 
												delivered into the power of 
												Satan, to be influenced and 
												ruled by him at his pleasure. 
												Let Satan stand — Hebrew, ושׂשׂן 
												יעמד, and Satan, or the 
												adversary, as the word means, 
												shall stand at his right hand — 
												To molest and vex him, and 
												hinder him in all his affairs; 
												or rather to accuse him, for 
												this was the place and posture 
												of accusers in the Jewish 
												courts. When he shall be judged 
												— When he shall be called to an 
												account, and his cause be 
												examined before thy tribunal; 
												let his prayer become sin — That 
												is, be turned into sin, or be as 
												unavailable with thee for his 
												relief as his sins. When he 
												makes supplication to his judge, 
												as Job speaks, Job 9:16, for 
												pity and pardon, let his judge 
												be the more provoked and enraged 
												by it. If David spoke thus in 
												reference to Doeg or Ahithophel, 
												(see the contents,) it was only 
												as they were types of Judas: at 
												least the Holy Ghost intended it 
												of Judas, and the persecutors of 
												our Lord, as we learn Acts 1:20, 
												of whom this whole paragraph, to 
												the end of Psalms 109:19, is a 
												prophecy. Thus Dr. Horne on 
												Psalms 109:6 : “A transition is 
												here made to the adversaries of 
												Messiah; primarily to Judas, who 
												was guide to them that took 
												Jesus, Acts 1:16; secondarily to 
												the synagogue, of whom Judas may 
												be considered as an epitome and 
												representative. It is foretold, 
												that by betraying and murdering 
												the best of masters, they should 
												subject themselves to the 
												tyranny of the worst; that they 
												should become slaves to the 
												wicked one, who should justly be 
												set over them, when they had 
												delivered themselves into his 
												hands; that Satan, who had stood 
												by them to tempt them, should 
												stand at their right hand, to 
												accuse them at the tribunal of 
												God; that, when tried, they 
												would be convicted and 
												condemned, and even their prayer 
												would be an abomination in the 
												sight of the Lord, as being 
												offered without true contrition 
												and repentance, without faith, 
												hope, or charity. Such is the 
												wretched state of the Jews, 
												estranged from God, and in 
												bondage to the devil; such the 
												prayers which, from hardened and 
												malignant hearts, they 
												continually utter for the 
												excision of all Christians, and 
												for the extirpation of that 
												blessed name on which Christians 
												call.”
 
 Verse 8
 Psalms 109:8. Let his days be 
												few — The days of his life. Let 
												him die an untimely death. So 
												did Ahithophel, and so did 
												Judas; both hanging themselves. 
												And let another take his office 
												— Made void by his death. This 
												is the clause which St. Peter 
												has cited and applied to Judas, 
												in his discourse to the 
												disciples, at the election of 
												Matthias into Judas’s place. He 
												cites, at the same time, a 
												clause from Psalms 69:25; Let 
												their habitation be desolate, 
												and let no man dwell therein. 
												This latter sentence, though in 
												the plural number in the Hebrew, 
												yet is applied by St. Peter in 
												the singular number to Judas. 
												The passage in this Psalm is 
												singular, “yet applicable,” says 
												Dr. Horne, “not to Judas only, 
												but to the whole nation of the 
												Jews; whose days, after they had 
												crucified the Lord of glory, 
												were few; who were dispossessed 
												of the place and office which 
												they held as the church of God, 
												and to which, with all its 
												honours and privileges, the 
												Gentile Christian Church 
												succeeded in their stead, when 
												the Aaronical priesthood was 
												abolished, and that of the true 
												Melchisedek established for 
												ever.”
 
 Verse 9-10
 Psalms 109:9-10. Let his 
												children be — Hebrew, יהיו 
												בניוjihju banaiv, his children 
												shall be fatherless — Namely, 
												while they are but children, and 
												so are unable to provide for 
												themselves; and his wife a widow 
												— Made a widow by his death, and 
												continuing a widow. Let his 
												children be vagabonds — Hebrew, 
												ונוע ינועו בניו, in wandering, 
												his children shall wander, that 
												is, they shall certainly wander, 
												and beg — Not knowing where to 
												obtain the least sustenance. Let 
												them seek, &c., out of their 
												desolate places — Into which 
												they have fled for fear and 
												shame, as not daring to show 
												their faces among men. “If, by 
												the wretched death of Judas,” 
												says the last-mentioned divine, 
												“his wife became a widow, and 
												his children orphans, vagabonds, 
												and beggars, their fate was but 
												a prelude to that of thousands 
												and tens of thousands of the 
												same nation, whose husbands and 
												fathers came afterward to a 
												miserable end at the destruction 
												of Jerusalem. Their children and 
												children’s children have since 
												been continually vagabonds upon 
												the earth, in the state of Cain, 
												when he had murdered his 
												righteous brother, not cut off, 
												but marvellously preserved for 
												punishment and wo.” Thus also 
												Dr. Hammond on these verses: “By 
												this is described, in a very 
												lively manner, the condition of 
												the Jewish posterity, ever since 
												their ancestors fell under that 
												signal vengeance for the 
												crucifying of Christ. 1st, Their 
												desolations and devastations in 
												their own country, and being 
												rejected thence. 2d, Their 
												continual wanderings from place 
												to place, scattered over the 
												face of the earth: and, 3d, 
												Their remarkable covetousness, 
												keeping them always poor and 
												beggarly, be they never so rich, 
												and continually labouring and 
												moiling for gain, as the poorest 
												are wont to do; and this is 
												continually the constant course 
												attending this people, 
												wheresoever they are scattered.”
 
 Verse 11-12
 Psalms 109:11-12. Let the 
												extortioner catch, &c. — Hebrew, 
												ינקשׁ נשׁה, jenakkesh nosheh, 
												the creditor, or usurer, shall 
												insnare all that he hath: that 
												is, take it away, not only by 
												oppression and violence, but by 
												cunning artifices and fraud, 
												whereby such persons are wont to 
												entangle, and so ruin their 
												debtors. Let the stranger — Who 
												hath no right to his goods, and 
												will use no pity in spoiling 
												him; spoil his labour — All the 
												fruits of his labour. Let there 
												be — There shall be none to 
												extend mercy to him, &c. — He 
												and his offspring shall be 
												unpitied and hated as the public 
												enemies of mankind. “Since the 
												destruction of Jerusalem how 
												often hath this race been 
												seized, pillaged, stripped, and 
												empoverished by prince and 
												people, in all the nations of 
												the known world, none appearing, 
												as in other cases, to favour and 
												extend mercy to them:” see notes 
												on Leviticus 26:21-39; 
												Deuteronomy 28:29-68. “They have 
												had no nation, none,” says Dr. 
												Jackson, “to avenge their 
												grievous wrong, which the Lord 
												God of their forefathers had 
												ordained they should suffer at 
												all times and in all places, 
												wheresoever they have come, 
												without redress. Nay, their 
												general carriage hath been so 
												odious and preposterous, that 
												albeit Christian magistrates had 
												conspired together for their 
												good, they would themselves have 
												certainly provoked their own 
												misery.”
 
 Verses 13-15
 Psalms 109:13-15. Let his 
												posterity, &c. — His posterity 
												shall be cut off, &c: they 
												suffered an excision by the 
												Roman sword, and in the 
												generation following, their 
												name, as a church, and civil 
												polity, were blotted out of the 
												list of states and kingdoms. Let 
												the iniquity of his father be 
												remembered — Hebrew, יזכר, it 
												shall be remembered against him, 
												or punished in him, as God had 
												threatened to deal with great 
												delinquents, Exodus 20:5. Let 
												them be — יהיו, they shall be, 
												namely, the sins of his parents 
												last mentioned; before the Lord 
												— In God’s sight and memory, to 
												provoke him to punish them: they 
												shall not be covered nor 
												pardoned. That upon them, as 
												Christ foretold, might come all 
												the righteous blood shed from 
												the blood of righteous Abel; 
												&c., Matthew 22:25. For “the 
												blood of the prophets cried for 
												vengeance against those who 
												crucified the Lord of the 
												prophets.”
 
 Verse 16
 Psalms 109:16. Because he 
												remembered not — “The crime 
												which brought upon its 
												perpetrators all the 
												above-mentioned judgments and 
												calamities, is here pointed out 
												too plainly to be mistaken. They 
												remembered not to show mercy — 
												To him who showed it to all the 
												world; they persecuted him who 
												for our sakes became poor; they 
												betrayed and murdered the lowly 
												and afflicted Jesus, whose heart 
												was broken with sorrow for their 
												sins, and with a sense of the 
												punishment due to them.”
 
 Verses 17-20
 Psalms 109:17-20. As he loved 
												cursing — To curse others, as 
												appears from the blessing here 
												opposed to it, and from the next 
												verse; to wish and to procure 
												mischief to others; so let it 
												come unto him — Hebrew, תבואהו, 
												teboeehu, it shall come unto 
												him; the mischief in which he 
												delighted, and which he both 
												wished and designed to others, 
												shall fall upon himself. As he 
												delighted not in blessing — In 
												desiring and promoting the 
												welfare of others; so let it be, 
												&c. — Hebrew, תרחק, tirchak, it 
												shall be far from him — He shall 
												never meet with the blessing of 
												those righteous courses which he 
												always hated and avoided. As he 
												clothed himself with cursing — 
												As his very business was to 
												slander others everywhere, 
												taking a pride in the 
												mischievous effects of his 
												wretched lies; so let it come — 
												Hebrew, ותבא, vatabo, it shall 
												come, into his bowels, like 
												water — He shall feel the 
												miserable fruit of his 
												wickedness spreading itself, 
												like the water he drinks, to 
												every artery and vein; and 
												sticking as close to him as oil 
												unto the bones. As the garment 
												which covereth him — It shall 
												compass him on every side as a 
												garment; he shall be involved in 
												perpetual misfortunes and 
												miseries, and never be able to 
												shake them off. And as a girdle 
												wherewith he is girded 
												continually — He shall be 
												surrounded with, and entangled 
												in, straits and difficulties, 
												without any possibility of being 
												extricated from them. Observe, 
												reader, “They who reject Christ, 
												reject the fountain of blessing, 
												and choose a curse for their 
												portion; and this portion, when 
												they have finally made their 
												choice, will certainly be given 
												to them in full measure.” We see 
												here that “the curse which 
												lighted on the Jewish nation is 
												resembled, for its universality 
												and adhesion, to a garment which 
												covereth the whole man, and is 
												girded close about his loins; 
												for its diffusive and 
												penetrating nature, to water, 
												which, from the stomach passeth 
												into the bowels, and is 
												dispersed through all the 
												vessels of the frame; and to 
												oil, which imperceptibly 
												insinuates itself into the very 
												bones. When that unhappy people 
												pronounced the words, His blood 
												be on us, and on our children, 
												then did they put on the 
												envenomed garment which has 
												stuck to and tormented the 
												nation ever since; then did they 
												eagerly swallow down that 
												dreadful draught, the effects 
												whereof have been the 
												infatuation and misery of upward 
												of seventeen hundred years! Now, 
												if such, in this world, be the 
												reward of Christ’s adversaries, 
												and of those who speak evil 
												against him, what will hereafter 
												be the vengeance inflicted on 
												those who crucify him afresh, 
												and put him again to open shame? 
												Hebrews 6:6. And what will be 
												the operation of the sentence, 
												Go, ye cursed, upon the bodies 
												and souls of the wicked? How 
												will it at once affect all the 
												senses of the former, and all 
												the faculties of the latter, 
												with pain, anguish, sorrow, and 
												despair! Think on these things, 
												O sinner! tremble and repent.” — 
												Horne.
 
 Verse 21-22
 Psalms 109:21-22. But do thou 
												for me, O God — Namely, what I 
												desire, which he expresses in 
												the next clause, saying, Deliver 
												thou me — Or, he means, Do thou 
												act for me; be not silent or 
												still, but stir up thyself to 
												work on my behalf; for thy 
												name’s sake — For the glory of 
												thy faithfulness, which is 
												highly concerned in giving me 
												the deliverance which thou hast 
												promised me; because thy mercy 
												is good — That is, gracious, and 
												ready to do good to all, but 
												especially to those that love 
												and fear thee. For I am poor and 
												needy — And therefore a very 
												proper object for thy pity and 
												help. And my heart is wounded 
												within me — I am wounded not 
												slightly, but even to the very 
												heart, with soul-piercing 
												sorrows.
 
 Verse 23
 Psalms 109:23. I am gone, &c. — 
												Hebrew, נהלכתי, neehlacheti, I 
												am made to go, either, 1st, From 
												place to place; which was 
												David’s case when he was 
												persecuted by Saul and by 
												Absalom, and Christ’s case upon 
												earth when he had no certain 
												place where to lay his head. Or, 
												2d, Into the grave, as this 
												phrase frequently signifies; 
												like the shadow when it 
												declineth — Toward the evening, 
												when, the sun setting, it 
												vanisheth instantly and 
												irrecoverably. I am tossed up 
												and down as a locust — Which of 
												itself is unstable, continually 
												leaping and moving from place to 
												place, and is easily driven away 
												with every wind. So am I exposed 
												to perpetual and successive 
												changes within myself, and to a 
												thousand violences and mischiefs 
												from other persons and things.
 
 
 Verse 24-25
 Psalms 109:24-25. My knees are 
												weak through fasting — Either 
												through forced fasting for want 
												of food, when he was persecuted, 
												or for want of appetite when he 
												was sick, or through voluntary 
												fasting, which the frequency and 
												long continuance of his 
												sufferings induced him to use. I 
												became also a reproach unto them 
												— Instead of that pity, which 
												either religion or humanity 
												should have taught them to 
												exercise toward a person in 
												extreme misery, they loaded me 
												with reproaches and scorns. They 
												shaked their heads — By way of 
												contempt and derision. In all 
												this David was a type of Christ, 
												who, in his humiliation, was 
												thus wounded, thus weakened, 
												thus reproached, and at whom 
												they thus shook their heads, 
												saying, Thou that destroyest the 
												temple, and buildest it in three 
												days, save thyself. He was also 
												a type of the church, which is 
												often afflicted, tossed with 
												tempests, and not comforted.
 
 Verses 26-29
 Psalms 109:26-29. Help me, O 
												Lord my God — But my hope is, 
												that thou, my God, wilt 
												seasonably interpose for my 
												relief, and save me — Out of my 
												troubles; according to thy mercy 
												— That tender mercy which is 
												wont to extend itself to those 
												who have nothing else to depend 
												upon. That they may know that 
												this is thy hand — Being 
												convinced of the eminence, 
												singularity, and strangeness of 
												the work. Let them curse, but 
												bless thou — I can patiently 
												bear their curses, as being 
												causeless, and fully compensated 
												by thy blessing. Or, rather, as 
												the Hebrew, יקללו המה, jekalelu 
												hemma, is literally rendered, 
												They will curse; I expect 
												nothing else from them; ואתה 
												תברךְ, veatta tebareck, but thou 
												wilt bless me, and all those 
												that trust in thee; for, blessed 
												is the man who trusteth in the 
												Lord, and whose hope the Lord 
												is. When they arise let them be 
												ashamed — Hebrew, קמו ויבשׁו, 
												kamu vajeboshu, they have 
												arisen, namely, have taken 
												active measures against me; they 
												shall be ashamed — Disappointed 
												of their wicked hopes and 
												designs against me, and covered 
												with their own confusion as with 
												a mantle — For that unexpected 
												destruction which they have 
												brought upon themselves. 
												Observe, reader, if God bless 
												us, we need not care who curseth 
												us; for how can they curse whom 
												God hath not cursed? Nay, whom 
												he hath blessed? Numbers 23:28. 
												Men’s curses are impotent, God’s 
												blessings are omnipotent. And 
												those whom men unjustly curse, 
												may in faith expect and pray for 
												God’s blessing, his special 
												blessing. When the Pharisees 
												cast out the poor man for 
												confessing Christ, Christ found 
												him, John 9:35. When men, 
												without cause, say all the ill 
												they can of us, and wish all the 
												ills they can to us, we may with 
												comfort lift up our hearts to 
												God in this petition: Let them 
												curse, but bless thou.
 
 
 Verse 30-31
 Psalms 109:30-31. I will greatly 
												praise the Lord — For that 
												deliverance which I confidently 
												expect; with my mouth — Not only 
												with my heart, in secret, but 
												with my mouth, openly; and among 
												the multitude — Or, among the 
												mighty, or the great men, as 
												בתוךְ רבים, betoch rabbim, may 
												be properly translated; for he 
												shall stand at the right hand of 
												the poor — Nigh to him, as a 
												present help; as his patron and 
												advocate, to plead his cause 
												against, and defend him from, 
												his adversary, who stood in that 
												place to accuse him, and procure 
												his condemnation and 
												destruction; to save him from 
												those that condemn his soul — 
												That pass a sentence of death 
												upon him. God was David’s 
												protector in his sufferings, and 
												was present also with the Lord 
												Jesus in his; stood at his right 
												hand, so that he was not moved, 
												Psalms 16:8; saved his soul from 
												those that pretended to be the 
												judges of it, and received it 
												into his own hands. Let all 
												those that suffer according to 
												the will of God, commit the 
												keeping of their souls to him, 
												in well-doing, as unto a 
												faithful Creator, 1 Peter 4:19.
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