Psalms Chapter 15

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October 11, 2025

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🏠 Who Can Live Close to God?

Have you ever wondered who gets to be really close to God? King David wrote a song asking Yahweh this very question: “Who can come into Your special home? Who can live on Your holy mountain where You are?”

✨ People Who Do What’s Right

God loves people who are honest and kind! These are people who do the right thing even when no one is watching. They tell the truth and don’t make up stories about others. They’re the kind of friends everyone wants to have!

💬 Watching Our Words

People who are close to God are careful with their words. They don’t gossipᵃ or say mean things that hurt their friends or neighbors. They use their words to help people, not harm them. Remember, our tongues are like little paintbrushes – we can paint beautiful pictures or make ugly messes!

🤝 Keeping Promises

God’s special friends keep their promises, even when it’s hard. If they say they’ll do something, they do it! They respect people who love God and stay away from people who try to pull them away from doing good. Even if keeping a promise costs them something they really want, they still keep their word.

💝 Being Generous and Fair

These special people are generous! When someone needs help, they don’t try to take advantage of them. They shareᵇ what they have without expecting extra back. They never lie about innocent people, even if someone offers them money or candy or anything else to do it.

🎯 Standing Strong Forever

Here’s the amazing promise: People who live this way will stand strong forever! They won’t fall down or be shaken because God Himself is holding them up. When you choose to live God’s way – being honest, kind, and keeping your promises – you’re building your life on solid rock that nothing can knock over!

👣 Footnotes:

  • Gossip: Gossip is when we talk about someone behind their back in a way that makes them look bad. It’s like spreading rumors at school – it hurts people and breaks friendships. God wants us to speak kindly about others!
  • Share without expecting extra: In Bible times, some people would lend money but make poor people pay back way more than they borrowed, which wasn’t fair. God wants us to help people who need it without trying to get rich from their troubles. It’s like sharing your lunch with someone who forgot theirs – you do it because it’s kind, not because you want them to give you back two lunches tomorrow!
  • 1

    A Psalm of David.

    ¹Yahweh, who can find welcome in Your sacred tent?ᵃ
    Who can live on Your holy mountain?
  • 2
    ²Those who walk with integrity and do what is right,
    who speak truth from their hearts
  • 3
    ³and refuse to spread gossip or slander.ᵇ
    They don’t harm their neighbors
    or bring shame upon their friends.
  • 4
    They despise those who reject God
    but honor those who fear Yahweh.ᶜ
    When they make a promise, they keep it,
    even when it costs them.
  • 5
    They don’t charge interest when lending money to those in needᵈ
    and refuse bribes against the innocent.
    Those who live this way will never be shaken.

Footnotes:

  • ¹ᵃ Sacred tent: Refers to the tabernacle, God’s dwelling place among His people during Israel’s wilderness journey, symbolizing intimate fellowship with God.
  • ³ᵇ Gossip or slander: The Hebrew emphasizes malicious speech that destroys relationships and reputations – a serious offense in community life.
  • ⁴ᶜ Fear Yahweh: Not simply terror, but reverent awe and a healthy fear that leads to obedience and worship – the foundation of wisdom in Hebrew thought.
  • ⁵ᵈ Charge interest: The law prohibited charging interest to fellow Israelites in need (Exodus 22:25), protecting the poor from exploitation during hardship.
  • 1
    Psalm by David (1) O YAHWEH, who may sojourn in Your tent? Who may dwell among Your holy mountain?
  • 2
    (2) Those walking uprightly, doing what is right, And speaking faithful-truth in his heart.
  • 3
    (3) Not slandering with his tongue, Nor doing evil to his neighbour, Nor bringing up shame against his friend.
  • 4
    (4) In his eyes a reprobate is despised,   But he אֵת honours fearing YAHWEH, His vows hurt but he doesn’t change them.
  • 5
    (5) He doesn’t give money at interest, Nor does he take a bribe against the innocent, Do this and never, forever be shaken.

Footnotes:

  • ¹ᵃ Sacred tent: Refers to the tabernacle, God’s dwelling place among His people during Israel’s wilderness journey, symbolizing intimate fellowship with God.
  • ³ᵇ Gossip or slander: The Hebrew emphasizes malicious speech that destroys relationships and reputations – a serious offense in community life.
  • ⁴ᶜ Fear Yahweh: Not simply terror, but reverent awe and a healthy fear that leads to obedience and worship – the foundation of wisdom in Hebrew thought.
  • ⁵ᵈ Charge interest: The law prohibited charging interest to fellow Israelites in need (Exodus 22:25), protecting the poor from exploitation during hardship.
  • 1
    A Psalm of David. LORD, who shall abide in thy tabernacle? who shall dwell in thy holy hill?
  • 2
    He that walketh uprightly, and worketh righteousness, and speaketh the truth in his heart.
  • 3
    [He that] backbiteth not with his tongue, nor doeth evil to his neighbour, nor taketh up a reproach against his neighbour.
  • 4
    In whose eyes a vile person is contemned; but he honoureth them that fear the LORD. [He that] sweareth to [his own] hurt, and changeth not.
  • 5
    [He that] putteth not out his money to usury, nor taketh reward against the innocent. He that doeth these [things] shall never be moved.
  • 1
    A Psalm of David. O LORD, who may abide in Your tent? Who may dwell on Your holy mountain?
  • 2
    He who walks with integrity and practices righteousness, who speaks the truth from his heart,
  • 3
    who has no slander on his tongue, who does no harm to his neighbor, who casts no scorn on his friend,
  • 4
    who despises the vile but honors those who fear the LORD, who does not revise a costly oath,
  • 5
    who lends his money without interest and refuses a bribe against the innocent. He who does these things will never be shaken.

Psalms Chapter 15 Commentary

The Guest List for God’s House

What’s Psalm 15 about?

This psalm reads like an ancient VIP guest list – David’s asking who gets to hang out in God’s house, and the answer might surprise you. It’s not about religious credentials or perfect theology, but about how you treat people when nobody’s watching.

The Full Context

Psalm 15 sits at a fascinating crossroads in David’s collection. Written likely during his reign as king, this psalm reflects the moment when worship was transitioning from the portable tabernacle to what would become Solomon’s temple. David had brought the ark to Jerusalem and established regular worship there, but the question lingered: in a world where access to God was carefully regulated through priests and rituals, what really qualifies someone to approach the holy?

The literary structure is brilliant – it opens with a double question (Psalm 15:1) and then unfolds like a job description for God’s household staff. But here’s what’s remarkable: this isn’t a list of religious activities or ceremonial requirements. It’s a character profile that cuts straight to the heart of how we live with other people. David is essentially asking, “What does it look like to be the kind of person God actually wants to spend time with?”

What the Ancient Words Tell Us

The Hebrew word David uses for “dwell” in verse 1 is shakan – the same root that gives us “Shekinah,” God’s glorious presence. But here’s what’s beautiful about this choice: shakan doesn’t just mean to visit or stop by. It means to settle down, to make yourself at home, to live as a neighbor.

When David asks who can “dwell in your sanctuary,” he’s not asking about a quick temple visit. He’s asking who gets to move in next door to God.

Grammar Geeks

The verb forms in verses 2-5 are all Hebrew participles – they describe ongoing character traits, not one-time actions. David isn’t asking “Who has done good things?” but “Who IS a person who walks blamelessly?” It’s about identity, not achievement.

The word for “blameless” (tamim) is the same word used for sacrificial animals – whole, complete, without defect. But applied to people, it doesn’t mean perfect. It means integrated, authentic, not fractured between public and private selves.

What Would the Original Audience Have Heard?

Picture this: you’re an Israelite in David’s time, and you’ve grown up with elaborate rules about who can approach God’s dwelling place. Only priests from the right family. Only people who are ceremonially clean. Only those who’ve brought the right sacrifices.

Then David drops this psalm, and suddenly the criteria have nothing to do with your bloodline or your bank account. Instead, it’s about whether you keep your word to your neighbor, whether you take bribes, whether you gossip.

Did You Know?

In ancient Near Eastern cultures, hospitality laws were sacred. When David mentions not taking bribes against the innocent (Psalm 15:5), he’s talking about corrupting the legal system that protected society’s most vulnerable – widows, orphans, and foreigners who had no family to defend them.

The original audience would have heard this as revolutionary. David is saying that God cares more about your integrity in the marketplace than your performance in the temple.

Wrestling with the Text

Here’s where things get interesting – and a little uncomfortable. Look at Psalm 15:4: the person who “despises a vile person but honors those who fear the Lord.”

Wait, what? Doesn’t this sound judgmental? Aren’t we supposed to love everyone?

The Hebrew word for “despises” (nibzah) is strong – it’s the same word used to describe how the suffering servant in Isaiah 53:3 is “despised and rejected.” David isn’t talking about casual dislike; he’s talking about moral revulsion.

But here’s the key: this isn’t about despising people because they’re different from you. The “vile person” (ma’as) is someone who actively rejects God’s ways, who hurts others without remorse. The psalm is saying that healthy people have healthy reactions to evil – they’re not neutral about injustice.

How This Changes Everything

The punch line of this psalm is in the final phrase of Psalm 15:5: “Whoever does these things will never be shaken.”

The Hebrew word mot means to totter, to slip, to lose your footing. David is painting a picture of someone so grounded in integrity that they can’t be knocked over by the storms of life.

“God’s guest list isn’t about who prays the prettiest prayers – it’s about who treats people like they matter when the spotlight’s off.”

But here’s what strikes me most: this isn’t really a list of requirements to earn God’s friendship. It’s a description of what friendship with God produces. When you spend time with someone who is perfectly trustworthy, perfectly just, perfectly loving, you start to become more trustworthy, more just, more loving yourself.

Wait, That’s Strange…

Notice what’s NOT on this list: no mention of attending services, tithing, or knowing the right theology. The closest thing to religious activity is “honors those who fear the Lord.” Everything else is about horizontal relationships – how you treat other people.

Key Takeaway

God’s house isn’t a museum where perfect people display their righteousness – it’s a workshop where broken people learn to love like their Father does, one relationship at a time.

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