Psalms 62
Psalm 62 is a meditation on trust offering calming reassurance and contrasting confidence in God with trust in human power, exemplifying the theological concerns of Book 3. The psalmist employs vivid imagery and direct address to God, establishing the intimate dialogue between worshiper and the divine that characterizes the psalmic tradition. The theological assertions center on God's character as both judge and redeemer, creating a comprehensive vision of divine justice and mercy integrated with human experience. The psalm reflects on both personal circumstance and communal identity, suggesting that individual faith finds validation through shared experience with the covenant community. The liturgical context indicates this psalm's function in worship where personal piety integrates with communal celebration of God's acts and attributes. The concluding movement typically affirms confidence in God's faithfulness, exemplifying the psalmic pattern of transformation through prayer and remembrance of divine acts throughout history.
Psalms 62:12
The reiteration that power and steadfast love belong to God emphasizes through repetition the fundamental truth that grounds all confidence and trust. The doubled affirmation suggests the absolute reliability and comprehensiveness of divine governance. The emphasis that God will render to each according to deeds reinforces the justice motif: there is ultimate accountability before God. This verse closes the psalm with the reassertion of the fundamental principle: trust in God is justified because God is both powerful and just.
Psalms 62:1
This opening affirmation that the soul waits silently for God establishes the stance of trust and patient expectation as the foundation for the entire psalm. The emphasis on silence suggests that the proper response to threat is not agitation but quiet confidence in God. The reference to God being salvation indicates that the fundamental hope is not for security through human effort but for deliverance through divine action. This verse establishes the paradox that characterizes the psalm: strength through silence, victory through waiting.
Psalms 62:2
The affirmation that God is a rock and fortress and that one will not be shaken establishes comprehensive protection against both external threat and internal despair. The rock and fortress imagery suggests both permanence and strength; they cannot be moved or destroyed. The refusal to be greatly shaken indicates a resolve grounded in confidence in God's protection; the psalmist will not yield to fear or despair. This verse provides the theological foundation for the stance of patient waiting articulated in the previous verse.
Psalms 62:3
The rhetorical question addressing those who attack the psalmist and who all lean together like a wall asks why the enemies persist in their assault despite the psalmist's grounding in God. The image of leaning together suggests coordinated and unified opposition; all forces are arrayed against the supplicant. The wall imagery suggests that the opposition is substantial and difficult to breach. This verse articulates the reality of the threat while implicitly questioning whether such opposition can ultimately succeed against one grounded in God.