Psalms 139:1-24

1 O LORD, thou hast searched me, and known me.

2 Thou knowest my downsitting and mine uprising, thou understandest my thought afar off.

3 Thou compassesta my path and my lying down, and art acquainted with all my ways.

4 For there is not a word in my tongue, but, lo, O LORD, thou knowest it altogether.

5 Thou hast beset me behind and before, and laid thine hand upon me.

6 Such knowledge is too wonderful for me; it is high, I cannot attain unto it.

7 Whither shall I go from thy spirit? or whither shall I flee from thy presence?

8 If I ascend up into heaven, thou art there: if I make my bed in hell, behold, thou art there.

9 If I take the wings of the morning, and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea;

10 Even there shall thy hand lead me, and thy right hand shall hold me.

11 If I say, Surely the darkness shall cover me; even the night shall be light about me.

12 Yea, the darkness hidethb not from thee; but the night shineth as the day: the darkness and the light are both alike to thee.

13 For thou hast possessed my reins: thou hast covered me in my mother's womb.

14 I will praise thee; for I am fearfully and wonderfully made: marvellous are thy works; and that my soul knoweth right well.

15 My substancec was not hid from thee, when I was made in secret, and curiously wrought in the lowest parts of the earth.

16 Thine eyes did see my substance, yet being unperfect; and in thy book all my members were written,d which in continuance were fashioned, when as yet there was none of them.

17 How precious also are thy thoughts unto me, O God! how great is the sum of them!

18 If I should count them, they are more in number than the sand: when I awake, I am still with thee.

19 Surely thou wilt slay the wicked, O God: depart from me therefore, ye bloody men.

20 For they speak against thee wickedly, and thine enemies take thy name in vain.

21 Do not I hate them, O LORD, that hate thee? and am not I grieved with those that rise up against thee?

22 I hate them with perfect hatred: I count them mine enemies.

23 Search me, O God, and know my heart: try me, and know my thoughts:

24 And see if there be any wickede way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.

Psalms 139

DESCRIPTIVE TITLE

An Individual submits Himself to Jehovah's All-Searching Eye.

ANALYSIS

Stanza I., Psalms 139:1-6, Jehovah's Knowledge considered as Taking into View every Form of Human Activity. Stanza II., Psalms 139:7-12, There is No Escaping that Knowledge by Distance or Darkness. Stanza III., Psalms 139:13-18, Based upon the Creatorship of each Individual, Jehovah's Knowledge rises to Precious Purposes Realisable by Fellowship with Him in a Higher Life. Stanza IV., Psalms 139:19-24, The Lesson thus Learned produces a Passionate Espousal of Jehovah's honour, which feeling, however, is Jealously Guarded by Prayer.

(Lm.) By DavidPsalm.

1

Jehovah! thou hast searched me and knowest:

2

Thou knowest my downsitting and mine uprising,

thou understandeth my purpose from afar.

3

My journeying and my resting hast thou traced out,[812]

[812] So Sep. Or (Heb.): winnowed.

and with all my ways art thou familiar.

4

When (as yet) there is no speech in my tongue

lo! Jehovah thou knowest it all.

5

Behind and before hast thou shut me in,

and hast laid upon me thine outspread hand.

6

Too wonderful is thy[813] knowledge for me,

[813] Thy in Sep. and Vul.

inaccessible! I cannot attain to it.

7

Whither can I go from thy spirit?

or whither from thy face can I flee?

8

If I ascend the heavens there art thou,

and if I spread out hades as my couch behold thee!

9

I mount the wings of the dawn,

settle down in the region behind the sea

10

Even there thy hand leadeth me.

and thy right hand holdeth me.

11

If I sayOnly let darkness shut me in,[814]

[814] So Gt. M.T.: bruise me.

and the light about me be night

12

Even darkness would not darken from thee,

and night like day would shine,

so the darkness as the light.

13

For thou thyself didst originate the first rudiments of my being,[815]

[815] Ml.: my reins.

didst weave me together[816] in the womb of my mother.

[816] Or (less prob.): screen me.

14

I thank thee that thou hast shewn thyself fearfully wondrous,[817]

[817] So it shd. be (w. Sep. and Syr.)Gn.

wonderful are thy works,
and my soul knoweth [it] well.

15

My frame[818] was not hid from thee

[818] Ml.: my bone.

when I was made in secret,

was skilfully wrought[819] in the underparts of the earth:[820]

[819] If the initial r in Heb. was an accidental repetition from the previous word (wh. ends w. that letter), then we might render the word so shortened: I arose. And this might convey a double allusion to race origin and individual origin.

[820] The secret laboratory of the origin of earthly existence(Cp. Job 1:21, Sir. 40:1)Del.

16

Mine undeveloped substance[821] thine eyes beheld,

[821] Ml.: my ballas yet unrolled! Br. conjectures grl (instead of glm) my lot.

and in thy book all of them were written
even days preordained,

and for it[822] one among them.

[822] Namely, for my undeveloped substance: one among them, namely, among preordained days. So, prob., if w. Del. we prefer the Heb. marginal reading (in one recension) welo=waw, lamed, waw; otherwise, if we follow M.T., welo-'=waw, lamed, aleph (same pronunciation), we must say: And not one among them.

17

To me then how precious thy purposes O GOD!

how numerous have become their heads!

18

I would recount thembeyond the sands they multiply!

I awakeand my continued being[823] is with thee.

[823] Ml.: my continuance.

19

Wouldst thou O God slay the lawless one!

then ye men of bloodshed depart from me!

20

Who speak of thee wickedly,

have uttered for unreality thy name.[824]

[824] So Gt.: cp. Exodus 20:7.

21

Must not I hate them who hate thee O Jehovah?

And them who rise up against thee must I not loathe?

22

With completeness of hatred do I hate them,

as enemies have they become to me.

23

Search me O GOD and know my heart,

try me and know my disquieting[825] thoughts;

[825] Cp. Psalms 94:19.

24

And see if there be any hurtful way in me,

and lead me in a way age-abiding.[826]

[826] That is, a way enduring or holding on to the ages. In contrast with the way that vanishes, Psalms 1:6. Cp. the path of life, Psalms 16:11.

(Lm.) To the Chief Musician.

PARAPHRASE

Psalms 139

O Lord, You have examined my heart and know everything about me.
2 You know when I sit or stand. When far away You know my every thought.
3 You chart the path ahead of me, and tell me where to stop and rest! Every moment, You know where I am!
4 You know what I am going to say before I even say it.
5 You both precede and follow me, and place Your hand of blessing on my head.
6 This is too glorious, too wonderful to believe!
7 I can never be lost to Your Spirit! I can never get away from God!

8 If I go up to heaven You are there; if I go down to the place of the dead, You are there.
9 If I ride the morning winds to the farthest oceans,
10 Even there Your hand will guide me, Your strength will support me.
11 If I try to hide in the darkness, the night becomes light around me!
12 For even darkness cannot hide from God; to You the night shines as bright as day. Darkness and light are both alike to You.
13 You made all the delicate, inner parts of my body, and knit them together in my mother's womb.
14 Thank You for making me so wonderfully complex! It is amazing to think about. Your workmanship is marvelousand how well I know it.
15 You were there while I was being formed in utter seclusion!
16 You saw me before I was born and scheduled each day of my life before I began to breathe. Every day was recorded in Your Book!
17, 18 How precious it is, Lord, to realize that You are thinking about me constantly! I can-'t even count how many times a day Your thoughts turn towards me![827] And when I waken in the morning, You are still thinking of me!

[827] Literally, how precious are Your thoughts to me.

*

*

*

*

*

19 Surely You will slay the wicked, Lord! Away, bloodthirsty men! Begone!
20 They blaspheme Your name and stand in arrogance against Youhow silly can they be?
21 O Lord, shouldn-'t I hate those who hate You? Shoudn-'t I be grieved with them?
22 Yes, I hate them, for Your enemies are my enemies too.
23 Search me, O God, and know my heart, test my thoughts.
24 Point out anything You find in me that makes You sad, and lead me along the path of everlasting life.

EXPOSITION

This beautiful and heart-searching psalm may be conveniently regarded as resolving itself into four Stanzas of six verses each, as set forth in our Analysis.
I. Jehovah's Knowledge considered as taking into view every form of human activity. A survey which includes a man's downsitting when his day's work is done, his uprising when his night's rest is over, and his chief purpose during the twenty-four hours; which traces his journeying from place to place, his resting at noon and at night, and his ways of deporting himself wherever he may be,may be said to touch in general terms on all the forms which individual activity can assume. If, to these specifications, are added those processes of the mind which prepare for speech, and which prompt and guide the tongue in its utterance,we may conclude that nothing of importance remains uncomprehended in this brief enumeration. Nevertheless, there is yet another aspect under which individual activity may be viewed; and that is, its narrow limitation. There are on every side bounds which it cannot overpass; an individual's downsittings and uprisings can only attain a certain number, and then they must cease; and so with all his forms of activity. Such limitation is graphically set forth in the simplest and most picturesque language: Behind and before hast thou shut me in, and kast laid on me thine outspread hand. This reflection, by so far, enhances the thoroughness of Jehovah's knowledge of me. He knows all the movements I can make, and he himself strictly limits those movements; which emphasises the main point, which is, that Jehovah knows every individual thoroughly: knows with first-hand knowledge; as the result of personal search and tracing and testing; knows, by anticipation, even the as yet unspoken words that are coming. It is not surprising that the psalmist realises how such knowledge surpasses any knowledge which he himself possesses: Too wonderful is thy knowledge for me.

II. There is no Escaping that Knowledge by Distance or Darkness. The psalmist first tests the question, whether by Distance he can hide himself from God. No: not by distance: whether the distant height, or the distant depth, or the distant breadth: the distant and dazzling height of heaven; or the dim, dark depth of hades, the underworld of the dead; or the hazy remoteness of the shores and islands behind the hinder Mediterranean Sea: escape to any of these distances will be no escape from Jehovah; who is above, below, beyond; present everywherepresent, in the diffused vitality of his spirit, present, in the personal capacity of revealing his face in wrath or love. The poet is only testing the question in all the forms his thoughts can appreciate. He does not say he wishes to escape: in fact, he almost implies that he does not; for, in putting the case, merely to test the possibility, he rather assumes the love than the wrath of the Omnipresent One: There, thy hand leadeth me, and thy right hand holdeth me. But, if he would escape, he could notthat is his main point.

Having tested the question of escape from God's knowledge by means of Distance, he next propounds the question whether by means of Darkness such escape were possible. Again he concludes in the negative. Darkness is no darkness to Jehovah.

III. Based upon the Creatorship of Each Individual, Jehovah's Knowledge rises to Precious Purposes realisable by Fellowship with Him in a Higher Life.

This comprehensive summary of the third stanza of our psalm is not more comprehensive than the particulars which it seeks to express. Nevertheless, being highly charged with meaning, it may be helpful to draw out its main points in the form of three distinct propositions.
1. Jehovah's knowledge of men is based upon his creatorship of each individual.
2. His creatorship of each individual comprehends benevolent purposes with respect to them.
3. His benevolent purposes with respect to each individual require for their realisation the advantages of a higher life than the present.
1. Jehovah's knowledge of men is based upon his creatorship of each individual. The causal word For=Because, which opens this stanza, strictly and properly leads up to this conception: Thou hast such an intimate knowledge of me as neither change of activity, nor distance, nor darkness can obstruct, because thou didst make me: because I am thy creature: because thou art my creator. This is the first strong and clear point in this third stanza-' of our psalm. Observe that it is clearly and strongly expressed. It is expressed by almost every form of language by which the idea could be conveyed: He originated the first rudiments of my being. Then he carries on the formative work so begun: He wove me together. He constructed my bony framework. Moreover he yet further advanced his handiwork to completion, by skilfully imparting the whole variegated web-work of nerves and blood-vessels. We need not trust too much to a single form of expression; but it may safely be said that at least three times over in this short paragraph is Jehovah's creatorship of the human body affirmed. Sum them all up, and put them in their proper connection of thought, by saying: He knows me thoroughly because he made me. He made, not only my spirit, but my body also.

We are not going too far when we individualise, and say: He made me. He made my body. We are not going too far, because precisely that is what the psalmist says.

But does he not also generalise, and speak of the origin of the race under cover of the origin of the individual? The correct answer to that plausible question would seem to be this: Yes, he does also generalise; but without withdrawing his individualisation. He refers to the literal mother's womb of the individual, as well asprobably and allusivelyto the figurative mother's womb here glanced at under the terms underparts of the earth. We need not deny the allusion. It is the easiest and happiest way of accounting for the introduction of that remarkable expression; which it may be observed is also found in the Septuagint and Vulgate: As the race was originally brought forth out of the underparts of the earth, so the individual is, at birth, brought forth from the maternal concealment answering thereto. But such an allusion does not dominate the passage: the psalm distinctly and repeatedly affirms the Divine Creatorship of the body of each individual human being.

The importance of this teaching will be evident to every thoughtful mind. The consequences which follow from it may, without exaggeration, be described as tremendous. To say that BEHIND EVERY HUMAN BIRTH DIVINE CAUSATION IS IMPLIED is to make a statement which may undoubtedly be abused. But, on the other hand, still more deplorable consequences will result from denying it. The alternativethat of cutting any single creature adrift from its Creatormust at all costs be avoided.
Jehovah created the race: Jehovah creates every individual of the race. Jehovah is the Father of our spiritsdoubtless with special immediateness, beautifully symbolised by the directness with which each breathing thing draws its breath from God. But, though not without creaturely intervention, yet through the fathers of our flesh, Jehovah's creatorship takes effect: his power and wisdom and love are operative in the production of our individual bodies also. It is this which the third stanza of our psalm so strongly teaches, and the more thoroughly and fearlessly we appropriate the solemn thought, the more shall we have ultimate cause for rejoicing.
Jehovah knows me thoroughly, because he made me; and he made my body as well as my spirithe made the whole man, the entire compound psychic individual.
This is not to say that even he, at my first birth, brought a clean thing out of an unclean; but it is to say, that my first birth, with all its drawbacks, lays a foundation for a second: a second birth whose very object will be to bring a clean thing out of an unclean. Creation may be followed by destruction; but that is not its object. Creation may be followed by salvation.
2. Jehovah's creatorship of each individual comprehends benevolent purposes respecting each. What is it but Jehovah's individual creatorship which calls forth the significant line which now comes before us?

To me, then, how precious thy purposes, O God!

Having employed the word purpose, in Psalms 139:2, in relation to man, we are bound in consistency to use it now, in Psalms 139:17, in relation to God, the word being the same in the original. God has not only thoughts about us when individually creating us, but purposes, and because these purposes are precious, therefore we must assume them to be benevolent; purposes of good and not of evil; of salvation, and not of destruction. Some, indeed, prefer the qualifying word weighty here instead of precious; but as precious is the more customary and obvious rendering, we shall hold ourselves warranted to abide by that more inspiring word until driven out of it. Inasmuch, however, as the immediately following context confirms the preferred and customary rendering, we have no fear of being driven out of the welcome conception of a benevolent Divine purpose in connection with every human birth.

It is quite true that the psalmist with great emphasis asserts the individuality of his own appreciation of God's benevolent purposes in his creation. To me, then, how precious! and he had every right to do this. To me, knowing thee as I know thee; To me, then, considering this matter as I have done, and pondering deeply upon it as I have pondered,how precious thy purposes are! But is this to shut others out from the same appreciation; or, is it, rather, to invite them to follow him? Let us beware of narrowing the ground of the exclamation so as to cut it away from under any man's feet. Suffice it, then, to observethat the psalmist neither says nor implies, Because I am a good man, therefore are thy purposes such as they are, therefore are they precious to me. No! the whole spirit of the stanza, and of the psalm hitherto, suggests the simpler and broader ground: Because I am a man, and because thou didst make me to be a man, therefore are thy purposes to me as man so precious.

3. Jehovah's benevolent purposes with respect to each individual require for their realisation the advantages of a higher life than the present. Nearly everything here turns on the bearing of the word awake; although something also turns upon the fact that the words I am still may give place to a more literal rendering, my continuance, which more literal rendering may justly assume the significant form, my continued being, as we see from Psalms 104:33: I awakemy continued being is with thee. Chiefly, the decision turns upon the scope or intention of the word awake. Does the psalmist intend to imply that he had nearly or quite fallen asleep under the weight of his profound meditation, but that when he roused himself he still found himself revolving the old problem,found him with God in the sense of still thinking about him? Or does he rather rise to a higher thoughtthat of awaking to a higher life than the present?

We may and must dismiss the former as purely fanciful: there is nothing sleepy about what has gone beforeall is alert, wakeful; with no indication even of weariness in the mind of the psalmist. Besides which, there is something essentially feeble in reducing the weighty words with thee to mean no more than thinking about thee; since they more properly mean in company with theein thy presence.

On the other hand there are attractive parallels for investing the word awake with a far richer meaning; such as, Awake and sing ye that dwell in the dust (Isaiah 26:19), many of the sleepers in the dusty ground shall awake (Daniel 12:2), and especially

As for me, I shall behold thy face in righteousness, I shall be satisfied when I awake in thy likeness.

Psalms 17:15.

Who can deny that, so to understand the words of our psalm, is to bring its third stanza to an altogether worthy conclusion? The whole context is strong, and favours a strong conclusion. Particularly strong and suggestive are the two lines falling between the two great words purposes and awake: how numerous have become the heads of them, namely thy purposes; andI would recount thembeyond the sands they multiply. Only regard the purposes as finding final culmination in the bestowment of IMMORTAL LIFE; only regard the awaking as being the GREAT AWAKING to that life; and then this multiplication of the Divine purposes is abundantly accounted for. The purposes culminating in the Great Awaking naturally multiply on both sides of that climax: on this side, and on that; as leading up to it, and as carrying us beyond it. He who purposes to bestow on me immortality, will he not purpose to prepare me for that priceless boon? Will he not purpose redemption, purpose sanctification, purpose the necessary discipline of suffering, purpose victory over temptation? So that we may well exclaim, How numerous the purposes leading me up to the Great Awaking! And again, will that Great Awaking not itself lead on to further and higher and still multiplying results? Does Jehovah purpose to awake me to an idle, sterile life? When I am awakened, will there be nothing for me to do, no lost ones to seek and save, no new worlds to conquer, no new victories to achieve, no new songs to sing, no new book of nature's secrets to open? Verily, it is as the psalmist says, How the heads of coming possibilities in the future multiply beyond the sands?

On every ground, therefore, are we emboldened to conclude, that this Awaking is THE GREAT AWAKING TO IMMORTALITY. On the ground of the utter feebleness of the alternative view, which fancies that this wakeful psalmist fell asleep; on the ground of the felt preciousness of these Divine purposes; and on the ground of their abundant multiplication, which can never so prolifically multiply as when clustered about Jehovah's greatest gift, age-abiding life:on all these substantial grounds we choose this conclusion, and rest in it, that the climax of this third stanza does really meanI awake to immortal lifeand find that my continued being is to be enjoyed in fellowship with thee my loving Creator!

IV. The lesson thus learned produces a Passionate Espousal of Jehovah's honour: which feeling, however, is Jealously Guarded by Prayer.

That is what we really have here, in the final stanza of our psalm: let us brush aside everything which hinders our seeing it.
Granted that the language employed is, some of it, such as we could not use: simply because we are not in the psalmist's circumstances. What were those circumstances?
As this question necessarily throws us back on the problem of authorship, it may be permitted us to say: that this Study was commenced under the impression that DAVID HIMSELF was the Writer of the whole of this psalm, the manifest difference in tone between the first three stanzas and the last being sufficiently accounted for by the easy supposition, that three-fourths of the psalm were written by David in his comparatively early and untroubled days, and the last part, after his days of conflict had set in; but that, on closer consideration of the peculiar language of the fourth stanza and contemplation of the circumstancesthe whole state of thingsthereby implied, the modified conclusion was reached, that, while David probably wrote the major part of the psalm, namely its continuously calm stanzas one, two, and three, being probably the whole original psalm, and abundantly entitling the psalm as a whole to bear his honoured name, it was his descendant HEZEKIAH who, having drunk in the existing psalm, in letter and spirit, then added to it the present fourth stanza. The sufficient reason for this modification may be allowed to stand thus: the fourth stanza does not exactly suit any known circumstances through which David passed, but does exactly and most wonderfully fit the peculiar condition of things which existed in the days of Hezekiah. So much for clearness being premised, the case may be thus stated, looking steadfastly and with a single eye to the exact language of this the fourth stanza of the psalm.

These are the words of a responsible King in Israel: with a foreign invader trampling down the land; leaving his subjects little chance of exercising the most ordinary rights of citizenship, and still less of maintaining the appointed central worship in Jerusalem; many of the Levites being beleaguered in the cities where are their homes, and consequently being unable to ascend to the holy city to attend there to their sacerdotal duties. All this, observe, simply because of this same Invaderthis lawless foreignerwho will, if he can, dethrone Israel's rightful monarch, and draw the people away from their allegiance to Jehovah himself. And now the question is:If, under these circumstances, the King praysWouldst thou, O God, slay the lawless one! is he doing wrong? Deserves he to lose our sympathies? Can we condemn him? Note, that he does not propose to slay the lawless one himself; he merely commits him to the judgment of God: Slay him, O God! Is that a wrong prayer for Israel's King, under such circumstances.

But let us be at pains to take in the whole situation. There is a war-party in Israel, who are prepared to rush forward into blood-shed, with or without Jehovah's permission. We know them; we have met with them before: we have heard their peace-loving King lament that he dwelt among them: bitterly complaining of them in such terms as these, I am peace; but when I speak, they are for war! (Psalms 120). These are the men to whom the devout monarch here says threateningly in a significant aside: then, ye men of blood-shed, depart from me! As much as to say, Once the Lawless One is slain by God's hand, your excuses for plunging into a wilful war will be silenced; and, depend upon it, I shall hasten to rid myself of your hated presence in my Court.

Not only was there a war-party in Israel, but that war-party was composed of profane menmen who spake of Jehovah wickedly, who tried to maintain falsehoods by the irreverent use of his holy name: men, in a word, who hated Jehovah! Those are the men whom this praying, Jehovah-loving monarch has to confront. And we ask, was he wrong in drawing a line at them? Could he do otherwise than exclaim, in loyalty to the God whom he adored and loved: Must I not hate them who hate thee, O Jehovah? There is no paltry, personal animosity in the language. In point of fact, these men might have been the king's own enemies, but of that he takes no account. Wholly on public groundssolely for Jehovah's sakehe accounts them as his own enemies. Thatno more, no lessis what the language expresses.

And so we claim to have brushed aside all obstructions to the reception of the large and solemn lesson here conveyed. It is an object-lesson; and is nothing less than this: That when a man rightly appreciates the precious purposes which his Creator cherishes towards him, then is he propelled by the highest moral compulsion to love him in return; to vindicate his honour; and to count his Creator's enemies as his own.

Yet, in such a passionate espousal of Jehovah's honour, there undoubtedly lurks a subtle danger: lest the public hate should take up into itself personal animosity; let an abhorrence of men's godless principles and animus should overlook the yet lingering preciousness of their personalities, not yet, it may be, wholly corrupt and finally abandoned.
And it is submitted, that this is one of the finest things in this matchless psalm; namely, that the psalmist is fully aware of this danger; and makes a determined stand against it, by voluntarily submitting himself to the searching eye of his heart-searching God; imploring to know whether there is in himeven by way of mixed motivesany hurtful way; and seeking to be Divinely led into a wayup to and through the great Awakingto the pure life that shall abide to the ages.

QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION

1.

Perhaps this is the most meaningful of all the psalms. Please read it and the exposition on it with this thought in mind. Discuss why you believe this psalm has meaning for you.

2.

Someone said, for the Christian, nothing happens in his life by accident, all is under God's hand of intent. The first six verses of this psalm surely confirm this thought. Discuss.

3.

Not only does God know all my movements, he himself strictly limits those movements, discuss this thought.

4.

Does man have a strong temptation to run away and hide? Why? Is this true of all men?

5.

There are various attempts to get away from God. to put distance between you and God. Discuss some modern-day applications of this.

6.

Every fifth man in America is emotionally sicki.e. according to some statisticsis this an attempt to escape God in the darkness? Discuss other forms of darkness. Most of all; discuss not only the futileness of this effort but the needlessness of it.

7.

What a tremendous thought! Not only did God create man, but He took a personal interest in creating each one. Discuss how very complete is the interest of our Creator in each one of us.

8.

What is involved in the expression the underparts of the earth?

9.

God has a plan and purpose for every life, is this taught in this psalm? Discuss.

10.

How do the first and second births relate?

11.

How is the word precious used in this psalm?

12.

How is the word awake here used?

13.

The multiplicity of the purposes of God is a strong argument for immortality. How so?

14.

Rotherham has an interesting thought about the writing of the fourth stanza. Discuss.

15.

Who was the lawless one? Why to be slain? Was this merciful?

16.

What protection did the psalmist seek against the lawless one?

Continues after advertising