Psalms 36:1-6

1 There is an inspired truth about the wicked person who has rebellion in the depths of his heart: He is not terrified of God.
2 He flatters himself and does not hate or [even] recognize his guilt.
3 The words from his mouth are [nothing but] trouble and deception. He has stopped doing what is wise and good.
4 He invents trouble while lying on his bed and chooses to go the wrong direction. He does not reject evil.
5 O LORD, your mercy reaches to the heavens, your faithfulness to the skies.
6 Your righteousness is like the mountains of God, your judgments like the deep ocean. You save people and animals, O LORD.

Psalms 36:1-6 Meaning and Commentary

To the chief Musician, [a Psalm] of David, the servant of the Lord. This title, which the psalmist takes to himself, regards him not only as a creature, every man being the servant of the Lord as such, of right, though not in fact; but as a king, he being a minister of God for good to good men, and for evil to evil men; and also may respect him as a renewed man; and it is here used in opposition to and distinction from the wicked, who are the servants of sin and Satan, of whom he speaks in this psalm. The Syriac and Arabic versions in their titles suggest that this psalm was written when David was persecuted by Saul, and which is the sense of some interpreters; but R. Obadiah thinks Ahithophel is designed by the wicked man in it; and so it was penned on account of Absalom's rebellion.
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