David according to the superscription.
The Blessedness of Forgiven Sin and Honest Confession
True blessedness belongs to the sinner who stops hiding sin, confesses honestly to the Lord, receives forgiveness, and walks in the joy of surrounding steadfast love.
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True blessedness belongs to the sinner who stops hiding sin, confesses honestly to the Lord, receives forgiveness, and walks in the joy of surrounding steadfast love.
Psalm 32 argues that the blessed life is not the life that denies sin but the life that brings sin honestly before the Lord and receives His forgiving mercy. Concealment brings wasting misery under God's heavy hand, but confession brings pardon, refuge, instruction, steadfast love, and restored joy.
The worshiping covenant community, especially those needing instruction in confession, assurance, repentance, and restored joy.
A Davidic testimony after a season of concealed sin, divine pressure, confession, and forgiveness; the exact historical occasion is not identified in the psalm.
True blessedness belongs to the sinner who stops hiding sin, confesses honestly to the Lord, receives forgiveness, and walks in the joy of surrounding steadfast love.
David according to the superscription.
The worshiping covenant community, especially those needing instruction in confession, assurance, repentance, and restored joy.
A Davidic testimony after a season of concealed sin, divine pressure, confession, and forgiveness; the exact historical occasion is not identified in the psalm.
- The primary pressure in the psalm is not external enemy attack but the internal and covenantal pressure of unconfessed guilt before the Lord.
The psalm assumes covenant worship, prayer, moral accountability before God, and wisdom instruction within Israel's gathered life. It uses physical imagery of wasting bones, drought-like dryness, overwhelming waters, animal restraint, and surrounding mercy to make spiritual realities concrete.
Book I of the Psalter within the Davidic monarchy horizon, contributing to the canon's theology of confession, forgiveness, non-imputation, covenant mercy, and wisdom-shaped obedience.
Beatitude of forgiveness -> bodily misery under hidden sin -> confession and forgiven guilt -> call to timely prayer -> refuge in God -> divine instruction -> warning against stubbornness -> contrast of sorrows and steadfast love -> rejoicing for the upright
Theological exposition and fulfillment
Psalm 32 forms a people who are honest about sin, quick to confess, confident in forgiveness, teachable under God's counsel, and joyful in worship.
The psalm states its central claim first: the blessed life is the forgiven life, where sin is covered by God and not counted against the sinner.
David's personal experience illustrates the thesis by contrasting the misery of hidden sin with the relief of confessed and forgiven guilt.
The testimony expands into instruction: the faithful should seek the Lord and find Him to be the true hiding place when trouble rises.
The forgiven person is invited into teachability and warned not to require the painful restraint suited to an unreasoning animal.
The psalm ends by contrasting the wicked with those who trust the Lord and by calling the righteous and upright to full-hearted joy.
- 1-2: David defines blessedness through forgiven transgression, covered sin, non-counted iniquity, and a spirit without deceit.
- 3-4: Hidden guilt wastes the whole person under the Lord's heavy hand, drying strength like summer heat.
- 5: David acknowledges sin, stops covering iniquity, confesses transgressions, and receives the Lord's forgiveness.
- 6-7: The forgiven testimony becomes an urgent summons for the faithful to seek God, find refuge from overwhelming waters, and be surrounded by songs of deliverance.
- 8-9: The Lord instructs and counsels the forgiven while warning them not to act like stubborn animals requiring external control.
- 10-11: Many sorrows remain for the wicked, but steadfast love surrounds those who trust the Lord, so the righteous and upright are called to rejoice and sing.
Theological Argument
Psalm 32 argues that the blessed life is not the life that denies sin but the life that brings sin honestly before the Lord and receives His forgiving mercy. Concealment brings wasting misery under God's heavy hand, but confession brings pardon, refuge, instruction, steadfast love, and restored joy.
The argument moves from the blessing of non-imputation, to the misery of concealment, to confession and forgiveness, to prayerful refuge, to teachable obedience, to covenant joy.
- 1.If sin is forgiven, covered by God, and not counted by the LORD, then blessedness rests on mercy rather than self-vindication.
- 2.If hidden sin wastes the whole person under God's heavy hand, then concealment is not safety but spiritual harm.
- 3.If confession receives forgiveness from the LORD, then honesty before God is the doorway to assurance rather than despair.
- 4.If God becomes the hiding place of the confessed sinner, then the faithful should seek Him before judgment-like waters rise.
- 5.If the LORD instructs and counsels forgiven sinners, then grace trains teachable obedience rather than excusing stubbornness.
- 6.If steadfast love surrounds the one who trusts the LORD, then forgiveness should end in glad worship, not perpetual shame.
Theological Focus
- The blessedness of forgiven sin
- Non-imputation of iniquity
- Truthfulness before God
- The misery of hidden guilt
- Divine chastening as severe mercy
- Confession and assurance of pardon
- The Lord as hiding place and protector
- Wisdom instruction for the forgiven
- Warning against stubborn resistance
- Steadfast love surrounding those who trust the Lord
- Forgiveness leading to worshipful joy
- Sin
- Forgiveness
- Non Imputation
- Confession
- Divine Discipline
- Covenant Mercy
- Sanctification
- Worship
Covenant Significance
Psalm 32 shows covenant life as honest return to the Lord rather than concealment of sin. The Lord's mercy covers confessed sin, does not count iniquity against the forgiven, disciplines hidden guilt, instructs His people, and surrounds those who trust Him with steadfast love.
- The psalm assumes real covenant accountability: transgression, sin, and iniquity are not dismissed as minor mistakes.
- Forgiveness is the Lord's merciful act, not the worshiper's self-absolution.
- The forgiven person is drawn into prayer, refuge, instruction, and trust rather than left in moral neutrality.
- The final joy of the righteous shows that covenant mercy restores worship and uprightness of heart.
Canonical Connections
Genesis 3 provides the foundational pattern of guilty hiding after sin, while Psalm 32 shows the redeemed alternative: stop hiding sin and hide in the Lord.
The Day of Atonement background helps frame the idea of guilt being carried away, though Psalm 32 applies forgiveness personally through confession and trust.
David's sin, concealment, prophetic exposure, confession, and mercy in the Bathsheba-Uriah narrative provide a plausible canonical backdrop for Psalm 32's testimony, though the psalm itself does not name the event.
Psalm 51 supplies a fuller penitential prayer from David, while Psalm 32 teaches the blessedness and wisdom that follow confession and forgiveness.
Psalm 130 similarly holds together sin, forgiveness, reverent hope, and redemption, complementing Psalm 32's confession-and-assurance movement.
Proverbs teaches that concealing sin fails while confession and renunciation receive mercy, matching Psalm 32's contrast between hidden guilt and forgiven confession.
Isaiah 53 reveals the suffering Servant bearing iniquity, providing a later prophetic foundation for how confessed guilt can be righteously forgiven in God's saving purpose.
The promise of the new covenant includes definitive forgiveness of sin, expanding the hope Psalm 32 celebrates in Davidic covenant worship.
Jesus' parable of the lost son echoes the formation pattern of coming to oneself, returning, receiving mercy, and entering joy rather than remaining in shame or resentment.
Paul quotes Psalm 32:1-2 to explain the blessedness of the person to whom God credits righteousness apart from works and against whom sin is not counted.
John's call to confess sin rather than claim sinlessness parallels Psalm 32's movement from deceit to honest confession and cleansing mercy.
James connects confession and prayer within the life of the community, complementing Psalm 32's summons for the faithful to pray and live truthfully before God.
The gospel clarity of Psalm 32 is that sinners are blessed not by hiding guilt, managing appearances, or proving themselves righteous, but by receiving the Lord's forgiveness. In the fuller canon, this non-counting of iniquity is secured through Christ, whose atoning death and resurrection make forgiveness, justification, and restored joy righteous and sure.
- Sin is real and must be named truthfully before God.
- Forgiveness is God's merciful act of lifting guilt and not counting iniquity against the sinner.
- Confession is the honest posture of returning to God, not a payment that purchases pardon.
- The forgiven are instructed into a new path, warned against stubbornness, and summoned into joy.
- Romans 4 shows that David's blessedness coheres with justification by faith apart from works.
- Do not turn Psalm 32 into moral therapy detached from atonement and divine pardon.
- Do not preach confession as self-punishment · biblical confession is truth before the God who forgives.
- Do not leave people under shame after pardon · the psalm ends with joy for the righteous and upright in heart.
Primary Emphasis
Psalm 32 contributes directly to the canon's gospel clarity by declaring the blessedness of forgiven sin and non-imputed iniquity, a truth Paul later draws into His argument in Romans 4. In Christ, the forgiveness David celebrates is grounded in the atoning work of the righteous One, so sinners are not merely emotionally relieved but truly forgiven and counted righteous before God.
Chapter Contribution
Psalm 32 argues that the blessed life is not the life that denies sin but the life that brings sin honestly before the Lord and receives His forgiving mercy. Concealment brings wasting misery under God's heavy hand, but confession brings pardon, refuge, instruction, steadfast love, and restored joy.
God is the master teacher who provides specific, intimate, and cognitive guidance for those who are in a right relationship with Him.
The act of God where He chooses not to count the believer's sin against them, legally clearing their record.
God’s covenantal love functions as an active, surrounding barrier that preserves the believer from ultimate harm.
While God is ready to forgive, the subjective experience and relief of that forgiveness require the believer's honest acknowledgment of sin.
Sin is rebellion, offense, and iniquity before the Lord, not merely personal weakness or social embarrassment.
Forgiveness is the Lord's merciful lifting of guilt and covering of sin for the one who comes truthfully before Him.
The blessed forgiven person is one against whom the Lord does not count iniquity, a doctrine later used in Romans 4 to explain gospel blessing.
Confession is honest acknowledgment of sin to the Lord, rejecting deceit and self-covering.
The Lord's heavy hand on hidden guilt is severe mercy, pressing the sinner away from concealment and toward restoration.
Steadfast love surrounds the one who trusts in the Lord, giving the forgiven sinner security beyond shame and fear.
Forgiveness leads into instruction, counsel, and teachable obedience rather than moral indifference.
The psalm ends in rejoicing, gladness, and singing, showing that forgiven sinners are restored to worship.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- Psalm 32 forms a people who are honest about sin, quick to confess, confident in forgiveness, teachable under God's counsel, and joyful in worship.
Sense contemplative or instructive psalm
Definition A psalm designation associated with wisdom, insight, or instruction.
References Psalm 32 superscription
Lexicon contemplative or instructive psalm
Why it matters The superscription signals that Psalm 32 is not only testimony but instruction; forgiven sinners are being taught the way from hidden guilt to confessed joy.
Form in passage Masculine · Plural · Absolute What is this?
Sense happy, blessed, enviable under God's favor
Definition A state of blessedness rooted in God's favor rather than temporary circumstance.
References Psalm 32:1-2
Lexicon happy, blessed, enviable under God's favor
Why it matters The opening beatitude defines true blessedness as forgiveness before God, correcting the assumption that happiness can be secured while guilt is hidden.
Form in passage Masculine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense rebellion, breach, transgression
Definition A willful breach of relationship or revolt against rightful authority.
References Psalm 32:1,5
Lexicon rebellion, breach, transgression
Why it matters The psalm does not minimize sin; the forgiven person has real rebellion lifted by God, not merely emotional discomfort relieved.
Form in passage Qal · Participle passive What is this?
Sense to lift, carry, forgive
Definition To lift up or carry away; in forgiveness, to remove guilt from the sinner's account.
References Psalm 32:1,5
Lexicon to lift, carry, forgive
Why it matters The first description of forgiveness pictures guilt being lifted away, making joy possible because God removes what the sinner cannot remove.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Form in passage Feminine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense sin, offense, missing the mark
Definition Moral failure before God, often viewed as offense or guilt.
References Psalm 32:1,5
Lexicon sin, offense, missing the mark
Why it matters The psalm uses multiple sin words to show that forgiveness is comprehensive: rebellion, sin, and iniquity are all brought before the Lord.
Form in passage Qal · Participle passive What is this?
Sense to cover, conceal
Definition To cover over or hide from view.
References Psalm 32:1,5
Lexicon to cover, conceal
Why it matters The blessed covering in verse 1 is God's merciful covering of confessed sin; it is contrasted with the destructive human covering of sin in verse 5.
Sense iniquity, guilt, crookedness
Definition Moral perversity and the guilt it incurs.
References Psalm 32:2,5
Lexicon iniquity, guilt, crookedness
Why it matters Iniquity is the burden God does not count against the forgiven person and the guilt He forgives when confession replaces concealment.
Form in passage Qal · Imperfect · 3rd Person · Masculine · Singular What is this?
Sense to reckon, account, impute, consider
Definition To account or credit something to a person.
References Psalm 32:2
Lexicon to reckon, account, impute, consider
Why it matters Psalm 32 becomes central to later gospel clarity because blessing includes the Lord not reckoning iniquity against the forgiven sinner.
Form in passage Feminine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense deceit, treachery, falsehood
Definition A false or deceptive posture.
References Psalm 32:2
Lexicon deceit, treachery, falsehood
Why it matters Forgiveness does not coexist with spiritual fraud; the forgiven person is not sinless but becomes honest before God.
Form in passage Hiphil · Perfect · 1st Person · Common · Singular What is this?
Sense to be silent, keep quiet
Definition To refrain from speaking or confessing.
References Psalm 32:3
Lexicon to be silent, keep quiet
Why it matters The silence of verse 3 is not reverent stillness but guilty concealment that corrodes the whole person.
Sense bones, bodily strength
Definition The body's inner structure and strength.
References Psalm 32:3
Lexicon bones, bodily strength
Why it matters Hidden sin is described as embodied misery; David's unconfessed guilt affects His strength, stability, and vitality.
Form in passage Qal · Perfect · 3rd Person · Common · Plural What is this?
Sense to wear out, waste away
Definition To deteriorate, grow old, or be consumed.
References Psalm 32:3
Lexicon to wear out, waste away
Why it matters The phrase shows that unconfessed guilt is not harmless privacy; it produces inward decay under the pressure of God's hand.
Sense roaring, groaning, loud anguish
Definition A deep cry or roar from distress.
References Psalm 32:3
Lexicon roaring, groaning, loud anguish
Why it matters The psalm exposes the paradox of hidden sin: silence before God becomes restless groaning within the person.
Sense hand, power, active agency
Definition A symbol of personal action, pressure, authority, or care.
References Psalm 32:4
Lexicon hand, power, active agency
Why it matters The Lord's heavy hand is chastening mercy, pressing David toward confession rather than abandoning Him to self-deception.
Form in passage Qal · Imperfect · 3rd Person · Feminine · Singular What is this?
Sense heavy, weighty, oppressive
Definition To be heavy, weighty, or burdensome.
References Psalm 32:4
Lexicon heavy, weighty, oppressive
Why it matters The divine hand is not light when sin is hidden; God makes guilt weighty so that the sinner will come into the light.
Sense moisture, vigor, vitality
Definition Life-sap, freshness, or bodily vigor.
References Psalm 32:4
Lexicon moisture, vigor, vitality
Why it matters David describes spiritual concealment as a drought of the soul and body; the heat image makes guilt feel like life-draining exposure.
Form in passage Masculine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense summer, dry season
Definition The hot season associated with heat and dryness.
References Psalm 32:4
Lexicon summer, dry season
Why it matters The summer heat image makes the cost of hidden sin concrete: inward vitality is sapped under divine pressure.
Sense to know, acknowledge, make known
Definition To know or to recognize openly.
References Psalm 32:5
Lexicon to know, acknowledge, make known
Why it matters David's turning point begins when He brings His sin into acknowledged truth before God instead of pretending it is not there.
Form in passage Hiphil · Imperfect · 1st Person · Common · Singular What is this?
Sense to confess, praise, give thanks
Definition To acknowledge openly, whether in confession or praise.
References Psalm 32:5
Lexicon to confess, praise, give thanks
Why it matters The same posture that tells the truth about sin also opens the way to praise; confession is not humiliation for its own sake but return to God.
Sense guilt, iniquity, liability
Definition The guilt-bearing dimension of sin.
References Psalm 32:5
Lexicon guilt, iniquity, liability
Why it matters The Lord does not merely improve David's feelings; He forgives the guilt attached to sin.
Form in passage Hithpael · Imperfect · 3rd Person · Masculine · Singular What is this?
Sense to pray, intercede
Definition To appeal to God in prayer.
References Psalm 32:6
Lexicon to pray, intercede
Why it matters Forgiven experience becomes invitation: the godly are told to pray while the Lord may be found rather than delay in concealment.
Sense faithful one, godly one, covenant-loyal person
Definition One characterized by covenant loyalty toward the LORD.
References Psalm 32:6
Lexicon faithful one, godly one, covenant-loyal person
Why it matters The forgiven are not those without sin but those who respond to the Lord with honest covenant dependence.
Form in passage Qal · Infinitive construct What is this?
Sense time when God may be found
Definition A fitting or urgent time of seeking and finding.
References Psalm 32:6
Lexicon time when God may be found
Why it matters The psalm warns against delay; mercy is to be sought now, before judgment-like waters rise.
Sense many or mighty waters
Definition Threatening waters that overwhelm and sweep away.
References Psalm 32:6
Lexicon many or mighty waters
Why it matters Forgiveness becomes refuge from overwhelming judgment and crisis; those who seek the Lord are protected when waters rise.
Form in passage Masculine · Singular · Absolute What is this?
Sense secret place, shelter, hiding place
Definition A protected hidden place.
References Psalm 32:7
Lexicon secret place, shelter, hiding place
Why it matters The sinner stops hiding sin and instead hides in God; this reversal is one of the psalm's deepest pastoral movements.
Sense to guard, preserve, keep
Definition To protect by careful guarding.
References Psalm 32:7
Lexicon to guard, preserve, keep
Why it matters The Lord preserves the confessed sinner from trouble; divine protection replaces the false safety of concealment.
Sense distress, trouble, narrow pressure
Definition A constricting trouble or adversity.
References Psalm 32:7
Lexicon distress, trouble, narrow pressure
Why it matters Forgiveness does not remove all hardship, but it gives the worshiper a true refuge within trouble.
Sense shouts or songs of escape and rescue
Definition Joyful cries surrounding deliverance.
References Psalm 32:7
Lexicon shouts or songs of escape and rescue
Why it matters The forgiven sinner is surrounded not by accusation but by rescue songs; worship replaces the groaning of hidden guilt.
Sense to instruct, make wise, give insight
Definition To cause one to understand wisely.
References Psalm 32:8
Lexicon to instruct, make wise, give insight
Why it matters The Lord answers forgiveness with guidance; grace does not leave the forgiven directionless but teaches the path of wisdom.
Sense to teach, direct, point out
Definition To instruct or direct in the right way.
References Psalm 32:8
Lexicon to teach, direct, point out
Why it matters The forgiven life becomes a taught life; God's mercy brings sinners into the way they should go.
Sense way, path, course of life
Definition A road or manner of life.
References Psalm 32:8
Lexicon way, path, course of life
Why it matters Forgiveness is not only release from guilt but reorientation onto the Lord's way.
Form in passage Qal · Cohortative · 1st Person · Common · Singular What is this?
Sense to counsel, advise
Definition To give guidance or advice.
References Psalm 32:8
Lexicon to counsel, advise
Why it matters The Lord personally counsels the forgiven, countering the foolish stubbornness warned against in verse 9.
Sense eye, watchful attention
Definition The organ of sight and a symbol of attentive oversight.
References Psalm 32:8
Lexicon eye, watchful attention
Why it matters God's guiding eye signals personal supervision and relational instruction, not mechanical rule-following.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense horse
Definition A strong animal often controlled by external restraint.
References Psalm 32:9
Lexicon horse
Why it matters The horse image warns against strength without understanding; stubborn sinners must not require painful restraint before they come near God.
Sense mule
Definition A work animal known for stubbornness.
References Psalm 32:9
Lexicon mule
Why it matters The mule image presses the wisdom lesson: do not make God treat You as unteachable when confession and counsel are offered.
Sense bit and bridle
Definition Instruments used to restrain and direct an animal.
References Psalm 32:9
Lexicon bit and bridle
Why it matters The image contrasts relationally guided obedience with externally forced restraint.
Sense wicked, guilty, morally opposed to God
Definition One who lives in opposition to God's ways.
References Psalm 32:10
Lexicon wicked, guilty, morally opposed to God
Why it matters The wicked are not presented as merely unfortunate but as those who remain outside the trust and confession that receive mercy.
Form in passage Masculine · Plural · Absolute What is this?
Sense sorrows, pains, griefs
Definition Painful consequences or sorrows.
References Psalm 32:10
Lexicon sorrows, pains, griefs
Why it matters The contrast is sharp: many sorrows remain for the wicked, while steadfast love surrounds the one who trusts the Lord.
Sense to trust, rely, feel secure
Definition To place confidence in someone as dependable.
References Psalm 32:10
Lexicon to trust, rely, feel secure
Why it matters The psalm's endpoint is not merely confession but renewed reliance on the Lord whose mercy surrounds those who trust Him.
Sense steadfast love, covenant mercy
Definition The LORD's loyal covenant love expressed in mercy and faithfulness.
References Psalm 32:10
Lexicon steadfast love, covenant mercy
Why it matters Steadfast love surrounds the trusting one, answering the earlier experience of guilt's crushing weight with covenant mercy on every side.
Cross-language bridge 2 links · View in lexicon
Sense to surround, encircle
Definition To go around or encompass.
References Psalm 32:7,10
Lexicon to surround, encircle
Why it matters The psalm contrasts being surrounded by groaning or trouble with being surrounded by songs of deliverance and steadfast love.
Sense righteous, in right relation to God
Definition One aligned with what is right according to God's standard.
References Psalm 32:11
Lexicon righteous, in right relation to God
Why it matters The righteous in this psalm are not sinless people but forgiven, honest, trusting worshipers whose uprightness flows from grace.
Form in passage Qal · Sequential imperfect · 2nd Person · Masculine · Plural What is this?
Sense to rejoice, be glad
Definition To express joy and gladness.
References Psalm 32:11
Lexicon to rejoice, be glad
Why it matters The final command shows that forgiveness is meant to erupt in worship, not leave the believer trapped in shame.
Sense to rejoice, exult
Definition To exult with joy.
References Psalm 32:11
Lexicon to rejoice, exult
Why it matters The psalm ends where the opening beatitude began: forgiven people are summoned into gladness before the Lord.
Sense to shout, sing for joy
Definition To cry out with joyful song.
References Psalm 32:11
Lexicon to shout, sing for joy
Why it matters The groaning of hidden guilt is replaced by singing; confession opens the mouth for praise.
Sense upright of heart
Definition Inner straightness, sincerity, and integrity before God.
References Psalm 32:11
Lexicon upright of heart
Why it matters The psalm closes with heart-level honesty; uprightness is not image-management but truthfulness before the Lord who forgives.
Lexicon data: MorphGNT Strong's Dictionary XML (CC0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Bible (CC BY 4.0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon (CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible Data (CC BY 4.0) · Full details
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
Psalm 32 forms a people who are honest about sin, quick to confess, confident in forgiveness, teachable under God's counsel, and joyful in worship.
- Psalm 32 warns against deceitful silence, delayed repentance, stubborn resistance to instruction, and the false safety of hiding sin instead of hiding in God.
- Hidden guilt corrodes the whole person and does not protect the sinner from God.
- The Lord's heavy hand should be heeded as merciful pressure toward confession, not resented as cruelty.
- The faithful should pray while the Lord may be found rather than presuming on endless delay.
- Forgiven sinners must not become stubborn like an animal that requires bit and bridle.
- The wicked experience many sorrows because they refuse the way of trust and mercy.
- Forgiveness means sin was not serious. - The psalm uses multiple strong terms for sin and describes divine pressure, confession, and forgiven guilt · mercy does not minimize rebellion.
- Human concealment and God's covering are the same thing. - The psalm contrasts the blessedness of sin covered by God with the misery of iniquity covered by David.
- Confession earns forgiveness. - Confession is the truthful turning point, but forgiveness is the Lord's merciful act.
- Physical or emotional distress always means a person is hiding sin. - Psalm 32 testifies to David's own experience of hidden guilt · it should not be turned into a universal accusation against all suffering people.
- Assurance should wait until the believer feels worthy enough. - The blessed person is forgiven because the Lord forgives and does not count iniquity, not because the sinner has become self-worthy.
- Grace removes the need for instruction. - After forgiveness, the psalm immediately speaks of instruction, teaching, counsel, and warning against stubbornness.
- The final joy is shallow positivity. - The joy of verse 11 is grounded in real pardon, trust, steadfast love, and uprightness of heart after honest confession.
- Where am I tempted to keep silent before God while inwardly groaning under guilt?
- Am I asking God to cover confessed sin, or am I trying to cover sin myself?
- Do I believe the Lord's forgiveness is real enough to receive assurance after honest confession?
- What would it look like today to hide in the Lord instead of hiding from Him?
- Where has the Lord's heavy hand been severe mercy, pressing me toward repentance rather than leaving me alone?
- Am I teachable under the Lord's instruction, or am I acting like a horse or mule that requires painful restraint?
- How does Romans 4 deepen my confidence that forgiveness and non-imputation are secured in Christ?
- Is my life after confession marked by joy, gladness, and singing, or by continued shame that refuses the Lord's pardon?
- Preach Psalm 32 as the blessedness of honest sinners forgiven by God, not as a generic message on emotional relief.
- Use the psalm to distinguish godly conviction from crushing shame: conviction presses people toward confession and mercy · shame keeps them hiding.
- Help believers rest in the Lord's non-counting of iniquity rather than demanding a level of self-punishment Scripture does not require.
- Frame confession of sin and assurance of pardon as essential worship practices that lead the congregation into joy.
- Teach that forgiveness is followed by instruction · grace trains people to walk in the way of the Lord.
- Model honest confession without theatrical self-display, showing that leaders are not above repentance and assurance.
- Parents can use the psalm to teach children that telling the truth before God and others leads to mercy, restoration, and wisdom.
- Use the psalm to explain the human need for forgiveness and the gospel promise that guilt can truly be lifted, not merely managed.
Follow faith, believing response, trust, and persevering allegiance across Scripture.
Study holiness as divine character, covenant identity, and sanctified life across Scripture.
Track judgment as covenant accountability, divine justice, and eschatological reckoning.
Follow shepherding as divine care, messianic leadership, and pastoral oversight across Scripture.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
Beatitude of forgiveness -> bodily misery under hidden sin -> confession and forgiven guilt -> call to timely prayer -> refuge in God -> divine instruction -> warning against stubbornness -> contrast of sorrows and steadfast love -> rejoicing for the upright
Psalm 32 shows covenant life as honest return to the Lord rather than concealment of sin. The Lord's mercy covers confessed sin, does not count iniquity against the forgiven, disciplines hidden guilt, instructs His people, and surrounds those who trust Him with steadfast love.
The gospel clarity of Psalm 32 is that sinners are blessed not by hiding guilt, managing appearances, or proving themselves righteous, but by receiving the Lord's forgiveness. In the fuller canon, this non-counting of iniquity is secured through Christ, whose atoning death and resurrection make forgiveness, justification, and restored joy righteous and sure.
Focus Points
- The blessedness of forgiven sin
- Non-imputation of iniquity
- Truthfulness before God
- The misery of hidden guilt
- Divine chastening as severe mercy
- Confession and assurance of pardon
- The Lord as hiding place and protector
- Wisdom instruction for the forgiven
- Warning against stubborn resistance
- Steadfast love surrounding those who trust the Lord
- Forgiveness leading to worshipful joy
- Sin
- Forgiveness
- Non-Imputation
- Confession
- Divine Discipline
- Covenant Mercy
- Sanctification
- Worship
Biblical Theology
- Atonement Trace the atonement thread from sacrificial cleansing and substitution to Christ's once-for-all priestly offering and propitiatory work. Trace thread →
- Covenant Love and Obedience Trace the covenant love and obedience theme from God's commanded covenant fidelity to the new-covenant life of walking in truth, love, and obedience through Christ. Trace thread →
- Word and Revelation Trace the word and revelation thread from God's speaking and self-disclosure to the climactic revelation fulfilled in Christ and proclaimed through Scripture. Trace thread →
- Truth Versus Deception Trace the truth versus deception theme from covenant warnings against false word to apostolic discernment that guards the church from lies about Christ. Trace thread →
- New Heart Trace the new heart thread from prophetic promise of inward renewal to the transformed life God gives His people through covenant grace and the Spirit. Trace thread →
- People of God Trace the people of God thread from covenant calling and gathered identity to the redeemed community united in Christ and gathered for God's name. Trace thread →
- Gospel and Repentance and Faith The gospel calls sinners not merely to admire Jesus Christ or agree with Christian ideas, but to repent and believe. Repentance and faith are the fitting human response to the saving announcement of Christ crucified and risen, and they belong together as grace-enabled turning from sin and turning to God in Christ. The gospel is not complete in ministry if it is explained without this summons. Where the gospel is central, repentance and faith are preached clearly, pastorally, and urgently as the necessary response to the lordship and saving work of Jesus.
- Gospel and Assurance The gospel and assurance belong together because the same Christ who saves sinners also gives them a solid basis for confidence before God through His finished work, present intercession, and unfailing promises. Assurance is not self-confidence, presumption, or denial of spiritual struggle, but a gospel-grounded confidence that rests in Jesus Christ and is strengthened by the Spirit, the Word, and the evidences of grace. The believer's peace does not arise from personal perfection, but from union with the crucified and risen Lord. Where the gospel is central, assurance is neither ignored nor artificially manufactured, but nurtured through truth, repentance, faith, and persevering dependence upon Christ.
- Gospel and Justification Justification stands at the heart of the gospel because it declares how guilty sinners can be declared righteous before a holy God through the saving work of Jesus Christ. In justification, God does not ignore sin or lower His standards, but counts believers righteous on the basis of Christ's obedience and atoning death. This doctrine anchors the believer's peace with God, protects the church from legalism and self-salvation, and ensures that the gospel remains centered on Christ rather than human merit. Where justification is clearly taught, the church proclaims the gospel as the good news that sinners are accepted by God through faith in Christ alone.
Passages
Chapter opening: Psalms 32:1-5
Psa 32:6-7 For this mercy, which is provided for every sinner who repents and confesses his sin, let then, every חסיד, who longs for חסד, turn in prayer to Jahve לעת מצא, at the time (Psa 21:10; 1Ch 12:22; cf. בּעת, Isa 49:8) when He, and His mercy, is to be found (cf. Deu 4:29 with Jer 29:13; Isa 55:6, בּהמּצאו). This hortatory wish is followed by a promissory assurance.
The fact of לשׁטף מים רבּים being virtually a protasis: quam inundant aquae magnae (ל of the time), which separates רק from אליו, prohibits our regarding רק as belonging to אליו in this instance, although like אף, אך, גּם, and פּן, רק is also placed per hypallage at the head of the clause (as in Pro 13:10 : with pride there is only contention), even when belonging to a part of the clause that follows further on. The restrictive meaning of רק here, as is frequently the case (Deu 4:6; Jdg 14:16; 1Ki 21:25, cf.
Psa 91:8), has passed over to the affirmative: certo quum , etc. Inundation or flooding is an exemplificative description of the divine judgment (cf. Nah 1:8); Psa 32:6 is a brief form of expressing the promise which is expanded in Ps 91. In Psa 32:7, David confirms it from his own experience. The assonance in מצּר תּצּרני (Thou wilt preserve me, so that צר, angustum = angustiae , does not come upon me, Psa 119:143) is not undesigned; and after תצרני comes רני, just like כלו after בהיכלו in Psa 29:9.
There is no sufficient ground for setting aside רני, with Houbigant and others, as a repetition of the half of the word תצרני. The infinitive רן (Job 38:7) might, like רב, plur . רבּי, חק, plur . חקּי, with equal right be inflected as a substantive; and פּלּט (as in Psa 56:8), which is likewise treated as a substantive, cf. נפּץ, Dan 12:7, presents, as a genitive, no more difficulty than does דעת in the expression אישׁ דּעת.
With songs of deliverance doth Jahve surround him, so that they encompass him on all sides, and on occasion of exulting meets him in whatever direction he turns. The music here again for the third time becomes forte , and that to express the highest feeling of delight.
Psa 32:6-7 For this mercy, which is provided for every sinner who repents and confesses his sin, let then, every חסיד, who longs for חסד, turn in prayer to Jahve לעת מצא, at the time (Psa 21:10; 1Ch 12:22; cf. בּעת, Isa 49:8) when He, and His mercy, is to be found (cf. Deu 4:29 with Jer 29:13; Isa 55:6, בּהמּצאו). This hortatory wish is followed by a promissory assurance.
The fact of לשׁטף מים רבּים being virtually a protasis: quam inundant aquae magnae (ל of the time), which separates רק from אליו, prohibits our regarding רק as belonging to אליו in this instance, although like אף, אך, גּם, and פּן, רק is also placed per hypallage at the head of the clause (as in Pro 13:10 : with pride there is only contention), even when belonging to a part of the clause that follows further on. The restrictive meaning of רק here, as is frequently the case (Deu 4:6; Jdg 14:16; 1Ki 21:25, cf.
Psa 91:8), has passed over to the affirmative: certo quum , etc. Inundation or flooding is an exemplificative description of the divine judgment (cf. Nah 1:8); Psa 32:6 is a brief form of expressing the promise which is expanded in Ps 91. In Psa 32:7, David confirms it from his own experience. The assonance in מצּר תּצּרני (Thou wilt preserve me, so that צר, angustum = angustiae , does not come upon me, Psa 119:143) is not undesigned; and after תצרני comes רני, just like כלו after בהיכלו in Psa 29:9.
There is no sufficient ground for setting aside רני, with Houbigant and others, as a repetition of the half of the word תצרני. The infinitive רן (Job 38:7) might, like רב, plur . רבּי, חק, plur . חקּי, with equal right be inflected as a substantive; and פּלּט (as in Psa 56:8), which is likewise treated as a substantive, cf. נפּץ, Dan 12:7, presents, as a genitive, no more difficulty than does דעת in the expression אישׁ דּעת.
With songs of deliverance doth Jahve surround him, so that they encompass him on all sides, and on occasion of exulting meets him in whatever direction he turns. The music here again for the third time becomes forte , and that to express the highest feeling of delight.
Psa 32:8-10 It is not Jahve, who here speaks in answer to the words that have been thus far addressed to Him. In this case the person addressed must be the poet, who, however, has already attained the knowledge here treated of. It is he himself who now directly adopts the tone of the teacher (cf. Psa 34:12). That which David, in Psa 51:15, promises to do, he here takes in hand, viz.
, the instruction of sinners in the way of salvation. It is unnecessary to read איעצך instead of איעצה, as Olshausen does; the suffix of אשׂכּילך and אורך (for אורך) avails also for this third verb, to which עליך עיני, equivalent to שׂם עליך עיני (fixing my eye upon thee, i. e. , with sympathising love taking an interest in thee), stands in the relation of a subordinate relative clause.
The lxx renders it by ἐπιστηριῶ ἐπὶ σὲ τοὺς ὀφθαλμούς μου, so that it takes יעץ, in accordance with its radical signification firmare , as the regens of עיני (I will fix my eye steadfastly upon thee); but for this there is no support in the general usage of the language. The accents give a still different rendering; they apparently make עיני an accus. adverb .
(Since אעצה עליך עיני is transformed from איעצה עליך עיני: I will counsel thee with mine eye; but in every other instance, יעץ על means only a hostile determination against any one, e. g. , Isa 7:5. The form of address, without changing its object, passes over, in Psa 32:9, into the plural and the expression becomes harsh in perfect keeping with the perverted character which it describes.
The sense is on the whole clear: not constrained, but willing obedience is becoming to man, in distinction from an irrational animal which must be led by a bridle drawn through its mouth. The asyndeton clause: like a horse, a mule (פּרד as an animal that is isolated and does not pair; cf. Arab. fard , alone of its kind, single, unlike, the opposite of which is Arab.
zawj , a pair, equal number), has nothing remarkable about it, cf. Psa 35:14; Isa 38:14. But it is not clear what עדיו is intended to mean. We might take it in its usual signification “ornament,” and render “with bit and bridle, its ornament,” and perhaps at once recognise therein an allusion to the senseless servility of the animal, viz. , that its ornament is also the means by which it is kept in check, unless עדי, ornament, is perhaps directly equivalent to “harness.
” Still the rendering of the lxx is to be respected: in camo et fraeno - as Jerome reproduces it - maxilas eorum constringere qui non approximant ad te . If עדי means jaw, mouth or check, then עדיו לבלום is equivalent to ora eorum obturanda sunt (Ges. §132, rem. 1), which the lxx expressed by ἄγξαι, constringe , or following the Cod. Alex. , ἄγξις (ἄγξεις), constringes .
Like Ewald and Hitzig (on Eze 16:7), we may compare with עדי, the cheek, the Arabic chadd , which, being connected with גּדוּד, a furrow, signifies properly the furrow of the face, i. e. , the indented part running downwards from the inner corners of the eyes to both sides of the nose, but then by synecdoche the cheek. If `dyw refers to the mouth or jaws, then it looks as if בּל קרב אליך must be translated: in order that they may not come too near thee, viz.
, to hurt thee (Targ. , Syriac, Rashi, etc.) ; but this rendering does not produce any point of comparison corresponding to the context of this Psalm. Therefore, it is rather to be rendered: otherwise there is no coming near to thee. This interpretation takes the emphasis of the בל into account, and assumes that, according to a usage of the language that is without further support, one might, for instance, say: בּל לכתּי שׁמּה, “I will never go thither.
” In Pro 23:17, בל also includes within itself the verb to be. So here: by no means an approaching to thee, i. e. , there is, if thou dost not bridle them, no approaching or coming near to thee. These words are not addressed to God, but to man, who is obliged to use harsh and forcible means in taming animals, and can only thus keep them under his control and near to him.
In the antitype, it is the sinner, who will not come to God, although God only is his help, and who, as David has learned by experience, must first of all endure inward torture, before he comes to a right state of mind. This agonising life of the guilty conscience which the ungodly man leads, is contrasted in Psa 32:10 with the mercy which encompasses on all sides him, who trusts in God.
רבּים, in accordance with the treatment of this adjective as if it were a numeral (vid. , Psa 89:51), is an attributive or adjective placed before its noun. The final clause might be rendered: mercy encompasses him; but the Poel and Psa 32:7 favour the rendering: with mercy doth He encompass him.
Psa 32:8-10 It is not Jahve, who here speaks in answer to the words that have been thus far addressed to Him. In this case the person addressed must be the poet, who, however, has already attained the knowledge here treated of. It is he himself who now directly adopts the tone of the teacher (cf. Psa 34:12). That which David, in Psa 51:15, promises to do, he here takes in hand, viz.
, the instruction of sinners in the way of salvation. It is unnecessary to read איעצך instead of איעצה, as Olshausen does; the suffix of אשׂכּילך and אורך (for אורך) avails also for this third verb, to which עליך עיני, equivalent to שׂם עליך עיני (fixing my eye upon thee, i. e. , with sympathising love taking an interest in thee), stands in the relation of a subordinate relative clause.
The lxx renders it by ἐπιστηριῶ ἐπὶ σὲ τοὺς ὀφθαλμούς μου, so that it takes יעץ, in accordance with its radical signification firmare , as the regens of עיני (I will fix my eye steadfastly upon thee); but for this there is no support in the general usage of the language. The accents give a still different rendering; they apparently make עיני an accus. adverb .
(Since אעצה עליך עיני is transformed from איעצה עליך עיני: I will counsel thee with mine eye; but in every other instance, יעץ על means only a hostile determination against any one, e. g. , Isa 7:5. The form of address, without changing its object, passes over, in Psa 32:9, into the plural and the expression becomes harsh in perfect keeping with the perverted character which it describes.
The sense is on the whole clear: not constrained, but willing obedience is becoming to man, in distinction from an irrational animal which must be led by a bridle drawn through its mouth. The asyndeton clause: like a horse, a mule (פּרד as an animal that is isolated and does not pair; cf. Arab. fard , alone of its kind, single, unlike, the opposite of which is Arab.
zawj , a pair, equal number), has nothing remarkable about it, cf. Psa 35:14; Isa 38:14. But it is not clear what עדיו is intended to mean. We might take it in its usual signification “ornament,” and render “with bit and bridle, its ornament,” and perhaps at once recognise therein an allusion to the senseless servility of the animal, viz. , that its ornament is also the means by which it is kept in check, unless עדי, ornament, is perhaps directly equivalent to “harness.
” Still the rendering of the lxx is to be respected: in camo et fraeno - as Jerome reproduces it - maxilas eorum constringere qui non approximant ad te . If עדי means jaw, mouth or check, then עדיו לבלום is equivalent to ora eorum obturanda sunt (Ges. §132, rem. 1), which the lxx expressed by ἄγξαι, constringe , or following the Cod. Alex. , ἄγξις (ἄγξεις), constringes .
Like Ewald and Hitzig (on Eze 16:7), we may compare with עדי, the cheek, the Arabic chadd , which, being connected with גּדוּד, a furrow, signifies properly the furrow of the face, i. e. , the indented part running downwards from the inner corners of the eyes to both sides of the nose, but then by synecdoche the cheek. If `dyw refers to the mouth or jaws, then it looks as if בּל קרב אליך must be translated: in order that they may not come too near thee, viz.
, to hurt thee (Targ. , Syriac, Rashi, etc.) ; but this rendering does not produce any point of comparison corresponding to the context of this Psalm. Therefore, it is rather to be rendered: otherwise there is no coming near to thee. This interpretation takes the emphasis of the בל into account, and assumes that, according to a usage of the language that is without further support, one might, for instance, say: בּל לכתּי שׁמּה, “I will never go thither.
” In Pro 23:17, בל also includes within itself the verb to be. So here: by no means an approaching to thee, i. e. , there is, if thou dost not bridle them, no approaching or coming near to thee. These words are not addressed to God, but to man, who is obliged to use harsh and forcible means in taming animals, and can only thus keep them under his control and near to him.
In the antitype, it is the sinner, who will not come to God, although God only is his help, and who, as David has learned by experience, must first of all endure inward torture, before he comes to a right state of mind. This agonising life of the guilty conscience which the ungodly man leads, is contrasted in Psa 32:10 with the mercy which encompasses on all sides him, who trusts in God.
רבּים, in accordance with the treatment of this adjective as if it were a numeral (vid. , Psa 89:51), is an attributive or adjective placed before its noun. The final clause might be rendered: mercy encompasses him; but the Poel and Psa 32:7 favour the rendering: with mercy doth He encompass him.
Psa 32:8-10 It is not Jahve, who here speaks in answer to the words that have been thus far addressed to Him. In this case the person addressed must be the poet, who, however, has already attained the knowledge here treated of. It is he himself who now directly adopts the tone of the teacher (cf. Psa 34:12). That which David, in Psa 51:15, promises to do, he here takes in hand, viz.
, the instruction of sinners in the way of salvation. It is unnecessary to read איעצך instead of איעצה, as Olshausen does; the suffix of אשׂכּילך and אורך (for אורך) avails also for this third verb, to which עליך עיני, equivalent to שׂם עליך עיני (fixing my eye upon thee, i. e. , with sympathising love taking an interest in thee), stands in the relation of a subordinate relative clause.
The lxx renders it by ἐπιστηριῶ ἐπὶ σὲ τοὺς ὀφθαλμούς μου, so that it takes יעץ, in accordance with its radical signification firmare , as the regens of עיני (I will fix my eye steadfastly upon thee); but for this there is no support in the general usage of the language. The accents give a still different rendering; they apparently make עיני an accus. adverb .
(Since אעצה עליך עיני is transformed from איעצה עליך עיני: I will counsel thee with mine eye; but in every other instance, יעץ על means only a hostile determination against any one, e. g. , Isa 7:5. The form of address, without changing its object, passes over, in Psa 32:9, into the plural and the expression becomes harsh in perfect keeping with the perverted character which it describes.
The sense is on the whole clear: not constrained, but willing obedience is becoming to man, in distinction from an irrational animal which must be led by a bridle drawn through its mouth. The asyndeton clause: like a horse, a mule (פּרד as an animal that is isolated and does not pair; cf. Arab. fard , alone of its kind, single, unlike, the opposite of which is Arab.
zawj , a pair, equal number), has nothing remarkable about it, cf. Psa 35:14; Isa 38:14. But it is not clear what עדיו is intended to mean. We might take it in its usual signification “ornament,” and render “with bit and bridle, its ornament,” and perhaps at once recognise therein an allusion to the senseless servility of the animal, viz. , that its ornament is also the means by which it is kept in check, unless עדי, ornament, is perhaps directly equivalent to “harness.
” Still the rendering of the lxx is to be respected: in camo et fraeno - as Jerome reproduces it - maxilas eorum constringere qui non approximant ad te . If עדי means jaw, mouth or check, then עדיו לבלום is equivalent to ora eorum obturanda sunt (Ges. §132, rem. 1), which the lxx expressed by ἄγξαι, constringe , or following the Cod. Alex. , ἄγξις (ἄγξεις), constringes .
Like Ewald and Hitzig (on Eze 16:7), we may compare with עדי, the cheek, the Arabic chadd , which, being connected with גּדוּד, a furrow, signifies properly the furrow of the face, i. e. , the indented part running downwards from the inner corners of the eyes to both sides of the nose, but then by synecdoche the cheek. If `dyw refers to the mouth or jaws, then it looks as if בּל קרב אליך must be translated: in order that they may not come too near thee, viz.
, to hurt thee (Targ. , Syriac, Rashi, etc.) ; but this rendering does not produce any point of comparison corresponding to the context of this Psalm. Therefore, it is rather to be rendered: otherwise there is no coming near to thee. This interpretation takes the emphasis of the בל into account, and assumes that, according to a usage of the language that is without further support, one might, for instance, say: בּל לכתּי שׁמּה, “I will never go thither.
” In Pro 23:17, בל also includes within itself the verb to be. So here: by no means an approaching to thee, i. e. , there is, if thou dost not bridle them, no approaching or coming near to thee. These words are not addressed to God, but to man, who is obliged to use harsh and forcible means in taming animals, and can only thus keep them under his control and near to him.
In the antitype, it is the sinner, who will not come to God, although God only is his help, and who, as David has learned by experience, must first of all endure inward torture, before he comes to a right state of mind. This agonising life of the guilty conscience which the ungodly man leads, is contrasted in Psa 32:10 with the mercy which encompasses on all sides him, who trusts in God.
רבּים, in accordance with the treatment of this adjective as if it were a numeral (vid. , Psa 89:51), is an attributive or adjective placed before its noun. The final clause might be rendered: mercy encompasses him; but the Poel and Psa 32:7 favour the rendering: with mercy doth He encompass him.
Psa 32:11 After the doctrine of the Psalm has been unfolded in three unequal groups of verses, there follows, corresponding to the brief introduction, a still shorter close, which calls upon those whose happy state is there celebrated, to join in songs of exultant joy.
The Davidic Maskîl, Psa 32:1-11, is followed by an anonymous congregational song of a hymnic character, which begins just like the former closes. It owes its composition apparently to some deliverance of the nation from heathen oppression, which had resulted from God’s interposition and without war. Moreover it exhibits no trace of dependence upon earlier models, such as might compel us to assign a late date to it; the time of Jeremiah, for instance, which Hitzig adopts.
The structure is symmetrical. Between the two hexastichs, Psa 33:1, Psa 33:20, the materia laudis is set forth in eight tetrastichs.
Psa 33:1-3 The call contained in this hexastich is addressed to the righteous and upright, who earnestly seek to live a godly and God-pleasing life, and the sole determining rule of whose conduct is the will and good pleasure of God. These alone know God, whose true nature finds in them a clear mirror; so on their part they are joyfully to confess what they possess in Him.
For it is their duty, and at the same time their honour, to praise him, and make their boast in Him. נאוה is the feminine of the adjective נאוה (formed out of נאוי), as in Psa 147:1, cf. Pro 19:10. On כּנּור (lxx κιθάρα, κινύρα) and נבל (lxx ψαλτήριον, νάβλα, ναῦλα, etc.) vid. , Introduction §II. נבל is the name given to the harp or lyre on account of its resemblance to a skin bottle or flash (root נב, to swell, to be distended), and נבל עשׂור, “harp of the decade,”' is the ten-stringed harp, which is also called absolutely עשׂור, and distinguished from the customary נבל, in Psa 92:4.
By a comparison of the asyndeton expressions in Psa 35:14, Jer 11:19, Aben-Ezra understands by נבל עשור two instruments, contrary to the tenour of the words. Gecatilia, whom he controverts, is only so far in error as that he refers the ten to holes (נקבים) instead of to strings. The בּ is Beth instrum . , just like the expression κιθαρίζειν ἐν κιθάραις, Rev 14:2.
A “new song” is one which, in consequence of some new mighty deeds of God, comes from a new impulse of gratitude in the heart, Psa 40:4, and frequently in the Psalms, Isa 42:10, Judith 6:13, Rev 5:9. In היטיבוּ the notions of scite and strenue, suaviter and naviter , blend. With בּתרוּעה, referring back to רננו, the call to praise forms, as it were, a circle as it closes.
Psa 33:1-3 The call contained in this hexastich is addressed to the righteous and upright, who earnestly seek to live a godly and God-pleasing life, and the sole determining rule of whose conduct is the will and good pleasure of God. These alone know God, whose true nature finds in them a clear mirror; so on their part they are joyfully to confess what they possess in Him.
For it is their duty, and at the same time their honour, to praise him, and make their boast in Him. נאוה is the feminine of the adjective נאוה (formed out of נאוי), as in Psa 147:1, cf. Pro 19:10. On כּנּור (lxx κιθάρα, κινύρα) and נבל (lxx ψαλτήριον, νάβλα, ναῦλα, etc.) vid. , Introduction §II. נבל is the name given to the harp or lyre on account of its resemblance to a skin bottle or flash (root נב, to swell, to be distended), and נבל עשׂור, “harp of the decade,”' is the ten-stringed harp, which is also called absolutely עשׂור, and distinguished from the customary נבל, in Psa 92:4.
By a comparison of the asyndeton expressions in Psa 35:14, Jer 11:19, Aben-Ezra understands by נבל עשור two instruments, contrary to the tenour of the words. Gecatilia, whom he controverts, is only so far in error as that he refers the ten to holes (נקבים) instead of to strings. The בּ is Beth instrum . , just like the expression κιθαρίζειν ἐν κιθάραις, Rev 14:2.
A “new song” is one which, in consequence of some new mighty deeds of God, comes from a new impulse of gratitude in the heart, Psa 40:4, and frequently in the Psalms, Isa 42:10, Judith 6:13, Rev 5:9. In היטיבוּ the notions of scite and strenue, suaviter and naviter , blend. With בּתרוּעה, referring back to רננו, the call to praise forms, as it were, a circle as it closes.
Psa 33:4-5 Now beings the body of the song. The summons to praise God is supported (1) by a setting forth of His praiseworthiness ( a ) as the God of revelation in the kingdom of Grace. His word is ישׂר, upright in intention, and, without becoming in any way whatever untrue to itself, straightway fulfilling itself. His every act is an act in אמוּנה, truth, which verifies the truth of His word, and one which accomplishes itself.
On אהב, equivalent to אהב הוּא, vid. , Psa 7:10; Psa 22:29. צדקה is righteousness as conduct; משׁפּט is right as a rule of judgment and a state or condition. חסד is an accusative, as in Psa 119:64 : misericordia Domini plena est terra (the introit for Misercordias Sunday or the second Sunday after Easter).