Psalms Chapter 143

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October 14, 2025

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🙏 David’s Urgent Prayer

David was in serious trouble. His enemies were chasing him, and he felt scared and alone. So he cried out to God with all his heart: “Yahweh, please hear my prayer! Listen to me! I need Your help right now! You are faithful and always do what’s right, so please answer me!” David knew he wasn’t perfect. None of us are! He said, “Please don’t judge me too harshly, God, because nobody is perfect enough to stand before You without making mistakes.”

😰 Feeling Crushed and Discouraged

David’s enemy had been hunting him down like a wild animal chases its prey. He felt completely crushed, like someone had pushed him face-down into the dirt. It was so bad that David felt like he was living in total darknessᵃ, like people who had died long ago and been forgotten. His spirit felt overwhelmed—like when you have so many problems you don’t know what to do. His heart was completely discouraged, like a deflated balloon that has lost all its air.

💭 Remembering God’s Goodness

But then David did something smart. Instead of just thinking about his problems, he started remembering all the amazing things God had done before! He thought about the old days when God did incredible miracles. He meditated on all of God’s mighty worksᵇ—all the wonderful things God’s hands had made and accomplished.

🙌 Desperate for God’s Help

David stretched out his hands toward heaven in prayer. His soul was thirsty for Godᶜ—not regular thirsty, but desperately thirsty, like super dry, cracked ground that hasn’t had rain in months and months! He prayed urgently: “Answer me quickly, Yahweh! I’m running out of strength! Please don’t hide Your face from me, or I’ll feel like I’m dying. Let me hear about Your unfailing love when I wake up in the morning, because I trust You completely! Show me which way to go, because I’m lifting up my whole life to You.”

🛡️ Asking for Protection and Guidance

David needed rescue badly. He prayed, “Save me from my enemies, Yahweh! I’m running to You like running to a safe shelter during a storm.” Then David asked God to teach him. “Teach me to do what You want, because You are my God. Let Your good Spirit lead me on a smooth, safe path—not a rocky, dangerous one where I might fall.”

✨ Trusting God to Save Him

David ended his prayer by putting everything in God’s hands: “For the sake of Your great name, Yahweh, keep me alive! Because You always do what’s right, bring me out of this terrible trouble. And because of Your unfailing love, protect me from my enemies and rescue me from everyone who’s trying to hurt me. I am Your servant, and I trust You!” David knew that God loved him and would take care of him, no matter how bad things looked right now.

👣 Footnotes:

  • Living in total darkness: This means feeling hopeless and sad, like everything good has disappeared from your life—similar to being in a dark room where you can’t see anything happy or hopeful.
  • Mighty works: These are the amazing miracles and wonderful things God has done throughout history—like parting the Red Sea, providing food in the desert, and protecting His people from danger.
  • Thirsty for God: This doesn’t mean physically thirsty for water. It means your heart and soul desperately need God’s presence, love, and help—like when you really, really need a hug from someone you love or really need help with a big problem.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • 11
  • 12

Footnotes:

  • 1
    A Psalm of David: יהוה Yahweh, hear my prayer Listen to my pleadings Answer me in Your faithfulness In Your righteousness 
  • 2
    Don’t enter into judgement with Your servant For in Your sight, nobody alive is counted righteous.
  • 3
    Yes, the enemy has been pursuing my life He has crushed my life to the ground He has made me dwell in dark places Like those long dead.
  • 4
    My ruach-spirit faints within me In the middle of me, my heart is desolate.
  • 5
    I remember the days of old I meditate on all Your works I sing at the accomplishment of Your hands.
  • 6
    I stretch out my hands to You My whole being longs for You, like a thirsty land.  סֶלָה Selah
  • 7
    Answer me quickly, יהוה Yahweh My ruach-spirit fails Don’t hide Your face from me Or I will become like those sent down to the pit.
  • 8
    Let me hear of Your covenant love in the morning Yes, I trust in You Teach me this way I should walk Yes, to you I lift up my life.
  • 9
    Rescue me, יהוה Yahweh, from my enemies In You, I hide.
  • 10
    Teach me to do Your pleasing will For You are My אֱלֹהַּ Eloha (God) Your delightfully good, רוּחַ Ruach-Spirit leads me Upon grounded land.
  • 11
    On account of Your name, יהוה Yahweh, revive me In Your righteousness, bring me out from trouble. 
  • 12
    In Your covenant love, silence my enemies Destroy all those attacking me, for I am Your servant.

Footnotes:

  • 1
    A Psalm of David. Hear my prayer, O LORD, give ear to my supplications: in thy faithfulness answer me, [and] in thy righteousness.
  • 2
    And enter not into judgment with thy servant: for in thy sight shall no man living be justified.
  • 3
    For the enemy hath persecuted my soul; he hath smitten my life down to the ground; he hath made me to dwell in darkness, as those that have been long dead.
  • 4
    Therefore is my spirit overwhelmed within me; my heart within me is desolate.
  • 5
    I remember the days of old; I meditate on all thy works; I muse on the work of thy hands.
  • 6
    I stretch forth my hands unto thee: my soul [thirsteth] after thee, as a thirsty land. Selah.
  • 7
    Hear me speedily, O LORD: my spirit faileth: hide not thy face from me, lest I be like unto them that go down into the pit.
  • 8
    Cause me to hear thy lovingkindness in the morning; for in thee do I trust: cause me to know the way wherein I should walk; for I lift up my soul unto thee.
  • 9
    Deliver me, O LORD, from mine enemies: I flee unto thee to hide me.
  • 10
    Teach me to do thy will; for thou [art] my God: thy spirit [is] good; lead me into the land of uprightness.
  • 11
    Quicken me, O LORD, for thy name’s sake: for thy righteousness’ sake bring my soul out of trouble.
  • 12
    And of thy mercy cut off mine enemies, and destroy all them that afflict my soul: for I [am] thy servant.
  • 1
    A Psalm of David. O LORD, hear my prayer. In Your faithfulness, give ear to my plea; in Your righteousness, answer me.
  • 2
    Do not bring Your servant into judgment, for no one alive is righteous before You.
  • 3
    For the enemy has pursued my soul, crushing my life to the ground, making me dwell in darkness like those long since dead.
  • 4
    My spirit grows faint within me; my heart is dismayed inside me.
  • 5
    I remember the days of old; I meditate on all Your works; I consider the work of Your hands.
  • 6
    I stretch out my hands to You; my soul thirsts for You like a parched land. Selah
  • 7
    Answer me quickly, O LORD; my spirit fails. Do not hide Your face from me, or I will be like those who descend to the Pit.
  • 8
    Let me hear Your loving devotion in the morning, for I have put my trust in You. Teach me the way I should walk, for to You I lift up my soul.
  • 9
    Deliver me from my enemies, O LORD; I flee to You for refuge.
  • 10
    Teach me to do Your will, for You are my God. May Your good Spirit lead me on level ground.
  • 11
    For the sake of Your name, O LORD, revive me. In Your righteousness, bring my soul out of trouble.
  • 12
    And in Your loving devotion, cut off my enemies. Destroy all who afflict me, for I am Your servant.

Psalms Chapter 143 Commentary

When You’re Running on Empty

What’s Psalm 143 about?

This is David’s raw, honest prayer when he’s hit rock bottom – spiritually, emotionally, and physically exhausted. It’s a masterclass in how to approach God when you’re running on fumes and desperately need rescue.

The Full Context

Psalm 143 emerges from one of the darkest periods in David’s life, likely during his flight from Absalom’s rebellion or another crisis where enemies were pursuing him relentlessly. The superscription identifies this as “A Psalm of David,” and the internal evidence suggests he’s writing from a place of genuine desperation – not just facing external enemies, but wrestling with internal spiritual drought. This isn’t David the triumphant king, but David the hunted fugitive, physically exhausted and spiritually depleted.

Within the broader structure of the Psalter, Psalm 143 serves as the final petition in a series of penitential psalms, bridging the gap between desperate complaint and confident trust. The psalm masterfully weaves together themes of human frailty, divine faithfulness, and the urgent need for spiritual renewal. What makes this psalm particularly compelling is David’s brutal honesty about his spiritual state – he doesn’t dress up his prayer with pious language, but comes to God with the raw truth of his exhaustion and need.

What the Ancient Words Tell Us

The opening Hebrew word ’aneni (“answer me”) hits you like a desperate shout across a canyon. This isn’t polite religious language – it’s the cry of someone who needs rescue now. The verb form suggests David isn’t just asking for an eventual response; he’s pleading for immediate divine intervention.

When David says his spirit is ’ataf (overwhelmed/faint), he’s using a word that describes fabric being wrapped so tightly it can’t breathe. Picture a person wrapped in burial cloths – that’s the metaphor David chooses for his spiritual state. He feels suffocated by circumstances, unable to draw a spiritual breath.

Grammar Geeks

The Hebrew phrase nephshi b’qirbi tishtohmem (my soul within me is appalled/stunned) uses a verb that literally means “to be devastated like a wasteland.” David isn’t just sad – his inner landscape looks like a bombed-out city.

The word derek (way) appears three times in this psalm, creating a path motif that runs throughout. David has lost his way (verse 8), needs to know the way (verse 8), and asks to be taught the way (verse 10). This repetition shows that spiritual disorientation is at the heart of his crisis.

What Would the Original Audience Have Heard?

Ancient Israelites would have immediately recognized the life-or-death urgency in David’s language. When he talks about his enemies pursuing him (verse 3), they would have understood this wasn’t abstract spiritual warfare – people were literally trying to kill him.

The agricultural metaphors would have resonated powerfully with a society dependent on seasonal rains. When David compares his thirst for God to ’erets tsiyah (dry land) in verse 6, his audience would have immediately pictured the parched earth during the long, hot summers, cracking and desperate for the first drops of rain.

Did You Know?

In ancient Near Eastern culture, morning was considered the optimal time for divine communication. When David asks to “hear your steadfast love in the morning” (verse 8), he’s following established spiritual rhythms where dawn represented hope and divine favor.

The reference to “the pit” (verse 7) would have immediately evoked images of Sheol, the realm of the dead. David isn’t being melodramatic – in ancient Hebrew thinking, serious illness, deep depression, or mortal danger could make someone feel like they were already descending into the underworld.

Wrestling with the Text

Here’s what puzzles me about this psalm: David begins by acknowledging he has no right to stand before God based on his own righteousness (verse 2), yet by the end he’s confidently asking God to destroy his enemies (verse 12). How does someone go from “I’m unworthy” to “smite my enemies” in the span of twelve verses?

The key lies in understanding that David isn’t basing his final requests on his own merit, but on God’s character. He moves from tsidqatka (your righteousness) in verse 1 to chasedka (your steadfast love) in verse 12. This isn’t presumption – it’s faith learning to rest in divine character rather than human performance.

The rapid emotional shifts in this psalm reflect the genuine experience of someone in crisis. David swings from despair to hope to petition to confidence – and that’s exactly how real spiritual struggle works. We don’t pray ourselves into a steady emotional state; we pray ourselves through the ups and downs until we land on solid theological ground.

Wait, That’s Strange…

David asks God not to “enter into judgment” with him (verse 2), yet later requests judgment on his enemies (verse 12). This apparent contradiction reveals David’s understanding that God’s justice operates differently toward his covenant people than toward their enemies.

How This Changes Everything

What transforms this from ancient poetry to contemporary lifeline is how David models spiritual honesty. He doesn’t pretend to have it together or dress up his desperation in religious language. When you’re spiritually dry, emotionally overwhelmed, and physically exhausted, this psalm gives you permission to come to God exactly as you are.

The progression of this psalm teaches us something crucial about prayer during crisis: start with who God is (verse 1), acknowledge your true spiritual condition (verses 3-4), remember what God has done before (verse 5), express your current need (verses 6-7), and make specific requests based on God’s character (verses 8-12).

David’s physical metaphors – thirsty ground, overwhelmed spirit, fainting soul – remind us that spiritual crisis often has bodily dimensions. When we’re spiritually depleted, we feel it in our bones, our energy, our physical capacity to cope. This psalm validates the connection between spiritual and physical exhaustion.

“Sometimes the most spiritual thing you can do is admit you’re running on empty and desperately need God to show up.”

The morning motif in verse 8 offers hope for anyone stuck in the midnight of the soul. David doesn’t ask for instant relief, but for God’s steadfast love to meet him at dawn – suggesting that spiritual renewal often comes not as dramatic rescue, but as quiet, faithful presence when we’re ready to receive it.

Key Takeaway

When you’re spiritually, emotionally, or physically running on empty, this psalm teaches you to pray with brutal honesty about your condition while anchoring your requests in God’s faithful character rather than your own worthiness.

Further Reading

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