This Psalm 34
This Psalm 34
This Psalm 34
A Psalm of David when he pretended madness before Abimelech, who drove him away, and
he departed. A fugitive from Saul, David went to the Philistine city of Gath but found no refuge there and narrowly
escaped. Those events are recorded in 1 Samuel 21:10-22:1. Following that, David went to the cave at Adullam
where many desperate men joined him. This joyful and wise psalm seems to have been written from that cave, and
sung in the presence of those men.
The structure of this psalm is an acrostic, or nearly so. Each verse begins with another letter of the Hebrew alphabet,
except for the letter waw. The purpose of the acrostic format in this psalm mainly seems to be as a device used to
encourage learning and memorization.
Abimelech was probably a title given to rulers among the Philistines; the ruler’s proper name was Achish (1 Samuel
21:10).
i. “He may have acted like a fool, but he was not so foolish as to neglect praise of him who was his only
true wisdom. He may have been hiding in a dismal cave, but this psalm tells us that in his heart he was
hiding in the Lord.” (Boice)
ii. Praise shall continually be in my mouth: “Not in my heart merely, but in my mouth too. Our thankfulness
is not to be a silent thing; it should be one of the daughters of music.” (Spurgeon)
b. My soul shall make its boast in the LORD: David might have boasted in himself. The 1 Samuel account
describes how David cleverly won his freedom by pretending madness, but he knew that the working of
the thing was due to God, not his own cleverness.
i. “What scope there is for holy boasting in Jehovah! His person, attributes, covenant, promises, works,
and a thousand things besides, are all incomparable, unparalleled, matchless; we may cry them up as we
please, but we shall never be convicted of vain and empty speech in so doing.” (Spurgeon)
ii. Yet in a sense, David had little to boast of, from a human perspective. He had to humiliate himself like a
madman to escape the Philistines, whom he had foolishly sought refuge among – even bringing Goliath’s
sword with him to Gath!
iii. Therefore this is a humble boast of David, boasting in the LORD and even a bit in his own humiliation.
“Paul, in his great passage on boasting, may have remembered this saying and this episode, and so
recalled his own ignominious escape from another foreign king (2 Corinthians 11:30-33), and the lessons
learned in such straits.” (Kidner)
iv. “The seeming idiot scribbling on the gate is now saint, poet, and preacher; and, looking back on the
deliverance won by a trick, he thinks of it as an instance of Jehovah’s answer to prayer!” (Maclaren)
c. The humble shall hear of it and be glad: David won his freedom by a radical display of humility.
Other humble people would be glad to hear how God blessed and rewarded David’s humility.
i. It’s significant that he calls the people of God in general the humble. It is as if being proud were a denial
of God Himself – and in a sense, it is.
ii. “As not sufficient to do a great work himself, he calleth in the help of others.” (Trapp)
iii. “The Christian, not only himself magnifies God, but exhorts others to do likewise; and longs for that day
to come, when all nations and languages, laying aside their contentions and animosities, their prejudices
and their errors, their unbelief, their heresies, and their schisms, shall make their sound to be heard as
one, in magnifying and exalting their great Redeemer’s name.” (Horne)
b. I sought the LORD, and He heard me, and delivered me from all my fears: David’s simple testimony is still
powerful thousands of years later. David sought the LORD – looked to Him in loving trust. God
then heard His servant, with the implication that He heard him with love, sympathy, and action. God
responded when He delivered David from all his fears.
i. Commentators are divided regarding whether or not David sinned when he feigned madness among the
Philistines, or if he was obedient and guided by God. Morgan observed, “There does seem to be
incongruity between David feigning madness to save his life, and this exalted outpouring of praise to God
as the Great Deliverer.”
ii. “Wherein, whether he sinned or not, is matter of dispute; but this is undoubted, that God’s favour and his
deliverance at that time was very remarkable, and deserved this solemn acknowledgment.” (Poole)
iii. “Even when I was in the enemies’ hands, and playing my pranks as a mad-man amongst them, I prayed
secretly and inwardly.” (Trapp)
iv. Even if David sinned in feigning madness, God delivered him and did not abandon him. “It is easy to
understand how, in the quietness and solemnity of that cave of refuge, he recovered, and that with new
power, his sense of the Divine care and wisdom and might and sufficiency. So he sang.” (Morgan)
c. They looked to Him and were radiant, and their faces were not ashamed: In moving from “I” to “They,”
David indicates that this experience was not his alone. Many others have known and will know what it is to
set the focus of their loving trust upon God and receive His help.
i. They looked to Him: “The more we can think upon our Lord, and the less upon ourselves, the better.
Looking to him, as he is seated upon the right hand of the throne of God, will keep our heads, and
especially our hearts, steady when going through the deep waters of affliction.” (Smith, cited in Spurgeon)
ii. And were radiant: The idea is that they draw radiance from God’s own glory. Later, the Apostle Paul
would explain much the same thought: But we all, with unveiled face, beholding as in a mirror the glory of the
Lord, are being transformed into the same image from glory to glory, just as by the Spirit of the Lord (2 Corinthians
3:18). This radiance is evidence that one has truly looked to Him.
iii. “Radiant is a word found again in Isaiah 60:5, where it describes a mother’s face lighting up at the sight
of her children, long given up for lost.” (Kidner)
iv. And their faces were not ashamed: David also knew that God would never forsake the one who trusts in
Him. God would give him confidence in the moment and vindication in time.
d. This poor man cried out, and the LORD heard him: David again emphasized his personal experience of
these truths. He was the one. He was the poor man who cried out to God, and God graciously answered.
i. Acting the madman among the Philistines, David certainly was the poor man. “To get the force of David’s
words one has only to recall his peril and his abject clowning to save his life.” (Kidner)
e. The angel of the LORD encamps all around those who fear Him: David narrowly escaped death among
the Philistines. He was still a hunted, wanted man with King Saul determined to kill him. A rag-tag group of
desperate losers gathered to him at Adullam. David was at a genuine low point; yet he was still filled with
praise and trust, even knowing that God had an angelic camp all around him.
i. The triumph and joy of this song is so clear that it is easy to forget the life context of the psalm. “It is for
people who find themselves at the absolute low point in life, which is where David was. Or find themselves
between a rock, which in this case was King Saul, and a hard place, which was King Achish. It is for you
when everything seems against you.” (Boice)
ii. David’s protection was real, even if it was invisible. He could not see the angelic presence around him,
but it was real. Many times in the Old Testament, the angel of the LORD was an actual material
appearance of Yahweh Himself (as in Judges 13). We don’t know if David meant an angelic being sent by
God, or God Himself present with the believer. Both are true.
iii. “The fugitive, in his rude shelter in the cave of Adullam, thinks of Jacob, who, in his hour of defenceless
need, was heartened by the vision of the angel encampment surrounding.” (Maclaren)
iv. Psalm 34:7 is one passage that gives support to the thought of a guardian angel for everyone, or
perhaps at least for believers. One can’t say that this passage proves the idea, but it is consistent with it.
“Let the consideration of these invisible guardians, who are also spectators of our actions, at once restrain
us from evil, and incite us to good.” (Horne)
iii. “As he that feels the fire hot, or as he that tasteth honey sweet, ye need not use arguments to persuade
him to believe it; so here, let a man but once taste that the Lord is good, and he will thenceforth, as a new-
born babe, desire the sincere milk of the word.” (Trapp)
iv. “Both Hebrews 6:5 and 1 Peter 2:3 use this verse to describe the first venture into faith, and to urge that
the tasting should be more than a casual sampling.” (Kidner)
v. “There are some things, especially in the depths of the religious life, which can only be understood by
being experienced, and which even then are incapable of being adequately embodied in words. ‘O taste
and see that the Lord is good.’ The enjoyment must come before the illumination; or rather the enjoyment is
the illumination.” (Binney, cited in Spurgeon)
b. Blessed is the man who trusts in Him: David was sure that the one who did taste and see – or, who trusted
in God – would not be forsaken. God would make him blessed.
c. Oh, fear the LORD, you His saints: David thought that to fear the LORD was much like trusting Him and
experiencing His goodness. This fear is the proper reverence and respect that man has for Deity. If you
really experience God’s goodness, if you really experience the blessedness of trusting Him, you will also
have an appropriate fear of the LORD.
d. Those who seek the LORD shall not lack any good thing: Even one as strong as the young lions may lack
and suffer hunger; but David testified of God’s greater provision.
i. “The word ‘lions’ may be a metaphor for those who are strong, oppressive, and evil.” (VanGemeren)
ii. “Were there lions prowling around the camp at Adullam, and did the psalmist take their growls as typical
of all vain attempts to satisfy the soul?” (Maclaren)
iii. David experienced a good thing from God in his deliverance among the Philistines. He knew that the
good thing was not due to his own strength or might; it was the goodness of God extended to those who
seek the LORD.
iv. “Although God doth usually take a special care to supply the wants of good men, and hath oft done it by
extraordinary ways, when ordinary have failed, yet sometimes he knows, and it is certainly true, that wants
and crosses are more needful and useful to them than bread, and in such cases it is a greater mercy of
God to deny them supplies than to grant them.” (Poole)
i. “To teach men how to live and how to die, is the aim of all useful religious instruction. The rewards of
virtue are the baits with which the young are to be drawn to morality. While we teach piety to God we
should also dwell much upon morality towards man.” (Spurgeon)
ii. “A bird with a broken wing, an animal with a broken leg, a woman with a broken heart, a man with a
broken purpose in life – these seem to drop out of the main current of life into shadow. They go apart to
suffer and droop. The busy rush of life goes on without them. But God draws nigh.” (Meyer)
iii. “Broken hearts think God is far away, when he is really most near to them; their eyes are holden so that
they see not their best friend. Indeed, he is with them, and in them, but they know it not.” (Spurgeon)
iv. A contrite spirit: “‘The beaten-out spirit’…the hammer is necessarily implied; in breaking to pieces the
ore first, and then plating out the metal when it has been separated from the ore.” (Clarke)
i. “‘Many are the afflictions,’ but more are the deliverances.” (Maclaren)
b. But the LORD delivers him out of them all: This was the principle that answered the previous statement.
Indeed, the righteous had many afflictions; yet God’s deliverance was real in David’s life and still is real in
the experience of many of God’s people.
c. He guards all his bones; not one of them is broken: David could look at his own body and see that though
he had endured many battles, accidents, and hardships – yet not one bone was broken.
i. According to the Gospel of John, David spoke not only of his own experience. He also spoke
prophetically of the Messiah to come, Jesus Christ. John explained that the Roman soldiers who
supervised the crucifixion of Jesus came to His body on the cross, expecting to hasten and guarantee His
death in the traditional way – breaking the legs of the crucified victim. When they looked carefully, they
learned that Jesus was already dead and they pierced His side to confirm it. John wrote, for these things
were done that the Scripture should be fulfilled, “Not one of His bones shall be broken” (John 19:36).
ii. “Christ’s bones were in themselves breakable, but could not actually be broken by all the violence in the
world, because God had fore-decreed, a bone of him shall not be broken.” (Fuller, cited in Spurgeon)
d. Evil shall slay the wicked, and those who hate the righteous shall be condemned: David had confidence in
more than the rescue of the righteous. He was also confident that the wicked and those who hate would be
judged.
i. Evil shall slay the wicked: “Either, 1. The evil of sin. His own wickedness, though designed against others,
shall destroy himself. Or, 2. The evil of misery. When the afflictions of good men shall have a happy issue,
[the affliction of the wicked] shall end in their total and final destruction.” (Poole)
e. None of those who trust in Him shall be condemned: David could proclaim that God would rescue the soul
of His servants, and they would be found in a place outside God’s condemnation.
i. Many centuries later the Apostle Paul would write, There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are
in Christ Jesus (Romans 8:1). Even under the Old Covenant, David knew something of this freedom from
condemnation.