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Psalm 86 – “Petition”

Hebrew-English Text
I. Summary
The psalmist praises God and asks to be saved from his enemies.

II. Photo
The psalmist asks for strength: “Grant your strength to your servant and deliver the son of your maidservant!” (v. 16b)

III. Select Verses    
2-5: Preserve my life, for I am steadfast; O You, my God, deliver Your servant who trusts in You. Have mercy on me, O LORD, for I call to You all day long;  bring joy to Your servant’s life, for on You, LORD, I set my hope. For You, LORD, are good and forgiving, abounding in steadfast love to all who call on You.
8-10: There is none like You among the gods, O LORD, and there are no deeds like Yours. All the nations You have made will come to bow down before You, O LORD, and they will pay honor to Your name. For You are great and perform wonders; You alone are God.
11-12:  Teach me Your way, O LORD; I will walk in Your truth; let my heart be undivided in reverence for Your name. I will praise You, O LORD, my God, with all my heart and pay honor to Your name forever.
14: O God, arrogant men have risen against me; a band of ruthless men seek my life; they are not mindful of You.
16-17: Turn to me and have mercy on me; grant Your strength to Your servant and deliver the son of Your maidservant. Show me a sign of Your favor, that my enemies may see and be frustrated because You, O LORD, have given me aid and comfort.

IV. Outline
1a. Superscription
1b-7. Invocation, petitions
8-10. Hymnic praise/wish/rationale
11a. Theophoric petition
11b-12. Vow to obey/praise
13. Rationale = account of past salvation
14. Complaint
15. Affirmation of confidence
16-17. Petition, imprecation

V. Comment
Psalm 86, which belongs to the petition/complaint genre, exhibits a great degree of righteousness: “I am righteous, I trust in you” (v. 2), “I call to you all day” (v. 3), “bring joy to Your servant’s life, for on You, Lord, I set my hope” (v. 4), “Teach me Your way, O Lord; I will walk in Your truth; let my heart be undivided in reverence for Your name,” (v. 11) etc. The phrase “But You, O Lord, are a God compassionate and merciful, slow to anger, abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness” in v. 15 appears in similar forms throughout the Bible:

Gerstenberger notes that the relative stability of this phrase might indicate its liturgical use.

VI. Works Used
(see “Commentaries” page)
Gerstenberger, Erhard S. “Psalms Part 1 with an Introduction to Cultic Poetry” Forms of Old Testament Literature (Michigan: Eerdmans, 1988).
Tate, Marvin. “Psalms 51-100” Word Biblical Commentary vol. 20 (Waco, Texas: Wordbooks, 1990).
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