Psalms 53 - Matthew Poole's English Annotations on the Holy Bible

Bible Comments
  • Psalms 53:1 open_in_new

    PSALM 53 THE ARGUMENT This Psalm, some few words excepted, is wholly the same with Psa 14, and therefore the reader must resort thither for the interpretation of it. And it is repeated, partly because the matter of it is so important and necessary to be known and considered; and partly because there arose some new and suitable occasion which made David sing it a second time, and that with some small alterations. And the compiler or compilers of David's Psalms had so great a reverence for their composer, whom they knew to be guided by Divine inspiration, that they would not lose any of his fragments, and therefore repeated this Psalm with the variations which he had made. Mahalath seems to be the name of a musical instrument, or tune; wherein, as in the rest of them, it is better to confess our ignorance, as the Hebrew doctors themselves do, than to give way to vain and groundless conjectures about them. David describeth the atheism and corruption of men, &c. See Psa 10 Psa 14. No text from Poole on this verse.

  • Psalms 53:5 open_in_new

    Where no fear was, i.e. where there was no great nor sufficient cause of fear. See Leviticus 26:36 Deuteronomy 28:65 Job 15:21 Proverbs 28:1. They who designed to secure themselves from all fear and danger by their contempt of God, and by the persecution of good men, and by other wicked courses, were by those means filled with the terrors which they sought to avoid. Hath scattered the bones; hath not only broken their bones, i.e. their strength and force, which is oft noted by the bones, as Psalms 6:2, Psalms 31:10 51:8, but also dispersed them hither and thither, so as there is no hopes of a reunion and restoration. Against thee, i.e. against my people, expressed, Psalms 53:4, or Israel, or Zion, as it is in the next verse. Thou, O Zion, or Jerusalem, which they besiege, hast put them to shame, for the great and strange disappointment of their hopes and confidence. It was a great reproach to them, for such numerous and mighty forces to be baffled and conquered by those whom they thought to swallow up at a morsel. Despised them; or, rejected them; cursed them. Therefore it is no wonder if they could not stand before thee.