Psalms 34:15–22
The Lord watches the righteous and stays close to the brokenhearted, delivering them from all their troubles and ensuring they will never be condemned.
Scripture Text
34:15 Yahweh’s eyes are toward the righteous. His ears listen to their cry.
34:16 Yahweh’s face is against those who do evil, to cut off their memory from the earth.
34:17 The righteous cry, and Yahweh hears, and delivers them out of all their troubles.
34:18 Yahweh is near to those who have a broken heart, and saves those who have a crushed spirit.
34:19 Many are the afflictions of the righteous, but Yahweh delivers Him out of them all.
34:20 He protects all of His bones. Not one of them is broken.
34:21 Evil shall kill the wicked. Those who hate the righteous shall be condemned.
34:22 Yahweh redeems the soul of His servants. None of those who take refuge in Him shall be condemned.
The Lord watches the righteous and stays close to the brokenhearted, delivering them from all their troubles and ensuring they will never be condemned.
The life of the righteous is marked by significant affliction but guaranteed by divine presence and redemption, ensuring that while the wicked are destroyed by their own evil, the faithful will never face final condemnation.
To conclude the acrostic with a definitive statement on divine justice, contrasting God's compassionate attentiveness to the righteous and brokenhearted with His judicial opposition to the wicked. The life of the righteous is marked by significant affliction but guaranteed by divine presence and redemption, ensuring that while the wicked are destroyed by their own evil, the faithful will never face final condemnation.
- A The rescued servant blesses the Lord continually and invites the humble to magnify Him together.
- B Seeking, crying, looking, and fearing are met by the Lord's answer, rescue, and protective encampment.
- C The congregation is invited to taste the Lord's goodness, fear Him, and seek Him as the source of every good thing.
- D The teacher instructs learners that life under the fear of the Lord includes truthful speech, turning from evil, doing good, and pursuing peace.
- E The Lord watches the righteous, hears their cries, opposes evildoers, and draws near to the brokenhearted.
- F Many afflictions do not defeat the righteous because the Lord delivers and redeems His servants, while evil destroys the wicked.
Personal praise after deliverance -> communal summons to magnify the Lord -> invitation to taste divine goodness -> wisdom instruction in holy fear -> ethical speech and peace-seeking -> divine attention to the righteous and opposition to evil -> nearness to the brokenhearted -> redemption and no condemnation for the Lord's servants
Psalm 34 argues that the Lord is worthy of continual praise and obedient fear because He answers the needy, delivers those who seek Him, shelters those who fear Him, teaches His people the path of righteous speech and peace, draws near to the brokenhearted, and redeems His servants from condemnation.
Theological logic
- The rescued servant should bless the LORD continually and invite the humble into shared praise.
- The LORD answers those who seek Him and rescues the afflicted from fear, shame, and trouble.
- Those who fear the LORD are surrounded by His protective care.
- The LORD's goodness must be personally tasted by taking refuge in Him.
- The fear of the LORD forms speech, conduct, and peace-seeking.
- The LORD sees and hears the righteous but opposes those who do evil.
- The LORD is near to the brokenhearted and saves those crushed in spirit.
- The righteous may suffer many afflictions, yet the LORD delivers, preserves, redeems, and removes condemnation from those who take refuge in Him.
- Continual praise - Begin prayer by blessing the Lord before rehearsing the trouble.
- Testimony as ministry - Share answered prayer in a way that helps the humble rejoice, not in a way that centers self.
- Refuge-taking - Name where You are seeking safety outside the Lord and consciously flee to Him in prayer and obedience.
- Speech examination - Audit the tongue and lips for evil, deceit, exaggeration, manipulation, and retaliation.
- Active peacemaking - Identify one conflict where obedience requires pursuing peace, not waiting passively.
- Brokenhearted prayer - Bring crushedness to the Lord with Psalm 34:18 as a promise of nearness.
- Redemptive assurance - Answer condemnation fears with refuge in the Lord and the finished work of Christ.
- : The superscription links the psalm to David's escape from danger among the Philistines; the narrative gives a plausible historical pressure behind the testimony without controlling every line of the poem.
- : Psalm 25 and Psalm 34 both combine trust, fear of the Lord, instruction, deliverance from shame, and refuge for those who wait on the Lord.
- : Psalm 32 ends with joy for the upright and Psalm 34 continues the formation of the forgiven community through praise, confession, fear of the Lord, and righteous speech.
- : Psalm 37 develops many of Psalm 34's themes: trusting the Lord, turning from evil and doing good, the fate of evildoers, and the Lord's care for the righteous.
- : Psalm 34's instruction in the fear of the Lord resonates with wisdom teaching that the fear of the Lord is foundational for knowledge and life.
- : Isaiah's witness to the high and holy God dwelling with the contrite and lowly parallels Psalm 34's claim that the Lord is near to the brokenhearted and saves the crushed in spirit.
- : Jesus' beatitudes echo Psalm 34's valuation of the poor, meek, righteous sufferers, peacemakers, and those who are blessed while depending on God.
- : John identifies the unbroken bones of Jesus at the crucifixion as Scripture fulfilled, a fulfillment horizon that includes Psalm 34:20 along with Passover-bone imagery.
- : Peter echoes Psalm 34:8 by applying the tasted goodness of the Lord to believers who have come to Christ and are being built as God's people.
- : Peter quotes Psalm 34:12-16 to instruct suffering believers in truthful speech, turning from evil, doing good, seeking peace, and trusting the Lord's attentive care.
- : Psalm 34:22 promises that those who take refuge in the Lord will not be condemned; Romans 8 announces the gospel fullness of no condemnation for those in Christ Jesus.
- : The righteous sufferer's deliverance and the Lord's rescue of His servants find gospel depth in Christ, who shares His people's suffering and delivers them from slavery and fear.
Jesus Christ is the Righteous One whose bones were not broken and who was 'crushed' for our iniquities; because He was condemned in our place, we are redeemed and will never be condemned if we take refuge in Him.