Psalms Chapter 55

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October 13, 2025

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🎵 David’s Prayer Song

This is a song David wrote to be sung with stringed instruments, like guitars or harps.

😢 A Cry for Help

God, please listen to my prayer! Don’t ignore me when I’m crying out for help. Please pay attention to me and answer me quickly. I can’t stop thinking about my problems, and I’m groaning out loud because I’m so upset. My enemies are threatening me, and evil people are making my life miserable. They’re trying to hurt me and they’re so angry at me! My heart feels like it’s being squeezed, and I’m terrified—like I might die. I’m shaking with fear, and I feel completely overwhelmed by horror.

🕊️ Wishing to Fly Away

I said to myself, “I wish I had wings like a dove! Then I could just fly away and finally rest. I would fly far, far away and live out in the wildernessᵃ where no one could bother me. I would hurry to find a safe shelter, away from this terrible storm that’s crashing all around me.”

😠 Trouble in the City

Lord, please confuse my enemies and mess up their evil plans!ᵇ I can see violence and fighting all over the city. Day and night, bad things are happening on every street. Trouble and harm are everywhere. Destruction, bullying, and lying never stop—they’re happening all the time in the town square where everyone gathers.

💔 Betrayed by a Best Friend

You know what? If a regular enemy had insulted me, I could handle it. If someone who already hated me attacked me, I could just stay away from them. But the person who hurt me wasn’t an enemy—it was YOU! You were my best friend, someone I trusted completely. We used to have such good times together! We would walk together with other people going to God’s house to worship. We were so close!

⚖️ God Will Make Things Right

I pray that these evil people will face consequences for their actions, because evil lives in their hearts and homes. But as for me, I’m going to call out to God, and Yahweh will rescue me! Morning, noon, and night—all day long—I’ll pray and tell Him about my troubles, and He will hear me. God will bring me peace and save me from everyone fighting against me, even though there are so many of them.

👑 God Sits on His Throne Forever

God, who has been King forever and ever, will hear my prayers and will humble these proud people. They never change their evil ways, and they don’t respect or fear God at all. My former friend attacked the people who trusted him and broke all his promises. His words sound sweet and nice—like smooth butter or soft oil—but really his heart is full of hate. His gentle-sounding words are actually like sharp swords meant to hurt people.

🎒 Give Your Worries to God

“Give all your worries and heavy burdens to Yahweh, and He will take care of you. He will never let good people fall down and stay down forever.”ᶜ But God, You will make sure that evil people face justice. People who lie and hurt others won’t live as long as they should. But me? I’m going to trust in You, God!

💭 What This Psalm Teaches Us:

Even when we feel scared, alone, or hurt by people we trusted, we can always talk to God about it. He listens to our prayers and will take care of us. Instead of trying to carry all our worries by ourselves, we can give them to God and trust Him to help us!

👣 Footnotes:

  • Wilderness: A wild, empty place with no buildings or people—like a desert or deep forest where you could be alone and safe.
  • Confuse their plans: David is asking God to mix up the enemies’ plans so they can’t work together—kind of like what God did at the Tower of Babel when He made people speak different languages so they couldn’t understand each other.
  • Give your burdens to God: This means when you have big worries or problems that feel too heavy to carry, you can pray and ask God to help you. He’s strong enough to handle anything that’s bothering you! It’s like giving your heavy backpack to a strong adult who can carry it for you.
  • 1

    For the music director. A contemplative song of David on stringed instruments.

    ¹God, hear my prayer—
    don’t ignore my desperate cry for help!
  • 2
    2Pay attention to me and answer me quickly.
    I’m restless in my complaint, groaning loudly
  • 3
    3because of my enemy’s threats
    and the pressure of evil people bearing down on me.
    They’re bringing disaster crashing down on my head
    and attacking me with furious anger.
  • 4
    4My heart is writhing in agony,
    and death’s terrors have fallen on me.
  • 5
    5Fear and trembling have overwhelmed me,
    and horror has completely engulfed me.
  • 6
    6So I said, “If only I had wings like a dove!
    I would fly away and find rest.
  • 7
    7Yes, I would flee far away
    and stay in the wilderness.
    Selahᵃ
  • 8
    8I would hurry to my place of shelter,
    far from this raging storm and tempest.”
  • 9
    9Lord, confuse and divide their speech!ᵇ
    For I see violence and conflict in the city.
  • 10
    10Day and night they patrol its walls,
    while trouble and harm lurk within.
  • 11
    11Destruction operates in its midst,
    and oppression and deception never leave its public square.
  • 12
    12If an enemy had insulted me,
    I could endure it.
    If someone who hated me had attacked me,
    I could hide from him.
  • 13
    13But it was you—someone just like me,
    my companion and close friend!
  • 14
    14We used to enjoy sweet fellowship together
    and walked with the crowd to God’s house.
  • 15
    15Let death seize them suddenly!
    Let them go down alive to the grave,ᶜ
    because evil lives in their homes and hearts.
  • 16
    16But I will call out to God,
    and Yahweh will rescue me.
  • 17
    17Evening, morning, and noon
    I will complain and groan,
    and He will hear my voice.
  • 18
    18He will redeem my soul in peace
    from the battle waging against me,
    because there are many fighting me.
  • 19
    19God will hear and humble them—
    He who sits enthroned from ancient times.
    Selah
    Because they never change
    and don’t fear God.
  • 20
    20My friend has attacked his allies
    and broken his covenant promises.
  • 21
    21His speech is smoother than butter,
    but war fills his heart.
    His words are softer than oil,
    but they’re actually drawn swords.
  • 22
    22Cast your burden on Yahweh,
    and He will sustain you.
    He will never allow the righteous person
    to be permanently shaken.
  • 23
    23But You, God, will bring them down
    to the pit of destruction.
    Bloodthirsty and deceitful people
    won’t live out half their days.
    But I will trust in You.

Footnotes:

  • 7aSelah: A musical term of uncertain meaning, possibly indicating a pause for instrumental music or meditation.
  • 9bConfuse and divide their speech: A reference to God’s judgment at the Tower of Babel, asking God to bring confusion to the enemies’ plans through communication breakdown.
  • 15cGrave: Hebrew “Sheol,” the place of the dead, representing both physical death and spiritual separation from the living.
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    This chapter is currently being worked on.
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Footnotes:

  • 7aSelah: A musical term of uncertain meaning, possibly indicating a pause for instrumental music or meditation.
  • 9bConfuse and divide their speech: A reference to God’s judgment at the Tower of Babel, asking God to bring confusion to the enemies’ plans through communication breakdown.
  • 15cGrave: Hebrew “Sheol,” the place of the dead, representing both physical death and spiritual separation from the living.
  • 1
    To the chief Musician on Neginoth, Maschil, [A Psalm] of David. Give ear to my prayer, O God; and hide not thyself from my supplication.
  • 2
    Attend unto me, and hear me: I mourn in my complaint, and make a noise;
  • 3
    Because of the voice of the enemy, because of the oppression of the wicked: for they cast iniquity upon me, and in wrath they hate me.
  • 4
    My heart is sore pained within me: and the terrors of death are fallen upon me.
  • 5
    Fearfulness and trembling are come upon me, and horror hath overwhelmed me.
  • 6
    And I said, Oh that I had wings like a dove! [for then] would I fly away, and be at rest.
  • 7
    Lo, [then] would I wander far off, [and] remain in the wilderness. Selah.
  • 8
    I would hasten my escape from the windy storm [and] tempest.
  • 9
    Destroy, O Lord, [and] divide their tongues: for I have seen violence and strife in the city.
  • 10
    Day and night they go about it upon the walls thereof: mischief also and sorrow [are] in the midst of it.
  • 11
    Wickedness [is] in the midst thereof: deceit and guile depart not from her streets.
  • 12
    For [it was] not an enemy [that] reproached me; then I could have borne [it]: neither [was it] he that hated me [that] did magnify [himself] against me; then I would have hid myself from him:
  • 13
    But [it was] thou, a man mine equal, my guide, and mine acquaintance.
  • 14
    We took sweet counsel together, [and] walked unto the house of God in company.
  • 15
    Let death seize upon them, [and] let them go down quick into hell: for wickedness [is] in their dwellings, [and] among them.
  • 16
    As for me, I will call upon God; and the LORD shall save me.
  • 17
    Evening, and morning, and at noon, will I pray, and cry aloud: and he shall hear my voice.
  • 18
    He hath delivered my soul in peace from the battle [that was] against me: for there were many with me.
  • 19
    God shall hear, and afflict them, even he that abideth of old. Selah. Because they have no changes, therefore they fear not God.
  • 20
    He hath put forth his hands against such as be at peace with him: he hath broken his covenant.
  • 21
    [The words] of his mouth were smoother than butter, but war [was] in his heart: his words were softer than oil, yet [were] they drawn swords.
  • 22
    Cast thy burden upon the LORD, and he shall sustain thee: he shall never suffer the righteous to be moved.
  • 23
    But thou, O God, shalt bring them down into the pit of destruction: bloody and deceitful men shall not live out half their days; but I will trust in thee.
  • 1
    For the choirmaster. With stringed instruments. A Maskil of David. Listen to my prayer, O God, and do not ignore my plea.
  • 2
    Attend to me and answer me. I am restless in my complaint, and distraught
  • 3
    at the voice of the enemy, at the pressure of the wicked. For they release disaster upon me and revile me in their anger.
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    My heart murmurs within me, and the terrors of death assail me.
  • 5
    Fear and trembling grip me, and horror has overwhelmed me.
  • 6
    I said, “Oh, that I had wings like a dove! I would fly away and find rest.
  • 7
    How far away I would flee! In the wilderness I would remain. Selah
  • 8
    I would hurry to my shelter, far from this raging tempest.”
  • 9
    O Lord, confuse and confound their speech, for I see violence and strife in the city.
  • 10
    Day and night they encircle the walls, while malice and trouble lie within.
  • 11
    Destruction is within; oppression and deceit never leave the streets.
  • 12
    For it is not an enemy who insults me; that I could endure. It is not a foe who rises against me; from him I could hide.
  • 13
    But it is you, a man like myself, my companion and close friend.
  • 14
    We shared sweet fellowship together; we walked with the crowd into the house of God.
  • 15
    Let death seize them by surprise; let them go down to Sheol alive, for evil is with them in their homes.
  • 16
    But I call to God, and the LORD saves me.
  • 17
    Morning, noon, and night, I cry out in distress, and He hears my voice.
  • 18
    He redeems my soul in peace from the battle waged against me, even though many oppose me.
  • 19
    God will hear and humiliate them—the One enthroned for the ages—Selah because they do not change and they have no fear of God.
  • 20
    My companion attacks his friends; he violates his covenant.
  • 21
    His speech is smooth as butter, but war is in his heart. His words are softer than oil, yet they are swords unsheathed.
  • 22
    Cast your burden upon the LORD and He will sustain you; He will never let the righteous be shaken.
  • 23
    But You, O God, will bring them down to the Pit of destruction; men of bloodshed and deceit will not live out half their days. But I will trust in You.

Psalms Chapter 55 Commentary

When Friends Become Enemies

What’s Psalm 55 about?

This is David’s raw, unfiltered cry when someone he trusted completely—probably his own son Absalom or his counselor Ahithophel—turned against him. It’s the psalm for anyone who’s ever been stabbed in the back by someone they loved, showing us that even our deepest betrayals can become conversations with God.

The Full Context

Picture David fleeing Jerusalem in the dead of night, his own son Absalom leading a coup against him. The king who once faced Goliath with a sling now runs barefoot through the wilderness, betrayed by those closest to him. This psalm likely emerges from that dark period when David’s family imploded and his kingdom teetered on collapse. Written around 1000 BCE during the height of his reign’s greatest internal crisis, it captures the king’s most vulnerable moment—not facing external enemies, but watching his inner circle crumble.

The psalm fits within David’s collection as one of his most emotionally honest pieces, revealing the man behind the crown. Unlike his triumphant victory songs, this is David at his most human—confused, hurt, and desperately seeking escape. The Hebrew structure moves through distinct emotional phases: panic, anger, grief, and finally a hard-fought trust in God. For ancient Israelites hearing this sung in the temple, it would have validated their own experiences of betrayal while pointing them toward the only refuge that never fails.

What the Ancient Words Tell Us

The Hebrew here is absolutely fascinating. When David cries “nahah” in verse 17—“I will moan”—he’s using a word that means to wail like a dove. Picture that soft, mournful sound doves make, and you’ll hear David’s heart breaking. This isn’t loud, dramatic crying; it’s that quiet, internal collapse when betrayal hits.

But here’s where it gets interesting: David uses the word “sod” for the intimacy he once shared with his betrayer. This term describes the most sacred kind of friendship—the kind where you share your deepest secrets, where you plan together, where you trust without reservation. When David says they “walked to the house of God in company,” he’s describing someone who worshiped alongside him, who knew his prayers, who shared his spiritual journey.

Grammar Geeks

The verb tense in verse 22 is absolutely crucial—“hashlekh” (cast) is an imperative, not a suggestion. God isn’t politely requesting we give Him our burdens; He’s commanding it. The Hebrew structure suggests this isn’t optional self-care but essential spiritual survival.

The most gut-wrenching phrase comes in verse 13: “ki im-attah”—“but it was you.” Those three Hebrew words carry the weight of ultimate betrayal. David could handle enemies attacking from the outside, but this? This was different. This was family.

What Would the Original Audience Have Heard?

Ancient Israelites would have immediately recognized this as more than personal drama—they were hearing their king’s private prayers during a national crisis. When your leader’s own family turns against him, what does that say about the stability of your nation? Yet instead of finding a broken king, they discover a man who models what to do when your world implodes: you take it to God.

The imagery of fleeing to the wilderness would have resonated deeply. Every Israelite knew their history of wandering, of finding God in desolate places. When David wishes for “wings like a dove” to fly away, they’d understand that impulse—sometimes the desert seems safer than the palace, sometimes solitude feels better than community.

But Wait… Why Did David Want to Run?

Here’s something that might surprise you: David’s desire to escape isn’t weakness—it’s wisdom. Look at verse 6: “Oh, that I had wings like a dove! I would fly away and be at rest.” This isn’t cowardice; this is a king recognizing that sometimes strategic retreat is necessary for survival.

But why a dove specifically? In ancient Near Eastern culture, doves represented peace, purity, and the ability to find safe harbor. David isn’t wishing to become a mighty eagle or fierce hawk—he wants to be a dove, to find a quiet place where his soul can heal. Sometimes the most courageous thing you can do is admit you need space to process trauma.

Did You Know?

Archaeological evidence suggests that during times of political upheaval, wealthy Israelites often fled to cave systems in the Judean wilderness—the same caves where David had hidden from Saul decades earlier. His desire to escape wasn’t just metaphorical; it was practical survival strategy.

Wrestling with the Text

The hardest part of this psalm isn’t the betrayal—it’s verse 15, where David essentially wishes death on his enemies. Modern readers often stumble here, wondering how this fits with Jesus’ command to love our enemies. But here’s the thing: David isn’t plotting revenge; he’s being brutally honest with God about his feelings.

The Hebrew construction suggests David is describing what he believes God’s justice will look like, not prescribing what he’ll personally do about it. There’s a massive difference between “God, I’m so angry I could kill them” and “God, I think You should kill them.” David is bringing his rage to the right place—to God—rather than taking matters into his own hands.

This psalm teaches us something profound about emotional honesty in prayer. God doesn’t need us to clean up our feelings before we bring them to Him. He can handle our anger, our confusion, our desire for revenge. What He wants is our raw, unfiltered hearts, not our polished, sanitized emotions.

How This Changes Everything

The turning point comes in verse 22: “Cast your burden on the Lord, and he will sustain you.” The Hebrew word for “burden” here is “yahab”—it means “what has been given to you,” including the painful gifts of betrayal and loss. David isn’t just telling us to give God our problems; he’s saying to give God the very experiences that are crushing us.

Wait, That’s Strange…

Notice that David never actually gets his wings. He asks to fly away like a dove, but instead God sustains him right where he is. Sometimes what we think we need (escape) isn’t what God knows we need (endurance). The miracle isn’t always removal from the situation—sometimes it’s strength to stay and grow through it.

But here’s the revolutionary part: David doesn’t end by saying his problems disappeared or his betrayer repented. He ends by declaring his trust in God’s faithfulness. The circumstances haven’t changed, but David’s perspective has been transformed through honest conversation with God.

This psalm redefines strength. Real strength isn’t never getting hurt or never wanting to run away. Real strength is bringing your deepest wounds to God and discovering that He’s big enough to handle both your pain and your questions.

“Sometimes what we think we need (escape) isn’t what God knows we need (endurance). The miracle isn’t always removal from the situation—sometimes it’s strength to stay and grow through it.”

Key Takeaway

Betrayal by people we love is one of life’s deepest wounds, but it doesn’t have to be a dead end. When we bring our raw, honest emotions to God—including our anger and desire to escape—we discover that He doesn’t offer quick fixes, but something better: His sustaining presence that transforms us from the inside out.

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