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Psalm 7[a]

Appeal to the Divine Judge

A plaintive song of David, which he sang to the Lord concerning Cush,[b] a Benjaminite.

Lord, my God, I take refuge in you;
    keep me safe from all my pursuers and deliver me,
lest like a lion they tear me to pieces
    and carry me off, with no one to rescue me.
Lord, my God, if I have done this,
    if my hands are stained with guilt,
if I have repaid a friend with treachery—
    I who spared the lives of those who without cause were my enemies—[c]
then let my foe pursue and overtake me;
    let him trample my life into the ground
    and leave my honor in the dust. Selah
Rise up, O Lord, in your indignation;
    rise against the fury of my enemies.
Rouse yourself for me,
    and fulfill the judgment you have decreed.
Let the peoples assemble in your presence
    as you sit above them enthroned on high.
    The Lord is the judge of the nations.
Therefore, pass judgment on me, O Lord, according to my righteousness,
    according to my innocence, O Most High.

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Footnotes

  1. Psalm 7:1 Falsely accused, the psalmist implores the divine assistance, affirms his innocence, invokes God’s just judgment, and expresses limitless confidence in the punishment of his enemy as well as his own salvation, concluding with praise for God’s righteousness.
  2. Psalm 7:1 Cush is not otherwise known, but as a Benjaminite he was probably a supporter of Saul. Hence, the psalm is associated with Saul’s determined attempts on David’s life.
  3. Psalm 7:5 I who . . . enemies: an alternative translation is: “and without cause have despoiled an enemy.”