Psalms 89:49

where.

77:9,10; Isa 63:7-15

thou.

3,4,35; 54:5; 132:11,12; 2Sa 3:9; 7:15; Isa 55:3; Heb 7:21

Psalms 143:1

1 David prays for favour in judgment.

3 He complains of his griefs.

5 He strengthens his faith by meditation and prayer.

7 He prays for grace;

9 for deliverance;

10 for sanctification;

12 for destruction of his enemies;

(Title.) A Psalm.The LXX., Vulgate, Ethiopic, and Arabic state that this Psalm was composed by David on the rebellion of his son Absalom; and there are several passages in it which agree remarkably well with that period; for then he had most reason to fear lest God should deal with him according to his sins; which he deprecates with such a deep sense of his unworthiness, that it has hence been numbered among the penitential Psalms, of which it is the last. In it he prays to God for pardon, ver. 1; acknowledges the impossibility of being saved but by grace, ver. 2; deplores the lamentable effects of sin, ver. 3, 4; comforts himself with a retrospect of God's mercies of old, ver. 5; and prays, in a variety of expressions, for remission of sin, sanctification, and redemption, ver. 6-12.

thy faithfulness.

31:1; 71:2; 2Sa 7:25; Da 9:16; 1Jo 1:9

Psalms 143:12

of thy mercy.

54:5; 55:23; 136:15-20; 1Sa 24:12-15; 25:29; 26:10

for I am thy.

116:16; 119:94
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