Psalm 64
    
    The voice of prayer again is heard amid the multitude of 
    afflictions. But deliverance shows a smiling face. Foes will fall prostrate 
    and the righteous shall rejoice. 
    1-2. "Hear my voice, O God, in my prayer; preserve my 
    life from fear of the enemy. Hide me from the secret counsel of the wicked; 
    from the insurrection of the workers of iniquity." 
    The Psalmist is here seen as a child of sorrows cradled 
    in distress. His daily portion is affliction's bread. He holds a cup filled 
    to the very brim with trouble. He cannot stir but amid snares and hostile 
    threats. On every side the enemy shows a front of menace. But he has his 
    refuge. It is near. It is secure. It is the mercy-seat to which prayer 
    brings him near. Who will dread trouble when such remedies are at hand! Foes 
    may have cruel malice in their hearts, but all their malice will prove 
    blessings in disguise when they convey on wings of prayer to God's immediate 
    presence. Thus cruel distress is often made the means of boundless good. So 
    it was with David. In his worst straits he could look up and cry, 'Preserve 
    my life, O God, from fear of the enemy.' He knew that the wicked laid their 
    secret plots, and that the workers of iniquity were planning to rise up 
    against him. But no fears disturbed his peace when he could appeal to God to 
    spread His sheltering wings around him, and to hide him in His pavilion, 
    from the machinations of insurgents. 
    3-6. Who whet their tongue like a sword, and bend 
    their bows to shoot their arrows, even bitter words; that they may shoot in 
    secret at the perfect; suddenly they shoot at him, and fear not. They 
    encourage themselves in an evil matter; they commune of laying snares 
    privily; they say, Who shall see them? As they plot their crimes, they say, 
    "We have devised the perfect plan!" Yes, the human heart and mind are 
    cunning.
    
    In warfare the sword is a mighty weapon. It 
    inflicts deadly wounds and drives back the attacking foe. So, also, 
    arrows do destructive work. The Psalmist felt these weapons were arrayed 
    against him in the malice of attacking words. Sharp as the sword were their 
    tongues, piercing as the arrows were their words; secret was the ambush, and 
    suddenly they rushed out to fight. They hold malicious counsels. They 
    flatter themselves that darkness would conceal their plots. In disregard of 
    the all-seeing Eye they vainly question, 'Who shall see us?' They use, also, 
    every endeavor to malign. They strive to discover some evil which they may 
    bring to light, and use in slander against the objects of their hate. Who 
    can fathom the evil of their thoughts, the evil of their hearts? Truly this 
    evil is a deep well. 
    7-8. "But God shall shoot at them with an arrow; 
    suddenly shall they be wounded. So they shall make their own tongue to fall 
    upon themselves; all that see them shall flee away." 
    If our hope sprang only from this world, our hands might 
    hang down in despair. If help came only from the sons of men, helpless 
    indeed our state would be. How soon would we be trampled down by 
    overwhelming hosts; how soon would Satan send forth his legions to sweep us 
    into uttermost destruction. 
    But God is our hope, our help, our strength; therefore 
    unfailing victory must be on our side. He will bend His bow, and His arrows 
    never fail to reach their mark, and to discomfit the insulting hosts. In a 
    moment, when they least expect defeat, like Sennacherib's hosts, they shall 
    lie as dead men. Like Pharaoh's army, they shall be overwhelmed and no more 
    seen. God does not need to call in new implements of ruin; their own tongues 
    shall put forth destructive power. Self-wounded, self-ruined, 
    self-destroyed, they shall exhibit a spectacle so fearful that frightened 
    spectators shall dread their very sight. 
    9-10. "And all men shall fear, and shall declare the 
    work of God; for they shall wisely consider His doing. The righteous shall 
    be glad in the Lord, and shall trust in Him; and all the upright in heart 
    shall glory." 
    Awe shall be widely spread when such requital is beheld. 
    The hand of the Lord shall be conspicuous, and shall be reverently 
    acknowledged. Intelligence shall perceive that God's mind has been the 
    directing cause, and God's power accomplished the overthrow. Happy 
    thankfulness shall pervade the hearts of the righteous. They shall rejoice 
    not so much in the misery of the wicked and at their total overthrow, as 
    that God's work shall be thus manifestly seen, that praises should adore 
    Him, and all glory be ascribed to Him.