PSALM 35*
Prayer for Help Against Unjust Enemies
I
*Oppose, O LORD, those who oppose me;
war upon those who make war upon me.
rise up in my defense.
against my pursuers.
Say to my soul,
“I am your salvation.”
be put to shame and disgrace.
Let those who plot evil against mea
be turned back and confounded.
with the angel of the LORD driving them on.
with the angel of the LORD pursuing them.
II
without cause they dug a pit for me.
let the snare they have set catch them;
let them fall into the pit they have dug.c
exult in God’s salvation.
“O LORD, who is like you,d
Who rescue the afflicted from the powerful,
the afflicted and needy from the despoiler?”
III
accuse me of things I do not know.
my soul is desolate.e
afflicted myself with fasting,
sobbed my prayers upon my bosom.
bent in mourning as for my mother.
gathered against me and I did not know it.
They slandered me without ceasing;
gnashed their teeth against me.
IV
Restore my soul from their destruction,
my very life from lions!f
I will praise you before the mighty throng.g
my undeserved enemies wink knowingly.h
but against the quiet in the land
they fashion deceitful speech.i
They say, “Aha! Good!
Our eyes have seen it!”j
Lord, do not withdraw from me.
in my cause, my God and my Lord.
my God, do not let them rejoice over me.
“Aha! Our soul!”*
Do not let them say,
“We have devoured that one!”
all who relish my misfortune.
Clothe with shame and disgrace
those who lord it over me.
shout for joy and be glad.
May they ever say, “Exalted be the LORD
who delights in the peace of his loyal servant.”
declare your praise, all the day long.l
* [Psalm 35] A lament of a person betrayed by friends. The psalmist prays that the evildoers be publicly exposed as unjust (Ps 35:1–8), and gives thanks in anticipation of vindication (Ps 35:9–10). Old friends are the enemies (Ps 35:11–16). May their punishment come quickly (Ps 35:17–21)! The last part (Ps 35:22–26) echoes the opening in praying for the destruction of the psalmist’s persecutors. The Psalm may appear vindictive, but one must keep in mind that the psalmist is praying for public redress now of a public injustice. There is at this time no belief in an afterlife in which justice will be redressed.
* [35:1–6] The mixture of judicial, martial, and hunting images shows that the language is figurative. The actual injustice is false accusation of serious crimes (Ps 35:11, 15, 20–21). The psalmist seeks lost honor through a trial before God.
* [35:13, 15–17] The Hebrew is obscure.
* [35:25] Aha! Our soul!: an ancient idiomatic expression meaning that we have attained what we wanted.
b. [35:5] Ps 1:4; 83:14; Jb 21:18.
c. [35:8] Ps 7:16; 9:16; 57:7; Prv 26:27; Eccl 10:8; Sir 27:26.
d. [35:10] Ps 86:8; 89:7, 9; Ex 15:11.
e. [35:12] Ps 27:12; 38:20–21; 109:5; Jer 18:20.
f. [35:17] Ps 17:12; 22:22; 58:7.
g. [35:18] Ps 22:23; 26:12; 35:18; 40:10; 149:1.
j. [35:21] Ps 40:16; Lam 2:16.
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