Loading…

Evangelical Commentary on the Bible is unavailable, but you can change that!

Walter A. Elwell, editor. The purpose of this commentary, is to help the average reader of the Bible understand what the text says. Using the NIV as a basis for its comments, this commentary is a totally new work, not a reprint or a revised edition. Thirty-eight contributors representing some of the finest American evangelical scholars present their articles in clear, easy-to-understand language....

thought the poem reflected 1 Samuel 22:1–2 and chapter 24, although David’s “cave” was neither a prison nor lonely. The poem could express the longing of anyone feeling wrongfully used and forsaken; its vagueness makes it universal. . Two themes run through this urgent plea. The writer is pursued, crushed, “darkened,” faint, dismayed, beset, in danger of death. He urges that his foes be silenced and destroyed. He is plainly hard-pressed and frightened. But his cry is also for mercy, relying
Page 397