1 > Blessed is he who considers the poor: Yahweh will deliver him in the day of evil.
2 Yahweh will preserve him, and keep him alive, He shall be blessed on the earth, And he will not surrender him to the will of his enemies.
3 Yahweh will sustain him on his sickbed, And restore him from his bed of illness.
4 I said, "Yahweh, have mercy on me! Heal me, for I have sinned against you."
5 My enemies speak evil against me: "When will he die, and his name perish?"
6 If he comes to see me, he speaks falsehood. His heart gathers iniquity to itself. When he goes abroad, he tells it.
7 All who hate me whisper together against me. They imagine the worst for me.
8 "An evil disease," they say, "has afflicted him. Now that he lies he shall rise up no more."
9 Yes, my own familiar friend, in whom I trusted, Who ate bread with me, Has lifted up his heel against me.
10 But you, Yahweh, have mercy on me, and raise me up, That I may repay them.
11 By this I know that you delight in me, Because my enemy doesn't triumph over me.
12 As for me, you uphold me in my integrity, And set me in your presence forever.
13 Blessed be Yahweh, the God of Israel, From everlasting and to everlasting! Amen and amen.
Worthy.Bible » Commentaries » Matthew Henry Commentary » Commentary on Psalms 41
Commentary on Psalms 41 Matthew Henry Commentary
Psalm 41
God's kindness and truth have often been the support and comfort of the saints when they have had most experience of man's unkindness and treachery. David here found them so, upon a sick-bed; he found his enemies very barbarous, but his God very gracious.
Is any afflicted with sickness? let him sing the beginning of this psalm. Is any persecuted by enemies? let him sing the latter end of it; and we may any of us, in singing it, meditate upon both the calamities and comforts of good people in this world.
To the chief musician. A psalm of David.
Psa 41:1-4
In these verses we have,
Psa 41:5-13
David often complains of the insolent conduct of his enemies towards him when he was sick, which, as it was very barbarous in them, so it could not but be very grievous to him. They had not indeed arrived at that modern pitch of wickedness of poisoning his meat and drink, or giving him something to make him sick; but, when he was sick, they insulted over him (v. 5): My enemies speak evil of me, designing thereby to grieve his spirit, to ruin his reputation, and so to sink his interest. Let us enquire,