Attributed in the superscription to David.
Casting Betrayal's Burden on the Lord Who Sustains
When betrayal and fear make the soul restless, the faithful cast the whole burden on the Lord, who hears, redeems, sustains the righteous, and judges deceitful violence.
Reading a chapter
What this page is: Each chapter page shows the big idea, the argument flow, key original-language terms, doctrine connections, and passage units, all in one place.
How to use it: Start with the Overview tab to get the chapter's main point. Then move to Passages to study individual units, or Language to trace key terms.
Going deeper: The Doctrines and Motifs tabs show how this chapter connects to the broader biblical story.
When betrayal and fear make the soul restless, the faithful cast the whole burden on the Lord, who hears, redeems, sustains the righteous, and judges deceitful violence.
Psalm 55 argues that betrayal and violent disorder must be brought honestly before the Lord, not denied, romanticized, or avenged by self. The psalm begins with anguished prayer because the enemy's voice has troubled David's heart. It then shows that sin can corrupt public life and private friendship alike. The deepest wound is covenantal treachery from a close companion.
Yet David's answer is continual calling on God, confidence that God redeems, exposure of deceitful speech, and the command to cast the burden upon the Lord. Because God is enthroned and righteous, He will sustain the righteous and bring violent deceivers to judgment.
The worshiping community receives David's betrayal lament as instruction for prayer when enemies, anxiety, civic disorder, and relational treachery press on the soul.
The superscription provides Davidic authorship, musical direction for stringed instruments, and the maskil designation, but it does not name a specific historical episode. The content fits Davidic experiences of betrayal, court conflict, city unrest, and violent opposition without requiring one forced identification.
When betrayal and fear make the soul restless, the faithful cast the whole burden on the Lord, who hears, redeems, sustains the righteous, and judges deceitful violence.
Attributed in the superscription to David.
The worshiping community receives David's betrayal lament as instruction for prayer when enemies, anxiety, civic disorder, and relational treachery press on the soul.
The superscription provides Davidic authorship, musical direction for stringed instruments, and the maskil designation, but it does not name a specific historical episode. The content fits Davidic experiences of betrayal, court conflict, city unrest, and violent opposition without requiring one forced identification.
- David faces enemy threats, the burden of wicked pressure, public disorder in the city, and especially betrayal by an intimate companion who once shared counsel and worship. The social pressure includes anxiety, distrust, moral confusion, and the pain of treachery from within the covenant community.
The psalm assumes covenant worship, public prayer, city life with walls and squares, shared religious fellowship, and the moral seriousness of covenant-breaking speech. Smooth words and hidden violence are exposed as a threat to both personal relationships and communal righteousness.
Davidic monarchy period by attribution; canonical placement in Book II of the Psalter. The psalm contributes to the Davidic righteous-sufferer pattern, especially through betrayal by a close companion and trust in God's sustaining judgment.
Psalm 55 moves from urgent prayer and inner terror, to flight-longing and citywide disorder, to the anguish of intimate betrayal, then to continual prayer, confidence in redemption, exposure of smooth treachery, burden-casting trust, and final hope in God's judgment.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
Psalm 55 forms a burden-casting faith that is emotionally honest, morally discerning, prayerfully persistent, and anchored in the Lord's sustaining justice.
David turns troubled inner speech into direct petition to God.
Enemy pressure becomes inward terror and a longing to flee far from the storm.
The psalm moves from violent city disorder to the sharper grief of betrayal by a close worshiping companion.
David answers treachery with continual prayer and confidence that the enthroned God hears and redeems.
The betrayer's smooth speech is unmasked, and the faithful are commanded to cast their burdens on the Lord.
The chapter ends by contrasting the destined fall of violent deceivers with David's trust in God.
- 1-2: David begins with prayer, asking God to hear His troubled complaint rather than hiding His agitation.
- 3-5: The voice and anger of the wicked produce heart anguish, fear, trembling, and horror.
- 6-8: David honestly wishes for escape, but the psalm will move Him toward trust rather than mere flight.
- 9-14: Violence fills the city, but betrayal by a companion who once worshiped with David is the deeper wound.
- 15-19: David entrusts judgment to God and cries out evening, morning, and noon, confident that God redeems.
- 20-21: The betrayer violates covenant bonds with speech softer than oil but words like drawn swords.
- 22-23: The psalm culminates in burden-casting trust, confidence that the righteous will not finally be shaken, and assurance that God judges violent deceit.
Theological Argument
Psalm 55 argues that betrayal and violent disorder must be brought honestly before the Lord, not denied, romanticized, or avenged by self. The psalm begins with anguished prayer because the enemy's voice has troubled David's heart. It then shows that sin can corrupt public life and private friendship alike. The deepest wound is covenantal treachery from a close companion.
Yet David's answer is continual calling on God, confidence that God redeems, exposure of deceitful speech, and the command to cast the burden upon the Lord. Because God is enthroned and righteous, He will sustain the righteous and bring violent deceivers to judgment.
Troubled prayer becomes honest lament; lament exposes public and personal treachery; treachery leads to continual prayer; prayer yields burden-casting trust; trust rests in God's sustaining justice.
- 1.Anguish should be addressed to God.
- 2.Enemy pressure can create real inner terror.
- 3.The longing to flee is understandable but not ultimate.
- 4.Sin can become publicly embedded in a community.
- 5.Betrayal by a close companion is spiritually grievous.
- 6.The faithful entrust judgment to God.
- 7.Continual prayer is the pattern for sustained distress.
- 8.God hears and redeems because He is enthroned from of old.
- 9.Smooth speech may conceal covenant treachery.
- 10.The LORD sustains those who cast their burdens on Him.
Theological Focus
- God hears anguished prayer.
- The Lord sustains the righteous under unbearable burdens.
- Betrayal is a covenantal and spiritual wound, not merely a social inconvenience.
- Deceitful speech can become an instrument of violence.
- God's enthroned rule is the answer to social disorder and private treachery.
- Judgment belongs to God, not personal vengeance.
- Trust is formed by repeatedly casting burdens on the Lord.
- Prayer under anxiety
- Betrayal and covenant violation
- Speech and violence
- Divine sustaining
- Judgment and trust
- Divine Omniscience and Hearing
- Providence and Sustaining Grace
- Human Sin and Deceit
- Divine Judgment
- Prayer and Trust
- Christological Righteous-Sufferer Pattern
Theological Themes
The psalm teaches that fear, trembling, and restless complaint should be brought directly to God.
The close companion's treachery intensifies the moral and spiritual gravity of the lament.
Words may be smooth and soft while carrying war, deceit, and destructive force.
The Lord does not remove every burden immediately, but He sustains those who cast their burdens on Him.
The final contrast is between violent deceivers whom God brings down and the worshiper who trusts in Him.
Covenant Significance
Psalm 55 is covenantally significant because the betrayal is not only personal but fellowship-breaking. The companion once shared counsel and worship in God's house, then violated covenant bonds with smooth but warlike speech. The psalm therefore teaches that covenant life requires truthful speech, faithful friendship, public righteousness, and trust in the Lord's sustaining justice.
- The house of God reference frames the betrayal within shared worship memory.
- Verse 20 explicitly names covenant violation, making the treachery morally serious.
- The Lord's sustaining care in verse 22 is covenantally grounded: He upholds the righteous who cast their burdens on Him.
- The final judgment of bloodthirsty and deceitful people protects the covenant community from normalizing violent falsehood.
Canonical Connections
Absalom's rebellion and Ahithophel's counsel provide a plausible Davidic betrayal backdrop, though Psalm 55 itself does not name the event.
Psalm 41 also laments betrayal by a close companion who shared bread, providing a direct betrayal counterpart within Book I.
Psalm 54 gives a compact rescue prayer from betrayal and violence; Psalm 55 expands those themes emotionally, socially, and relationally.
Psalm 56 continues the Davidic pattern of fear under enemy pressure answered by trust in God.
Psalm 62 likewise calls the soul to rest in God and pour out the heart before Him as refuge.
Proverbs exposes smooth lips that hide an evil heart, closely paralleling Psalm 55's contrast between soft speech and warlike intent.
Jeremiah laments a community where deceit, treachery, and false speech make trust dangerous, echoing Psalm 55's citywide disorder and betrayal themes.
The betrayal of Jesus by one close to Him reflects the broader Davidic righteous-sufferer pattern of intimate treachery, though Psalm 55 is not explicitly quoted there.
John explicitly uses Psalm 41 for Judas's betrayal, and Psalm 55 stands nearby as a related canonical betrayal lament in the Davidic pattern.
Peter's call to cast anxiety on God because He cares resonates strongly with Psalm 55:22's command to cast the burden on the Lord.
Paul's call to leave vengeance to God helps Christian readers handle Psalm 55's judgment appeals without turning them into personal revenge.
The invitation to approach God's throne for mercy and help coheres with Psalm 55's movement from troubled complaint to confident divine help.
Christ's entrusting Himself to the righteous Judge models the righteous-sufferer response that Psalm 55 anticipates in prayer form.
Psalm 55 clarifies the gospel by showing that human beings cannot carry the burden of betrayal, fear, violence, and deceit into redemption by their own strength. The Lord hears, redeems, and sustains. In the wider canon, the burden-casting call points forward to the saving work of Christ, who bears what His people cannot bear, opens access to the Father, and secures final justice through His cross and resurrection.
- Do not turn verse 22 into a shallow slogan that ignores the psalm's deep anguish.
- Do not preach burden-casting as self-help emotional management detached from the Lord's covenant character.
- Do not remove divine judgment from gospel clarity · the gospel includes God's decisive answer to evil.
- Do not suggest that trusting God means betrayal no longer hurts.
Primary Emphasis
Psalm 55 contributes to the Davidic righteous-sufferer trajectory that finds its fullest expression in Christ, the Son of David who was betrayed by a close companion and entrusted Himself to the Father. The chapter should not be flattened into a direct prediction of Judas, because no explicit New Testament fulfillment citation is attached to Psalm 55; nevertheless, its pattern of intimate betrayal, deceptive speech, suffering innocence, and trust in God helps prepare the canonical imagination for the betrayal and vindication of Christ.
Chapter Contribution
Psalm 55 argues that betrayal and violent disorder must be brought honestly before the Lord, not denied, romanticized, or avenged by self. The psalm begins with anguished prayer because the enemy's voice has troubled David's heart. It then shows that sin can corrupt public life and private friendship alike. The deepest wound is covenantal treachery from a close companion.
Yet David's answer is continual calling on God, confidence that God redeems, exposure of deceitful speech, and the command to cast the burden upon the Lord. Because God is enthroned and righteous, He will sustain the righteous and bring violent deceivers to judgment.
God hears the cries, complaints, and prayers of His distressed people.
The Lord sustains the righteous under burdens that would otherwise crush them.
Sin corrupts speech, relationships, cities, and covenant bonds.
God will bring violent and deceitful people down to judgment.
The faithful respond to fear and betrayal by calling on God and entrusting burdens to Him.
The Davidic experience of intimate betrayal contributes to the canonical pattern fulfilled climactically in Christ, though without an explicit Psalm 55 fulfillment citation.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- Imperative petition at the opening
- Emotional accumulation in verses 4-5
- Wish-language in the dove-flight section
- Citywide moral catalogue in verses 9-11
- Sharp contrast between open enemy and close companion in verses 12-14
- Daily rhythm of prayer in verse 17
- Speech imagery contrasting butter/oil and swords
- Central imperative in verse 22
- Final antithetical contrast between violent deceivers and trusting David
- Psalm 55 forms a burden-casting faith that is emotionally honest, morally discerning, prayerfully persistent, and anchored in the Lord's sustaining justice.
Sense to lead, oversee, direct
Definition to supervise or direct, often in musical/liturgical settings
References Psalm 55 superscription
Lexicon to lead, oversee, direct
Why it matters The superscription places Psalm 55 in the worship life of Israel, so its anguish over betrayal is given to the congregation as prayer, not kept merely as private emotion.
Sense stringed music, song with instruments
Definition music or melody associated with stringed instruments
References Psalm 55 superscription
Lexicon stringed music, song with instruments
Why it matters The musical direction shows that the psalm's grief and complaint were meant to be sung before God, forming worshipers to lament faithfully.
Sense instructional or contemplative psalm
Definition a skillful, contemplative, or instructive composition
References Psalm 55 superscription
Lexicon instructional or contemplative psalm
Why it matters The designation warns readers not to treat the psalm only as emotional outburst; it teaches wisdom for handling betrayal, anxiety, and violence before God.
Sense David
Definition David, the LORD's anointed servant and king
References Psalm 55 superscription
Lexicon David
Why it matters The Davidic attribution places the prayer within the experience of the Lord's anointed servant who suffers treachery before final vindication.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense to give ear, listen
Definition to hear attentively or incline the ear
References Psalm 55:1
Lexicon to give ear, listen
Why it matters The psalm begins with urgent appeal, teaching that distress should move toward God in petition rather than spiral inward without prayer.
Sense prayer, plea
Definition a prayer or petition addressed to God
References Psalm 55:1
Lexicon prayer, plea
Why it matters The chapter's first category for anguish is prayer, not retaliation, escape fantasy, or despair.
Sense supplication, plea for favor
Definition an appeal for mercy or gracious attention
References Psalm 55:1
Lexicon supplication, plea for favor
Why it matters David asks God not merely to observe but to answer graciously in a situation too heavy for human endurance.
Sense complaint, meditation, troubled musing
Definition to muse, complain, or pour out troubled speech
References Psalm 55:2
Lexicon complaint, meditation, troubled musing
Why it matters The psalm legitimizes bringing disordered inner agitation to God in reverent lament rather than pretending the soul is calm.
Sense voice, sound
Definition audible voice, cry, or sound
References Psalm 55:3
Lexicon voice, sound
Why it matters David's anguish is triggered by the enemy's voice, contrasting destructive human speech with the prayerful voice lifted to God.
Sense enemy, hostile one
Definition one who opposes or acts with hostility
References Psalm 55:3
Lexicon enemy, hostile one
Why it matters The threat is personal and adversarial; Psalm 55 does not reduce evil to vague discomfort but names hostile opposition before God.
Sense wicked, guilty, morally wrong
Definition one characterized by guilt, injustice, or opposition to righteousness
References Psalm 55:3
Lexicon wicked, guilty, morally wrong
Why it matters The psalm frames the crisis morally, not merely emotionally: the pressure comes from those acting wickedly.
Sense trouble, evil, iniquity
Definition moral evil, trouble, or harmful injustice
References Psalm 55:3, 10
Lexicon trouble, evil, iniquity
Why it matters The enemies bring trouble down upon David, showing that sin produces burdens others are forced to bear.
Sense anger, wrath, nose
Definition anger or wrath, often pictured as burning intensity
References Psalm 55:3
Lexicon anger, wrath, nose
Why it matters The enemies' wrath presses against David, exposing the social and emotional force of hostile opposition.
Sense heart, inner person
Definition the center of thought, will, feeling, and moral life
References Psalm 55:4
Lexicon heart, inner person
Why it matters David's crisis is internal as well as external; betrayal and threat pierce the heart before they are resolved in circumstances.
Sense to writhe, tremble, be in anguish
Definition to twist, writhe, or be pained
References Psalm 55:4
Lexicon to writhe, tremble, be in anguish
Why it matters The psalm gives vocabulary for embodied emotional distress without treating such distress as unbelief in itself.
Sense death
Definition death, mortality, or deadly threat
References Psalm 55:4, 15
Lexicon death
Why it matters The terrors of death fall on David, indicating that the threat is not mild inconvenience but mortal pressure.
Sense fear, terror, reverence
Definition fear or awe, ranging from dread to reverent fear
References Psalm 55:5, 19
Lexicon fear, terror, reverence
Why it matters The psalm distinguishes David's terror under threat from the enemies' lack of proper fear of God later in the chapter.
Sense trembling, shaking
Definition physical trembling caused by fear or dread
References Psalm 55:5
Lexicon trembling, shaking
Why it matters David's lament includes bodily response, showing that faithful prayer can name psychosomatic distress honestly before the Lord.
Sense horror, shuddering dread
Definition terror or horror that overwhelms
References Psalm 55:5
Lexicon horror, shuddering dread
Why it matters The piling up of fear terms in verses 4-5 intensifies the depth of David's crisis before any turn to trust.
Sense dove
Definition a dove, often evoking flight, vulnerability, or longing for refuge
References Psalm 55:6
Lexicon dove
Why it matters The dove image captures David's desire to escape the violence around Him, but the psalm ultimately moves from flight-wish to burden-casting trust.
Sense wing, extremity, edge
Definition wing or covering edge
References Psalm 55:6
Lexicon wing, extremity, edge
Why it matters The wished-for wings of a dove express longing for distance from danger, yet God provides sustaining presence rather than immediate removal in verse 22.
Sense wilderness, desert
Definition uncultivated wilderness or desert region
References Psalm 55:7
Lexicon wilderness, desert
Why it matters David imagines refuge in the wilderness, a place associated with escape, exposure, testing, and dependence on God.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense to escape, slip away, be delivered
Definition to escape danger or be delivered from threat
References Psalm 55:8
Lexicon to escape, slip away, be delivered
Why it matters The longing for shelter from storm shows that David desires deliverance, yet the psalm will teach Him to place His burden on the Lord.
Sense storm, tempest
Definition a rushing storm or tempest
References Psalm 55:8
Lexicon storm, tempest
Why it matters The storm imagery externalizes David's inner and social turmoil, making the danger feel chaotic and overwhelming.
Sense Lord, Master
Definition sovereign Lord or master
References Psalm 55:9
Lexicon Lord, Master
Why it matters David appeals to the Lord as the one with authority to confuse violent schemes and judge treacherous speech.
Sense swallow up, confuse, engulf
Definition to swallow, engulf, destroy, or confound
References Psalm 55:9
Lexicon swallow up, confuse, engulf
Why it matters David asks the Lord to disrupt the destructive counsel and speech of the wicked, a prayer shaped by the reality that treachery often advances through words.
Sense violence, wrong, cruelty
Definition violence or injurious wrongdoing
References Psalm 55:9
Lexicon violence, wrong, cruelty
Why it matters Violence is not isolated to private enemies; it marks the city itself, showing social breakdown that needs divine intervention.
Sense strife, dispute, contention
Definition contention, quarrel, or legal dispute
References Psalm 55:9
Lexicon strife, dispute, contention
Why it matters Strife within the city reveals a community where covenant peace has been fractured by conflict and injustice.
Sense city
Definition a city or urban community
References Psalm 55:9-11
Lexicon city
Why it matters The lament is not only interpersonal; it includes the breakdown of public life where violence circulates day and night.
Sense wall, city wall
Definition protective wall around a city
References Psalm 55:10
Lexicon wall, city wall
Why it matters The image of violence and strife prowling on the walls reverses the normal expectation that city walls guard life and peace.
Sense evil, trouble, wickedness
Definition moral evil or destructive trouble
References Psalm 55:10
Lexicon evil, trouble, wickedness
Why it matters The same evil that presses David personally is embedded in the city's inner life, moving from enemy pressure to civic corruption.
Sense trouble, toil, oppression
Definition wearisome trouble, labor, or oppressive harm
References Psalm 55:10
Lexicon trouble, toil, oppression
Why it matters Abuse in the city square shows that sin is not only hidden but publicly operative in social dealings.
Sense destruction, ruin
Definition ruin, calamity, or destructive force
References Psalm 55:11
Lexicon destruction, ruin
Why it matters Psalm 55 portrays a city where ruin stands at the center rather than being kept outside the gates.
Sense deceit, treachery
Definition deception, fraud, or treacherous falsehood
References Psalm 55:11, 23
Lexicon deceit, treachery
Why it matters Deceit is central to the psalm because the deepest wound is not open hostility only but smooth treachery from one once trusted.
Sense broad place, square, street
Definition an open square, street, or public place
References Psalm 55:11
Lexicon broad place, square, street
Why it matters The public square is filled with threats and lies, showing civic disorder where truth and safety should have been maintained.
Sense equal, peer, one comparable
Definition one considered equal or comparable
References Psalm 55:13
Lexicon equal, peer, one comparable
Why it matters The betrayal hurts because it comes not from a distant enemy but from someone David regarded as like Himself.
Sense companion, intimate, trusted friend
Definition a close companion, confidant, or leader
References Psalm 55:13
Lexicon companion, intimate, trusted friend
Why it matters The term intensifies the pain: the betrayer was not merely known but trusted as a close companion.
Sense to know, be familiar with
Definition to know personally or relationally
References Psalm 55:13
Lexicon to know, be familiar with
Why it matters Betrayal is made more grievous because it violates relational knowledge and shared life.
Sense counsel, confidential talk
Definition confidential counsel, intimate conversation, or shared deliberation
References Psalm 55:14
Lexicon counsel, confidential talk
Why it matters The memory of shared counsel deepens the lament because covenant fellowship has been corrupted into hostility.
Sense house of God
Definition the place of worship associated with God's presence
References Psalm 55:14
Lexicon house of God
Why it matters The betrayal is spiritually painful because the companions once walked together in worship, not merely in ordinary friendship.
Sense realm of the dead, grave
Definition the realm of the dead or grave
References Psalm 55:15
Lexicon realm of the dead, grave
Why it matters The imprecation asks for decisive judgment, showing the severity of evil when treachery and violence dwell among people.
Sense to call, cry out
Definition to call, summon, or cry aloud
References Psalm 55:16
Lexicon to call, cry out
Why it matters David contrasts the enemies' destructive speech with His own Godward calling; speech is redirected from anxiety to prayer.
Sense God
Definition the true God, sovereign creator and judge
References Psalm 55:16, 19, 23
Lexicon God
Why it matters God is the one David addresses, trusts, and expects to act when human relationships collapse.
Sense to save, deliver
Definition to rescue or bring salvation
References Psalm 55:16
Lexicon to save, deliver
Why it matters The psalm's burden is not mere emotional relief but divine rescue from deadly opposition and betrayal.
Cross-language bridge 2 links · View in lexicon
Sense evening
Definition the evening time
References Psalm 55:17
Lexicon evening
Why it matters The rhythm of evening, morning, and noon portrays continual prayer under continual pressure.
Sense morning
Definition the morning time
References Psalm 55:17
Lexicon morning
Why it matters The prayer pattern shows that distress is repeatedly brought to God across the day rather than allowed to rule the day unchecked.
Sense noon, midday
Definition the middle of the day
References Psalm 55:17
Lexicon noon, midday
Why it matters By naming midday between evening and morning, David frames lament as a whole-day discipline of dependent prayer.
Sense to murmur, roar, moan
Definition to make a loud sound, murmur, roar, or moan
References Psalm 55:17
Lexicon to murmur, roar, moan
Why it matters David's prayer is not polished detachment; it is voiced anguish directed toward the God who hears.
Sense to hear, listen, obey
Definition to hear attentively and respond
References Psalm 55:17, 19
Lexicon to hear, listen, obey
Why it matters The whole psalm depends on God hearing what enemies distort and what the sufferer cannot resolve.
Sense to redeem, ransom, rescue
Definition to redeem or deliver by intervention
References Psalm 55:18
Lexicon to redeem, ransom, rescue
Why it matters Verse 18 moves from plea to confidence that God redeems David's life from battle, anticipating deliverance beyond human strength.
Sense peace, wholeness, well-being
Definition peace, completeness, safety, and wholeness
References Psalm 55:18
Lexicon peace, wholeness, well-being
Why it matters David expects God to redeem His life in peace even while many oppose Him, showing that peace is grounded in God's preserving action.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense battle, conflict
Definition battle or conflict
References Psalm 55:18
Lexicon battle, conflict
Why it matters The betrayal has become warfare-like opposition, yet David sees God's rescue as greater than the number of enemies against Him.
Sense to sit, dwell, be enthroned
Definition to sit, remain, dwell, or rule
References Psalm 55:19
Lexicon to sit, dwell, be enthroned
Why it matters God is described as enthroned from of old, grounding David's confidence in divine permanence rather than present instability.
Sense covenant
Definition a covenant, binding agreement, or solemn bond
References Psalm 55:20
Lexicon covenant
Why it matters The betrayer's sin includes violating covenant loyalty, making the treachery more than ordinary conflict.
Sense smooth, flattering, divided
Definition to be smooth or slippery, especially of speech
References Psalm 55:21
Lexicon smooth, flattering, divided
Why it matters The betrayer's speech is smooth, showing that deadly hostility can hide beneath pleasing words.
Sense curds, butter
Definition butter or curds
References Psalm 55:21
Lexicon curds, butter
Why it matters The image of speech smooth as butter exposes the danger of gentle words that conceal conflict and violence.
Sense oil
Definition olive oil, often smooth or soothing
References Psalm 55:21
Lexicon oil
Why it matters Words softer than oil contrast sharply with drawn swords, showing the split between appearance and intent.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense war, battle
Definition warfare or battle
References Psalm 55:21
Lexicon war, battle
Why it matters The betrayer's heart is war while His mouth sounds peaceful, revealing a deep contradiction between speech and inward posture.
Sense sword
Definition a sword or blade used in battle
References Psalm 55:21
Lexicon sword
Why it matters Smooth words become drawn swords; the psalm exposes the violence of deceptive speech.
Sense to throw, cast, hurl
Definition to cast, throw, or send away
References Psalm 55:22
Lexicon to throw, cast, hurl
Why it matters The central pastoral command of the psalm is to cast one's burden on the Lord rather than carry treachery alone.
Sense burden, what is given
Definition a burden, lot, or what is placed upon someone
References Psalm 55:22
Lexicon burden, what is given
Why it matters David does not deny the burden; He relocates it onto the Lord who is able to sustain His people.
Sense LORD, covenant name of God
Definition the covenant name of Israel's God
References Psalm 55:22
Lexicon LORD, covenant name of God
Why it matters The command to cast burdens rests on the covenant Lord, not on vague spirituality or self-calming technique.
Sense to sustain, contain, support
Definition to sustain, nourish, uphold, or support
References Psalm 55:22
Lexicon to sustain, contain, support
Why it matters The Lord does not promise the absence of burdens but promises sustaining care for the one who casts them on Him.
Sense righteous one
Definition one who is righteous, just, or covenantally upright
References Psalm 55:22
Lexicon righteous one
Why it matters The promise that God will not let the righteous be shaken must be read as covenant faithfulness, not exemption from emotional distress.
Sense to totter, be moved, shaken
Definition to slip, totter, or be shaken from secure footing
References Psalm 55:22
Lexicon to totter, be moved, shaken
Why it matters The psalm's assurance does not deny that David trembles; it promises that God will not finally let the righteous collapse.
Sense pit, destruction, corruption
Definition pit, grave, or place of destruction
References Psalm 55:23
Lexicon pit, destruction, corruption
Why it matters The wicked are not merely inconvenienced; the psalm entrusts their final end to God's righteous judgment.
Sense blood, bloodguilt
Definition blood or bloodshed
References Psalm 55:23
Lexicon blood, bloodguilt
Why it matters The final judgment is aimed at violent and deceitful people, not at ordinary personal irritation.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Sense to trust, rely, be confident
Definition to rely upon or place confidence in
References Psalm 55:23
Lexicon to trust, rely, be confident
Why it matters The last line resolves the psalm's burden: after prayer, complaint, and imprecation, David deliberately entrusts Himself to God.
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
Psalm 55 forms a burden-casting faith that is emotionally honest, morally discerning, prayerfully persistent, and anchored in the Lord's sustaining justice.
- Pray honestly when thoughts are troubled.
- Name betrayal without pretending it is harmless.
- Practice repeated daily prayer under long burdens.
- Refuse smooth deceit and warlike speech.
- Cast burdens on the Lord instead of carrying them in isolation.
- Trust God's judgment rather than rehearsing vengeance.
- Psalm 55:22 means believers should never feel anxiety or distress. - The psalm itself contains anguish, trembling, horror, and restless complaint · verse 22 commands where to place the burden, not that the burden is imaginary.
- David's wish to flee proves cowardice or unbelief. - The psalm honestly names escape-longing while moving the worshiper toward prayer, trust, and burden-casting dependence on the Lord.
- The betrayal language should be directly equated with Judas in every detail. - The psalm contributes to the broader righteous-sufferer betrayal pattern, but it is not explicitly cited as a Judas fulfillment passage.
- The imprecations permit believers to curse personal enemies carelessly. - The psalm entrusts judgment to God against violent deceit and covenant treachery · it does not authorize personal revenge.
- The city language is irrelevant to personal discipleship. - Psalm 55 links personal distress with public disorder, showing that sin damages both hearts and communities.
- Where am I carrying a burden that Scripture commands me to cast on the Lord?
- Have I confused silence about pain with trust, when Psalm 55 teaches me to pray my complaint honestly?
- What flight-wish is present in my heart, and how can I bring that desire under God's care?
- How do I respond when betrayal comes from someone who once shared fellowship or worship with me?
- Do my words ever become smoother than my heart, hiding conflict, bitterness, or manipulation?
- Am I entrusting judgment to God, or rehearsing vengeance internally?
- What would evening, morning, and noon prayer look like in the specific burden I am carrying?
- How can our church become a place where betrayed and anxious people are taught to cast burdens on the Lord without being shamed for feeling them?
- Counseling betrayal - Use Psalm 55 to validate the spiritual pain of being wounded by a trusted companion while guiding the person away from vengeance and toward burden-casting trust.
- Anxiety and panic - Show that Scripture gives words for anguish, trembling, horror, and escape-longing, then leads the anxious soul to repeated prayer and the sustaining Lord.
- Church conflict - Warn against smooth religious speech that hides warlike hearts, and call believers to truthful, covenantally faithful words and conduct.
- Preaching lament - Preach the whole movement, not only verse 22: prayer, fear, flight desire, public disorder, betrayal, confidence, exhortation, and judgment belong together.
- Leadership pressure - Encourage leaders who experience treachery to cry to God continually, discern deceit soberly, and refuse to let betrayal define their trust.
- Public moral disorder - Use the city imagery to teach that violence and deceit are not only private sins but communal corruptions that God sees and judges.
The troubled complaint is not ignored but redirected toward God.
The desire to flee is acknowledged but answered by casting the burden on the Lord.
The psalm does not minimize treachery; it exposes smooth words and covenant-breaking hearts.
Judgment is handed to God, who brings violent deceivers down in righteousness.
The righteous may feel shaken, but the Lord will not allow final collapse.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
Psalm 55 moves from urgent prayer and inner terror, to flight-longing and citywide disorder, to the anguish of intimate betrayal, then to continual prayer, confidence in redemption, exposure of smooth treachery, burden-casting trust, and final hope in God's judgment.
Psalm 55 is covenantally significant because the betrayal is not only personal but fellowship-breaking. The companion once shared counsel and worship in God's house, then violated covenant bonds with smooth but warlike speech. The psalm therefore teaches that covenant life requires truthful speech, faithful friendship, public righteousness, and trust in the Lord's sustaining justice.
Psalm 55 clarifies the gospel by showing that human beings cannot carry the burden of betrayal, fear, violence, and deceit into redemption by their own strength. The Lord hears, redeems, and sustains. In the wider canon, the burden-casting call points forward to the saving work of Christ, who bears what His people cannot bear, opens access to the Father, and secures final justice through His cross and resurrection.
Focus Points
- God hears anguished prayer.
- The Lord sustains the righteous under unbearable burdens.
- Betrayal is a covenantal and spiritual wound, not merely a social inconvenience.
- Deceitful speech can become an instrument of violence.
- God's enthroned rule is the answer to social disorder and private treachery.
- Judgment belongs to God, not personal vengeance.
- Trust is formed by repeatedly casting burdens on the Lord.
- Prayer under anxiety
- Betrayal and covenant violation
- Speech and violence
- Divine sustaining
- Judgment and trust
- Divine Omniscience and Hearing
- Providence and Sustaining Grace
- Human Sin and Deceit
- Divine Judgment
- Prayer and Trust
- Christological Righteous-Sufferer Pattern
Biblical Theology
- 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 →
- 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 →
- 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 →
- Kingdom Trace the kingdom thread from God's royal rule and promised dominion to the unshakable reign received and secured in Christ. Trace thread →
- Messianic Hope Trace the messianic hope thread from covenant promise and prophetic expectation to the clearer identification of Jesus as the promised ruler, priest, and deliverer. Trace thread →
- Gospel and Suffering The gospel and suffering belong together because the crucified and risen Christ saves His people not only from sin's guilt, but also teaches them how to endure affliction in union with Him. Suffering is not itself the gospel, yet the gospel gives suffering its truest interpretation by revealing God's holiness, Christ's cross, resurrection hope, and the promise that present affliction will not have the final word. Christian suffering is therefore neither meaningless pain nor automatic evidence of divine displeasure. Where the gospel is central, the church learns to suffer honestly, endure faithfully, comfort wisely, and hope stubbornly in the Lord Jesus Christ.
- Gospel and Perseverance The gospel of Jesus Christ not only saves sinners but secures and sustains them to the end. Through union with Christ and the preserving work of God, those who truly belong to Christ continue in faith, repentance, and obedience. Perseverance therefore reveals the enduring power of the cross and resurrection in the life of the believer. The same grace that begins salvation also carries believers forward until the final day of redemption.
- 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.