Psalms 13:5

5 Dominum non invocaverunt illic trepidaverunt timore %ubi non erat timor;

Psalms 13:5 Meaning and Commentary

Psalms 13:5

But I have trusted in thy mercy
The faith, hope, and comfort of the psalmist grew and increased by prayer; from complaining he goes to praying, from praying to believing; he trusted not in himself, not in his own heart, nor in his own righteousness and merits, but in the mercy of God; and not in the bare absolute mercy of God, but in the grace and goodness of God, as the word F24 here used signifies, as it is displayed in the plenteous redemption which is by Christ; which is a sufficient ground of faith and hope; see ( Psalms 130:7 ) ;

my heart shall rejoice in thy salvation;
which God is the contriver, author, and giver of, and in which the glory of his perfections is so greatly displayed: and a true believer rejoices more on account that God is glorified by it than because of his own interest in it; and this joy is an inward one, it is joy in the heart, and is real and unfeigned, and is what continues, and will be felt and expressed both here and hereafter.


FOOTNOTES:

F24 (Kdoxb) "in bonitate tua", Vatablus; "in benignitate tua", Junius & Tremellius, Piscator; "in benignissima voluntate tua", Gejerus.

Psalms 13:5 In-Context

3 omnes declinaverunt simul inutiles facti sunt non est qui faciat bonum non est usque ad unum = sepulchrum patens est guttur eorum = linguis suis dolose agebant = venenum aspidum sub labiis eorum = quorum os maledictione et amaritudine plenum est = veloces pedes eorum ad effundendum sanguinem = contritio et infelicitas in viis eorum = et viam pacis non cognoverunt % non est timor Dei ante oculos eorum;
4 nonne cognoscent omnes qui operantur iniquitatem qui devorant plebem meam sicut escam panis
5 Dominum non invocaverunt illic trepidaverunt timore %ubi non erat timor;
6 quoniam Deus in generatione iusta consilium inopis confudistis quoniam Dominus spes eius est
7 quis dabit ex Sion salutare Israhel cum averterit Dominus captivitatem plebis suae exultabit Iacob et laetabitur Israhel
The Latin Vulgate is in the public domain.